Results 1 to 4 of 4
  1. #1

    Thoughts on Non-Traditional Kitchen Garden?

    Greetings from Springfield, Mo. I'm a life long vegetable gardener who stumbled into taking over a public vegetable demonstration garden where the produce is donated to a local food bank called the Ozarks Food Harvest.

    I invite you to visit our garden via this video and would love to hear your thoughts... NatGreeneVeg Spring 2009

  2. #2
    Quote Originally Posted by Wandalin Ivo View Post
    The kitchen garden may serve as the central feature of an ornamental, all-season landscape, or it may be little more than a humble vegetable plot. It is a source of herbs, vegetables, fruits, and flowers, but it is often also a structured garden space with a design based on repetitive geometric patterns.
    I appreciate your response, but it is clear to me that only the title of the topic was read, not the post.
    Last edited by NatGreeneVeg; 11-26-2009 at 02:37 AM.

  3. #3
    This is because the author is a SEO link spammer. They get paid to provide SEO links on forums to give that merchant a better ranking in the search engines. FYI, ALL NO VALUE LINKS WILL BE DELETED AND MEMBERSHIP REMOVED. :)

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    uk
    Posts
    12
    Hello

    The traditional layout for kitchen gardens was established many hundreds of years ago. Called the “four-square” design, it is based on the intersection of two major paths within a symmetrical, enclosed area; in the days before irrigation it usually included a central well or spring.Many of the early examples of this traditional kitchen garden layout were monastic gardens, and while there were perhaps religious and symbolic reasons for the creation of this form, over the centuries its inherent efficiency has gained it a place in the secular world as well.Vegetables (and fruits and flowers and herbs) were grown in raised beds marked out by the permanent paths. The four equal-sized plots that resulted made crop rotation and planning easy. The diversity of the plantings not only made balanced demands on the soil, but preserved the natural balance of the garden’s animal life-small mammals, insects, amphibians, and birds-an important factor in keeping pest problems under control. American kitchen gardens have, on the whole, been much less formal. From the beginnings of colonization there has been less emphasis on strict training of the plants, but the efficiency and utility of the class four-square layout has been largely preserved. Americans have adapted, and should continue to adapt, this traditional design to the particulars of their lives and their land.

    Thanks for reading




Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •