Country Gardens Are Not Just for Vegetables

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Country gardens are not just for vegetables. There’s so much more you can do. Planting country flower gardens is often an easier and prettier option.

Just in time for our first snowfall, I got our vegetable patch put to bed for the winter. As I was working, I realized that in spite of the colorful veggies and herbs, I had really missed having a flower bed. Along with food production, beautiful scenery is an important part of a wellness sanctuary and rural living too.

We didn’t have flower beds around our house yet, but I’d intended to plant a rainbow-colored band of flowers around our country gardens. Somehow time got away from me, and with my focus on growing fruits and vegetables, I just never planted the flowers.

Starting a Country Garden

With just some basic supplies, like a great pair of pruning shears, you will be well on your way to a beautiful landscape and country gardens. That winter, as I prepared my seed orders for spring, colorful flowers were at the top of my list.

Not only do I love their outdoor display, but to me, one thing that says “country kitchen” is a large pitcher stuffed with multi-colored fresh flowers.

Another plus is that colorful flowers attract industrious bees and other pollinators, beautiful butterflies, and interesting birds to the garden.

In addition to keeping a garden, many find beekeeping to be a fascinating hobby. A country garden also lends itself to multiple income streams.

Country Gardens Aren’t Just for Vegetables

Acquiring seeds

You can buy flower seeds locally in the spring, or you can order them from seed companies throughout the year. There are catalogs full of beautiful photos and descriptions. If possible, get them from a local garden center.

In many areas, libraries have seed exchange programs. This means you can save seeds and donate them to the library. I like checking seeds out from my library because I know they are plants that are hardy in my area.

It’s easy to build a list of favorites, especially noting the ones native to your geographic region and climate. You can even find seed mixes for flowers that attract butterflies and hummingbirds.

Be sure to check your local library. More and more of them are letting you “check out” seeds for flowers, produce and plants native to your area.

Growing flowers to cut

Flowers that last well in indoor bouquets are often described with the words “cut flowers” or “cutting garden.” In some catalogs, they’re designated with an image of a pair of scissors or a vase.

Some seed companies sell “cut flower garden” packets containing seeds for a variety of flowers. Another way to discover long-lasting cut flower varieties is to visit a local flower shop or the website of an online florist.

There you can peruse bouquets and arrangements designed by professionals who know which blossoms have staying power.

For accurate information on gardening, I like to consult online educational articles from universities and extension offices.

Gardeners.com offers many tips for raising cut flowers. One tip is pick your flowers often which causes them to produce more.

They also advise on smaller spaces. You can start a successful cutting garden with up to 20 plants in just a 3 foot by 6 foot raised bed.

One publication I found, Maintaining a Succession of Cut Flowers, lists many varieties ideal for cutting. This year, I made a pledge to plant a colorful cutting garden each year — eye candy that will do my heart good!

garden flowers
garden flowers

Getting Ready to Grow Some Groceries

We are getting antsy to get our country gardens going. Though there’s still some snow in the forecast and spring won’t arrive for a few more weeks. We’ve been pacing out the garden area and getting ready to start some seeds indoors.

Last year was our first for our country gardens at our new place. Due to other urgent projects, we got a late start, but fortunately spring arrived late, too.

Since it was our “test drive” in a new climate zone, we started slowly with several different veggies and herbs grown in small scale. We experimented with rows, hills, and raised beds and tweaked our drip irrigation system.

Afterwards, we realized that dill and mustard are too tall to grow in our waist-high raised beds. Also, we couldn’t even dig up all our garlic—some was so firmly embedded in rocky soil.

 our garden
This is not our garden–just a photo I love!

We took note of what really grew well, what didn’t quite flourish, what worked and what didn’t.

Between our experience and conversations with neighbors, we learned what to generally expect during a shorter but warmer growing season than we’re accustomed to.

Expand and Grow More Varieties

This year, we’re ready to expand a bit more, grow a few more varieties, and plant more of everything. We’re still eating some frozen veggies and using dried herbs from last year but ran out of other things months ago.

This time, we want to grow enough for the full year. We like starting our plants from seed. Last year we were limited to four south-facing windowsills.

This year we attached lights to the underside of some closet shelves. We’ll be able to get quite a few seeds going.

