from: http://www.marthastewart.com/
Rent
to Own.ph: In line with the garden theme from last week, we are now featuring
DIY home gardens that are easy, functional and pleasing to the eye.
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Window
Boxes
Feeling
left behind by the grow-your-own-food revolution because you live in a
gardenless apartment or have a postage-stamp yard? Take heart: Anyone with a
sunny windowsill, patio, or balcony can cultivate edibles. In fact, choosing
plants that are nourishing, delicious, and beautiful is the ultimate way to
maximize limited space, whether you're working with one little window box or
several large containers.
When
space is limited but enthusiasm isn't, think containers. These window boxes,
just two feet long each, are big enough to grow all sorts of herbs, including
oregano, basil, chives, and rosemary.
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Patio
Garden
Just
as in conventional vegetable gardens, sunshine is vital for small-space
success. Six to eight hours of bright light daily is best. Buy bags of soilless
mix for container growing from a garden center or nursery. The lightweight
mixture provides a fast-draining medium that's ideal for growing vegetables.
Food crops also need consistent and frequent watering, so be sure to think
about the location of your hose or faucet when planning where to plant -- the
closer your plants can be to water, the better. And remember: A mini garden is
not likely to overflow with produce. But when you serve a just-picked salad
from your window box to a friend or make fresh salsa from sun-warmed tomatoes
and peppers harvested right outside your door, you'll get the same bragging
rights as any proud farmer.
Gardeners
who have room for pots can grow a surprising amount of produce by carefully
choosing plant varieties and staking where appropriate. Newport Premier window
boxes, hooksandlattice.com.
Rolled-Rim Lite stackable
planters, large; medium; and small.
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Tea
Garden in a Box
Gardening
editor Stephen Orr likes to give friends this portable garden, which contains
the ingredients for tisane, or herbal tea. To make one, plant mint, rose
geranium, pineapple sage, and lavender in a wooden wine crate or other container
with ample drainage. To get the gift to keep on giving, be sure to tell the
recipient to place it in full sun outdoors and to pluck a few sprigs for
morning tea or for adding to black tea.
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Garden
Pot Basics
As
long as it gets adequate sun, a small patio can provide enough room to grow a
range of crops without demanding much time or labor. Devote the most planting
space to the veggies your family loves best. Keep in mind that large plants
such as beans, cucumbers, and tomatoes require large pots (two feet in diameter
or more). Smaller pots are perfect for peppers, greens, kale, and herbs, and
they look great tucked between larger containers. For season-long interest,
combine plants with varied flowering times so that some things will be ripening
while others will be ready to harvest. In hot weather, water evaporates quickly
from the elevated soil in a container. You may need to irrigate your pots every
day if temperatures go above 90 degrees.
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Cluster
Theory
Minimal
growing space often corresponds to a dearth of off-season storage. Sturdy
containers that can be left out year-round, above, are a good solution. These
three sizes of these stackable planters in a lightweight, all weather resin
accommodate all kinds of veggies. Large plants such as tomatoes will need
staking: Bamboo is an attractive, inexpensive option; sturdy metal tomato cages
work well, too. By keeping the plants upright and well aerated, you help
minimize the possibility of disease while maximizing yield. You also increase
available space, allowing an under planting of small plants such as carrots,
radishes, or herbs.
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Choose
Superproductive Plants
Don't
wait all season for a few huge slicing tomatoes. Instead, opt for prolific,
early-bearing, and delicious cherry tomatoes, such as 'Sun Gold.'
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Combine
Similar Species
An
18-inch pot will hold a wide selection of plants. These fiery habanero and hot
lemon chiles and purple-leaved peppers make a colorful mix.
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Look
for Dwarf Varieties
Plant
breeders are constantly introducing vegetables that take up less space, such as
this tiny but tasty dark-green 'Diamant' cucumber.
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Window
Box Basics
A
two-foot-wide box will easily host four to six large herb plants or a small
crop of salad greens. Try to choose plants with a variety of shapes and colors,
such as purple basil, tall lemon verbena, and chives, to make the display
attractive. Herbs are particularly good choices for urban window boxes, since
they can be maintained with just a watering can and a pair of shears. Most
herbs require minimal fertilizing. In fact, overfed herbs lose essential oils
in their leaves, making them less flavorful.
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Go
With a Theme
Window
boxes offer numerous design possibilities. Combine your most frequently used
herbs, or put together some thematic plantings, such as Asian herbs (including
garlic chives, Thai basil, lemongrass, and shiso) and tea herbs (mint,
chamomile, lemon balm, and lemon verbena); or Italian herbs (rosemary, basil,
oregano, and chives), left. Other good mixes include edible flowers
(nasturtiums, borage, calendula, fennel, and violets) and salad greens
(lettuce, arugula, and dill).
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Pick
Pretty Plants
Variegated
herbs, such as this two-tone mint, make a strong visual impression (without
sacrificing flavor or productivity) when mixed with solid-color plants.
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Add
Edible Flowers
Sowing
a few extra seeds of easy-to-grow nasturtium and borage into any herb or
vegetable planting adds a welcome touch of color to pots and to salads.
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Keep
Your Greens Fresh
Harvest
salad greens lightly once a week to encourage growth; when the plants become
exhausted, remove them and plant seeds for a new crop.
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