Easy Flowers for the Vegetable Garden

Why plant flowers in the vegetable garden? Flowering plants attract beneficial insects and birds, suppress invasive weeds, help prevent soil erosion, discourage unwanted insects from destroying crops, and improve the soil. Planting flowers among or alongside rows of vegetable plants can be mutually beneficial. However, flowers with large, showy blooms aren't always best; so a gardener should concentrate on what benefits each plant brings to the garden.

 So what are some easy flowers to grow that will improve your vegetable garden?

 

flower garden paintings
flower garden paintings


pink clover is one of the easiest flowers to grow in the garden, and one of the most beneficial. In addition to attracting bees and other pollinators, clover improves the soil in a variety of ways. Since clover recovers quickly from foot traffic, it can be planted directly on walkways. This helps to prevent soil erosion while saving the planting beds for vegetables and other plants.

 

Clover's taproot, which can grow three feet long or longer, helps to loosen the soil and bring nutrients to the surface that would otherwise remain unused. All varieties of clover are legumes, meaning that they take nitrogen gas from the air and convert it into a nitrogen compound that is easily used by plants. Once the clover dies, it releases the nitrogen into the ground for the benefit of surrounding plants.

 

sunflower sunflowers attract a wide range of beneficial insects, as well as birds; which use the tall stalks as perches while hunting for cabbage worms, various caterpillars, and other pests. One caution, however: Many varieties of sunflowers grown for flower arrangements do not produce pollen because pollen will stain. Without pollen, these specially bred flowers do not attract beneficial insects. Make sure the variety you plant produces pollen.

 

chivesMost flower gardeners would turn up their collective noses at the flowers produced by onions and garlic, as they are generally small, plain, and do not produce a sweet scent. However, all alliums, including onions, garlic, and chives, have a pungent odor that seems to deter all but the most determined deer and rabbits. Therefore, including members of the allium family in a vegetable garden can help to protect it from the predations of these larger animals.

 

pink zinniaDaisies are hardy perennials that are easy to grow in almost any soil. They attract pollinators such as bees, butterflies, and moths, and add color to the garden. In addition, calendula can be used as a "trap crop" by attracting aphids away from vegetable plants. Zinnias are annuals and can add a wonderful burst of color; pollinators love them, too.

Marigolds

flower garden paintings

 

marigolds are very easy to grow and come in a wide range of yellows, oranges, and even reds. They're even great companion plants to keep pests away from such vegetables as basil, cucumbers, eggplant, kale, squash, and tomatoes and potatoes. They act as insect deterrents which is a great benefit when planted next to cucumbers and other squash-related veggies.

 

dandelionYou may think me daft for bringing up dandelions as a suitable flower for the vegetable garden. But, hear me out... Although you may consider dandelions to be nothing more than noxious weeds, they are actually good for the garden.

Like clover, their long taproots bring calcium and other minerals from deep in the soil to the surface, making these nutrients available for nearby plants with shallower root systems. Since dandelions grow wild nearly everywhere, planting and cultivating is not required. Just make sure to pick off the flower heads before they go to seed!

 

Adding flowers to your vegetable garden is a simple, often beautiful way to increase your crop yield. So go ahead and mix flowers with your veggies. You'll be glad you did.

Let's Talk About Flower Gardens.

 

Annuals and perennials can work very well together in the same flower garden.

 

The picture that first comes to many people when the word "garden" is mentioned as an arrangement of brilliantly colorful flowers, varying in types, textures, sizes, and habits of growth, but so placed and cared for as to give maximum pleasure to all the senses that a garden delights.

 

But garden effects can be created in many ways. There are formal and informal gardens in which additional effects are contributed by flowering shrubs, evergreens, trees, or vines. Such gardens can be extensive or limited, close to one's house, or at a distance.

A flower garden can be a small, intimate grouping of flowering plants, perhaps planned to enhance a special piece of sculpture. It can be open so that neighbors and passersby can enjoy its beauty, or it can be a private retreat screened from the public by fences, walls, or shrubs.

 

In the main, flower gardens are made up of 3 groups of flowering plants: perennials, annuals, and bulbs and tubers. A perennial has roots that live over from year to year, usually sending forth new growth above ground in the spring. Some perennials live longer than others: the peony is an example of a perennial that will outlast generations. Others, like the temperamental delphinium, have short lives.

 

An annual plant - the petunia is a popular example - lasts only for a season, growing from seed in the spring, flowering in the summer, and dying in the fall. In mild climates, and over mild winters in colder areas, some annuals, like the snapdragon, behave in perennial fashion, their roots surviving, with the result that the second-year plants are even bushier and more bountiful in their flower production.

mixed snapdragons

 

Depending on the climate snapdragons can be a short-lived perennial. Image Wikimedia commons.