It’s not too late to start! We’re planting the first seeds this week.

Cuke starts windowsills
Cuke starts windowsills

How about you? Will you be growing some food in your country gardens this year? We’d love to hear about your plans in the Comments.

Gardening in the Snow

Yes, I have been gardening in the snow. I’m not talking about checking the garlic plants under their deep white bed. And unfortunately, we didn’t get around to fixing up a cold frame and no longer have fall stragglers surviving in our raised garden bed.

Rasied Garden Beds
Rasied Garden Beds

The other day I was out in the snow sowing seeds! Last summer and fall, I collected seeds from several types of wildflowers growing on our property. I wanted to plant them in a few areas around our living area where our clearing and leveling had eradicated whatever was growing there before.

Only the lupines seemed to survive the turmoil of the soil.

I’d planned to plant the wildflower seeds in the fall, but our chickens were having such fun wandering around in the fall sunshine that I didn’t want to pen them up yet.

And I knew they’d eat any flower seeds they could find.

It’s kind of a good thing I didn’t sow seeds in the fall, because we had an unusually dry period between November and January.

Chickens and Roosters in the snow
Chickens and Roosters in the snow

Gardening with Heavy Snowfalls

Heavy snowfalls just didn’t come. Seeds would have been sitting on the ground in plain sight.I can pen up my chickens, but the wild birds are another story.

They would have scarfed up any seeds they found.

It seems like spring planting time is just around the corner.

But some of my seeds need to have a cold winter nap.

They actually benefit from several weeks of chilling.

This part of the dormancy phase, called stratification, can be artificially provided in a refrigerator or a cold building.

Gardening with snowfall
Gardening with snowfall

But when possible, I prefer to let nature do its job.

Where we live, it’s common to scatter hardy seeds before the first big snowstorm of the fall.

In a normal year, the seeds literally chill out under a layer of snow much of the winter.

As the snow melts, it carries the seeds down into the soil, moistening and softening the seed coats.

The seeds settle there and wait for spring thaws to wake them up.

As it turned out, this was not a normal winter.

But finally now in mid-January we are getting another wave of measurable snowfall.

So in between storms, I went out and raked snow away, scattered the seeds, and raked some snow back over them.

Sure enough, the next snowfall settled that layer down and nicely tucked the seeds in for a chilly snooze.

I can’t even tell there are seeds under there, can you?

I don’t think the chickens will, either!

Hopefully I’ll see green sprouts in the spring and a variety of wildflowers all summer.

If not, there’s always next year!

Celebrating Real Food!

You know, eating real food that’s real good for you.

According to the Food Day website

“Food Day’s goal is nothing less than to transform the American diet—to inspire a broad movement involving people from every corner of our land who want healthy, affordable food produced in a sustainable, humane way.

In other words, we want America to eat real.

We want to get Americans cooking real food for their families again.

We want fewer people at drive-through and bigger crowds at farmers markets.

Let’s celebrate fresh fruits, vegetables, and healthy whole grains—and to support the local farms and farmers that produce them.

Wouldn’t it be great for all Americans—regardless of their age or income or geographic location—to be able to select healthy diets and avoid obesity, heart disease, and other diet-related conditions?!”

In a similar vein, Slow Food USA recently launched a $5 challenge: create a SLOW FOOD meal for $5 or less, the cost of a FAST FOOD meal.

From www.slowfoodusa.org:

“The organization, a national non-profit working for good, clean and fair food for all, is encouraging people across the country to cook slow food that costs no more than five dollars per person.

Slow food – the opposite of fast food – is food that is good for those who eat it, good for farmers and workers, and good for the planet.

“Slow food shouldn’t have to cost more than fast food.

It’s time we take back the ‘Value Meal,’” said Josh Viertel, president of Slow Food USA.

Slow Food’s challenge and Food Day got me thinking of a further challenge: Create a slow food meal of local foods for $5 or less.

And then, an extended challenge: if we’ve raised our own meat and produce, how about creating a slow food meal of homegrown foods for $5 or less?

I’m up for the challenge! How about you?

Start by thinking about what you may have grown yourself and what’s available locally from neighbors, farmers’ markets, or savvy supermarkets that stock local products.

