Grow Your Own Kitchen
Garden
Growing your own fruit and vegetables is both a
challenge and a pleasure - it can be the most rewarding thing
you'll ever do, and it's also a fantastic way to create a
productive but beautiful garden.
Walled Kitchen Garden
Inspiration
A kitchen garden, or potager (from the French) is a
fantastic thing - it produces food for you to eat, keeps you
occupied on long summer days (whilst you harvest, freeze and
pickle) and looks beautiful at the same time. A pretty and
productive plot will take some looking after and planning
though.
Perhaps the best way to start your 'grow your own' journey
is to visit other successful kitchen and herb gardens. Either
in person - look at National
Garden Scheme properties in your local area
to find some - or look for inspiration from regular garden
bloggers and experts who have
plenty of advice to share.
Many of the English kitchen gardens on old properties are
walled - which offers a variety of benefits, mostly giving
shelter, extra heat, and an opportunity for climbing vines to
thrive. Many of these gardens are still in working order, and
have grapevines or figs on the walls, as well as many beds full
of various plants (often to cater for a cafe or restaurant on
site, instead of the large family and working staff it used to
feed). Some english country houses may even
have an orchard filled with many different varieties of
apples, pears or cherries.
Victorian and Wartime Garden
Ideas
Much inspiration can be gained from reading about gardens in
the Victorian and wartime periods - both eras of bountiful
fruit and vegetable growing! If you have access, do check out
the old BBC series, The Victorian Kitchen Garden,
which was filmed at Chilton Foliat and features the head
gardener Harry Dodson, it is full of useful practical
information and horticultural tips.
Wartime gardens from the early 20th century were also very
productive - even though gardening was born of necessity, it
was also made popular by the government slogan 'Dig for
Victory', which made it seem heroic too. There are many manuals
and guidebooks to discover from this period of history, and
thankfully the way in which we grow plants on a family scale
has not changed since then!
Kitchen Garden
Planner
When starting discussions for this years allotment or
kitchen garden, start by writing a list of what vegetables you
want to grow and how many. Then set about drawing up a plan of
how you will lay it out, taking into consideration where things
were grown last year, and the laws of rotation. Or, use an
online planting map, like the one from Grow Veg.
Consider height when writing out your vegetable garden
design and layout, and think of access too and
proximity to water. It is also important to take into
consideration formal ornamental features you may desire,
or pretty flowers you might want to add to make gardening even
more enjoyable, and practical structures, such as a
trellis or raised beds that may need to be built before
planting begins.
Indoor Herb
Garden
If you wish to grow your own organic herbs at home, or
throughout the year, creating your own indoor herb garden is a
very practical solution for most people - and is a possibility
for those living in apartments too. It offers the ability to
give your cooking so much more flavour and fun, so it's worth
trying out.
Even if you live in the country and have a substantial
garden, you may still wish to grow herbs indoors to fill the
house with beautiful aroma's or even to avoid pest attacks.
With all your herbs growing indoors, you could imagine you were
living in a Provencal french country home too - very rustic
and shabby chic.
To create your indoor herb garden, start by creating a space
near sunlight in a window, and then list down your favorite
herbs - then purchase some container's (or old vintage tins
would look very European), add some compost and sprinkle on the
seeds (or plug in the pre-grown plant).
Making the Most of your
Produce
Creating preserves and pickles with a glut of produce is
fairly easy to do with practice and the correct tools. It is no
secret that most years you will have a bumper crop or two
(especially if you are growing tomatoes), or that some produce
will grow faster than you can eat (especially
courgette/zucchini). So, what are you to do with all the
extras?
Well, turn them into enjoyable edibles you can consume all
year round, of course! Try dill cucumbers, sauerkraut, jams and
jellies using wild hedgerow produce, roasted tomatoes, garlic
peppers, chutney, ketchup, etc.
There is nothing better than food grown with your nurturing
skill and aid, it tastes better and is far more rewarding than
driving to the supermarket. It is eco friendly too, and all
that fresh air is bound to do your health wonders!
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