 

In between perennials and annuals is a lesser group of plants (in terms of numbers) called biennials that are grown from seed. They last for two years, making roots and above-ground leafy growth the first season. The second-year they produce flowers, then gradually die. Common favorites among the biennials are pansies, hollyhocks, and foxgloves.

Again, though, one can't be too rigid in classifying their growth patterns - like snapdragon, they may be more perennial inhabit under certain circumstances: some biennials may live a year or so beyond their expected 2-year growth cycle.

 

Once you have an understanding of the various classes of plants that make up a flower garden you can logically proceed to the next step - deciding what kind of flower garden you want.

 

Planning the Perennial Border Garden

When we think of a garden, our visual image is fairly certain to center around an English flower border composed of perennial plants laid out in great drifts of flowing color, relieved by masses of white lilies and accented with towering spires of blue. It expresses the beauty of form and color that every real lover of flowers tries to create to the best of his ability and resources.

Other Kinds of Gardens

 

A variation of the all-perennial border or garden is the mixed border. This type of garden includes many basic perennials such as daylily and phlox, but in addition utilizes groups of annuals and biennials, and perhaps some of the spring-flowering bulbs like tulips and hyacinths. Its advantages over the all-perennial garden are flexibility of design, greater masses of color over a longer season, and often lower cost and easier maintenance.

 

flower garden paintings
flower garden paintings



The third type of flower garden may be one composed entirely of annual plants. These can be arranged in artistic groups to make the best visual impact possible, or they can be grown in practical rows, to serve mostly as a source of cut flowers.

 

Of course styles of gardens change as do fashions in the architecture of the houses they surround. And cultural patterns and economic factors affect the types of gardens in vogue. Smaller properties and the demand for low maintenance (proper maintenance is the great lack of most American gardens when they are compared with their foreign counterparts) have resulted in the fourth type of flower garden.

It involves the use of a few plants or as many as you wish, annuals or perennials or both, in a variety of ways and situations, depending on where you think your property can be enhanced by their addition. This kind of the garden so prevalent over the entire nation today might be described as an 'accent garden'.

 

A beautiful perennial border set against a wood fence. Some annual petunias are also used here to good effect. Even though the birch trees are now on the small side, they may be too big one day. Image from The Garden Guru.

 

Wherever and however flowers are used, they stand out as color accents in the overall landscape. You are aware of this kind of garden everywhere: it may be a small bed of petunia plants nestled against shrubbery in a shopping mall. It may be one or three daylily plants that a friend has set against an ancient boulder that existed long before her ranch-style house was built.

Or it may be a narrow border of sweet alyssum along your neighbor's front walk or around her flagstone patio. Its great merits are flexibility and simplicity, and such a kind of flower gardening is suitable to any property.

 

But in all these gardens, the basic principles of growing the flowers, and the kinds that can be used, are much the same.

 

Now let's return to that first grand picture of a flower garden - the all-perennial or mixed border, the epitome of the flower garden today, yesterday, and tomorrow.

 

Start with a plan on paper drawn to a large scale so notes may be made directly on the plan. Ideally, the border should be at least 5 to 8 feet deep.

 

The ideal site is close to the house; preferably it should face south or south-west (in the northern hemisphere), but this is not of great consequence if it has sun and is several feet from the robbing roots of trees or shrubbery. Keep the border at least 2 to 3 feet away from any large tree.

 

In addition to a hedge, a good background may be a rough-textured wall, a view of distant trees or shrubbery, or a low fence covered with climbing roses. Above all, there should be surrounding relief, and nothing sets off the border better than a stretch of lawn.

It is better to have a smaller border than to deprive it of the grass setting. Free-form, "island" beds (roughly kidney or crescent-shaped) may fit into the landscape scheme. They are most often planted with shrubs, but there is no reason why perennials and annuals can't be used. If such beds are used, plant the high-growing plants toward the center, then the medium-sized ones and the edging plants on the sides.

 

Selection of Plants

The selection of plants for the flower border may seem like a weighty problem, but it is really one of the most pleasant aspects of garden planning. Studying the plant lists and looking up the descriptions of plants will help you. Use nursery catalogs and reference books found in garden centers, horticultural societies, and your public libraries.

 

10 points to guide you in the selection of plant material:


  1. Length of life of the plant. Is it annual, biennial, or perennial?
  2. Height and lateral spread of breadth.
  3. Growing habit: prostrate, erect, or climbing.
  4. Time and length of the flowering period.
  5. Color of flowers and foliage; persistence of foliage and decorative effect.
  6. Moisture, soil, and plant food requirements.
  7. Sun or shade-loving?
  8. Hardiness is a given region.
  9. Does the plant spread freely?
  10. Susceptibility to disease and insects.



In planning the material for an all-season, mixed border, select key plants for line, mass, color, and dependability. Try to avoid stiffness caused by too regular an arrangement. Do not place the plant groups in regular lines, like rows of cabbages, but in sections that are wider than they are deep. This gives each group a chance to be seen to a good advantage from the front of the border.

 

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