Be creative—how can you combine some of those products into a tasty and satisfying meal?

Granted, this might have been easier during the summer when many backyard gardens were producing fresh salad ingredients and farmers’ markets were at their prime.

But still there are stored or processed foods and fall-growing crops to help.

Here are some examples:

A soup or stew can be created with several different veggies.

Add a local source of protein—eggs, cheese, legumes, meat, poultry, or game—and you’ve got a complete meal.

Ditto with a main dish salad, especially if you’ve still got greens and other veggies growing.

If you are a fan of bread or rolls with every meal, one of the challenges might be finding local flour or grain to grind.

If you can’t think of a substitute and must have your bread, at least you can make most of your meal with local ingredients.

As I’m writing this, I’m planning a Food Day $5 homegrown slow food meal. My experimental patch of soup beans was not a stellar success, but I did manage to get enough beans for one pot of soup.

We had a good crop of potatoes and several other veggies and herbs.

To complement the beans’ protein I can also choose from eggs and meat from our own chickens.

Our New Strawberry Beds, Planted
Our New Strawberry Beds, Planted in August.

This is the first year I could ever say this, but from garlic and onions to chicken and beans, we can create a tasty hot meal using only ingredients from our backyard.

If I hadn’t raised enough myself, I could buy other locally grown products in my community.

If the local grocery stores all shut down, we’d still be able to eat some good meals.

That’s a good feeling!

Extended-season gardening information

  • Thinking about starting your plants early in the spring?
  • Want to make harvest last longer in the fall?
  • Wish you could pick fresh greens in the middle of winter?

Extended season gardening for Growing Fresh Vegetable in Fall and Winter

Many of these concepts and materials will also work in spring.

Gardening Books

The Year-Round Vegetable Gardener by Niki Jabbour

Four Season Harvest

The Winter Harvest Handbook

Gardening Articles

Sow Seeds for Fall Garden from National Garden Bureau at GRIT Magazine

Cold Frame Gardening at Kitchen Gardener Magazine

Top Tips for Great Fall Gardens by Vicki Mattern at Mother Earth News

Expert Advice for Greenhouse Growing by Harvey Ussery at Mother Earth News

Grow Your Own: Winter Lettuce and Microgreens

Natural Lawn Care Tips and Hacks

11 Herbs for Indoor Container Growing

Fall crop schedule and other tips

DIY Structures for your Country Gardens – plans, instructions

Extend Your Growing Season by Barbara Pleasant at Mother Earth News

How a Greenhouse Works

Use Low Tunnels to Grow Veggies in Winter: Quick Hoops by Eliot Coleman at Mother Earth News

Make an Easy, Inexpensive Mini-Greenhouse With Low Tunnels by Barbara Pleasant at Mother Earth News

Very clever, very simple cold frame from 5R Farm

Make a Cold Frame for Herbs (great cold frame info for veggies too) by Barbara Pleasant at The Herb Companion

Cold Frame Plans (wood) by Betsy Matheson Symanietz at Mother Earth News

A Cold Frame to Build (straw bales) by Paul Gardener at GRIT

Cold Frame Gardening at KitchenGardenerMagazine

Planning and Building a Greenhouse from Maryland and West Virginia Cooperative Extensions

The Benefits of Building a High Tunnel by George Devault at GRIT

Remember, country gardens are just that — filled with sprawling, brilliant flowers, fruits and vegetables. You can enjoy them all year long.

How to Store Food Long Term

Country Gardening

Unique Garden Decor Ideas Without Spending a Fortune

Garden Decor Ideas

Turning your terrace, patio or porch into a beautiful, relaxing, and fun place for your family and friends is personally rewarding.

A garden décor is great tool that can enhance the aesthetic qualities of your garden or backyard.

It’s time to rethink how you can make your backyard or garden the place to spend time alone or with people you love.

This article tells you how you can transform an ordinary area into something that will elicit “oohs” and “aahs” even if your budget is tight or have little space.

You need to have a theme for your garden’s overall look to make this makeover easier to accomplish.

Choose from the garden décor themes listed below based on what you already own.

Don’t think your area is too small because even a tiny space can look bigger with a few tricks.

