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‘Foodscaping’ slips vegetables in among the flowers for visual appeal in the garden

I recently started my seeds – tomatoes, cucuzza squash, climbing zucchini, golden beets, Florida cranberries, nasturtiums, zinnias, edelweiss, various herbs and Roma beans. They barely fit on my kitchen counter, which becomes a transient nursery every spring.

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3 min read
`Foodscaping' slips vegetables in among the flowers for visual appeal in the garden

This May 24, 2022 image provided by Jessica Damiano shows chives blooming in Glen Head, New York. Chives are among many edibles that can be used in “foodscaping,” a gardening style that includes ornamental and edible plants growing side-by-side. (Jessica Damiano via AP)


I recently started my seeds – tomatoes, cucuzza squash, climbing zucchini, golden beets, Florida cranberries, nasturtiums, zinnias, edelweiss, various herbs and Roma beans. They barely fit on my kitchen counter, which becomes a transient nursery every spring.

Come planting time, they also won’t all fit in my 4-by-4-foot raised beds, grow bags, Earth boxes or around the arbor I installed last year. But rather than curtail my ambitions, I’ll slip sweet potatoes, onions, extra tomatoes and other edibles into my front-yard flower garden.

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