And if you think you don’t have enough greenery to make it look like a garden that issue can be remedied, too.

All it takes is a little creativity, patience, and some new ideas.

Garden Decor Ideas

Here are 15 of the best outdoor themes you might want to consider:

Stick to a monochromatic theme by giving your garden a fresh, polished look sans the overkill.

You might already have essential pieces such as a wide beach or golf umbrella and wire-work stools and round table so that’s a plus.

Other future accessories will blend right in with a white/gray scheme.

A patio umbrella is an excellent visual addition to any garden.

If you have plenty of benches, now is the time to maximize their use.

Arrange them with a picnic table to play up a nautical theme such as blue hydrangeas in clear vases and fish motif on place mats and lines. Benches work well outdoors because they have no backs to obstruct the view.

You don’t need a complete makeover if you’re on a tight budget.

Weave splashes of fire engine red throughout your space with table linen, planters, red-based table lamps or ceramic vases for centerpiece.

Give outdoor space a tropical twist with colorful accents such as cushions in shades of fuchsia, tangerine, and lemon yellow.

Get table linen in stripes, florals, and ikat.

Have wide floor mats in hot pink and orange and, if your space has trees, and a draped canopy in a splash of any of those colors for balmy days.

If you love wicker furniture, use it to your advantage and create an intimate and cozy gathering space prepped for some evening entertainment.

Add a fire pit, a portable griller, a freestanding umbrella, and you have a barbecue-cum-poolside hang-out, even without the pool!

Do you live in a totally urban place where privacy is an issue?

Enclose your small backyard with a wooden fence a foot taller than usual.

Get shelves on the wall for outdoor cooking ingredients and condiments and set up essential stone furniture pieces such as stools.

If dining alfresco is your preference, choose furniture that is weather-resistant and a canopied “roof” that has sufficient sun coverage; you can take it down after sunset if you want to dine under the stars.

If you plan to have wood furniture, ensure that they have been water-proofed.

How about using that trunk in your attic as a coffee table for your garden, lawn or backyard?

Add some Chinese lanterns, a day bed, and some colorful potted plants and you’re all set for lounging in style in your outdoor space.

Small crates make good side tables for this lounging area as well.

One of the most important furniture pieces that can make or break your outdoor decoration is the sofa.

Choose a unique couch in rattan and transform it into a conversation piece with plush pillows.

Hang some festive-looking glass lanterns and throw in a few foot stools in bright-colored slipcovers.

You can convert any garden space into a casual area with smart seating options.

If you have a stone backyard, pepper it up with a few wire-work chairs in colors most people would find unconventional for garden furniture: purple, aquamarine, neon green, and sapphire.

No awning in your garden?

No problem.

Create yours with a simple fabric canopy in beige, camel or tan.

The key here is seating options like cushioned benches or stackable stools that your canopy can cover.

Create a garden under glass. Of course this setting will make you and guests huddle close, but that’s what it’s all about, right?

You want formality in dining but definitely without the fuss.

A reclaimed table in teak with low-backed wicker chairs will keep the setting relaxing.

Tabletop décor of lanterns made of chicken wire are not only cheap to buy or make but uniquely “cool.”

Use fragrant votives in the lanterns for awesome dining aroma.

Summer may be a long way off but you can make your lawn or patio look like summer with some lively details like bistro-style chairs in hot pink, a freestanding or golf umbrella, paper pom-pom lanterns in summer colors, and a huge jar with a circular wooden top for your dining table.

Having your morning coffee or afternoon lemonade outdoors is perfect when your garden has a “country living” theme.

Anything goes, actually, but pieces such as solid back wooden chairs, white lace-edged table linen, and blue flatware and cutlery translate to rustic cottage even when it is set up in a garden.

The avant garde in you can spice up your garden theme with chairs in different designs and colors without looking odd.

Just remember to have them all of them in one material like heavy metal, wire work, rattan or wood.

Interestingly-shaped chairs are all over flea markets and the internet.

Garden Decor Accents

Giving your garden your own personal touch makes all the difference between an ordinary yard, patio or lawn and a breathtaking spectacle.

Take the time to consider what accessories will make your garden a dreamscape.

Plants, vegetation, and flowers play a key role in giving your outdoor spot a classy finish.

Shade Plants: Our Favorite Shade-Loving Perennials

10 great garden décors to choose from:

Arbors: add elegance to your patio or garden entrance with an arbor.

You may not imagine it now, but garden arbors add some whimsy to any garden.

Trailing plants – honeysuckle, grape vines, and roses – can be strategically placed in a garden arbor.

Storage sheds: when you have that sense of style, a storage shed can easily blend with your garden scheme.

Create a flagstone path for a potting shed with wide-plank and peeled paint exteriors for rustic charm.

Sedum and other green succulents on a shed’s roof keep it cool, bright, and brighten any garden.

Statuary art: find your style and give your garden a sense of artistry with little gnomes, forest animals, and even gods and goddesses.

Statuary makes elegant accent pieces and gives your garden a classic touch.

Just make sure you don’t go overboard; you want a few pieces, not the whole Mt. Olympus community.

Water fountains or waterfalls: these are typically found indoors but why not think out of the box and give your garden the whole Zen appeal?

A water fountain or waterfall makes for an arresting focal point for any garden, including yours.

Get one with lights for quiet yet twinkling nights.

Bird feeders and bird baths: the available sizes, colors, and styles of bird feeders and bird baths is seemingly endless.

Choose your while from those with planters, in ornate metal, hand-sculpted, in brass finish, tube shape, with pedestals, in marble, and mosaic glass, among other popular choices.

Stone arrangements: although typical of a Zen garden, stones and pebbles can be ideal décor even in an outdoor setting sans the Japanese motif.

Lush vegetation and low-lying blooms look easy on the eyes with big and small polished flat stones used as steps. How to Grow Carrots

Container options: get clever with unusual plant containers!

Use old porcelain toilet cisterns as planters by concealing their past lives behind bamboo screens or other plants around their bases.

Colanders, baby bath tubs, crock pots, children’s wagons, old sinks, and even baby prams make terrific planters.

Gazing balls: these are yet another set of unusual décor items for a unique garden.

Gazing balls are multi-seasonal, add sparkle to the conventional greenery of a garden, and become the center of attraction for al fresco dining.

Make your own or scour the internet for great deals.

Garden stakes: give your outdoor place some interesting finds like garden stakes that require no other hardware; you just push them right into the ground.

Choose from a plethora of lawn art, pathway lights, flags, glass orbs, candle holders, outdoor shadow, weather vanes and metalwork, among other finds.

Go solar: help the environment and save money while you beautify your garden with solar lighting. eco-friendly Garden entertaining has never been more fun or eco-friendly than with solar tabletop lanterns, solar string lights, pathway lights, and garden wall lanterns, and lawn stakes, to name a few.

Outdoor Garden Decor

You can easily have an attractive, affordable outdoor garden on a shoestring budget (unless you want to replicate the one hanging in Babylon!).

The key factor is to have outdoor decor that is durable, inexpensive, sleek-looking, and blends well with your general garden motif.

Outdoor Garden Decor

If you are stumped on what to get, here are some ideas for great outdoor ideas using garden decor:

Create a patio in your garden with durable furniture pieces such as tiny chairs and small benches that take up little space.

Ditch the idea of a garden resembling that of Eden and “scatter” potted plants in your patio.

Have the planters in rich colorful hues to make greenery stand out.

Go for gravel.

10 Ways to Make Your Garden Look Beautiful

Crushed limestone is a great substitute for grass.

Get privacy with galvanized metal for your fence; it costs practically the same as a wood fence with a distinct advantage: metal will never rot.

Provide irrigation with an eco-friendly rainwater collection container to help your garden grow.

Do you want attractive landscaping but don’t want to spend loads of money for it?

Create your own! Install a “waterfall” or a water fountain.

Better yet, make your own fish pond and populate it with your favorite koi or construct a reflecting pool and surround it with colorful flowers.

Hopefully, these ideas will help you decorate your green garden beautifully or a Micro Garden on the cheap!

I have been using and reviewing a great resource The Home Book: A Complete Guide to Homeowner and Homebuilder Responsibilities, I’m finding this to be an authority guide on workmanship to Homeowners and Home builders alike.