Recent adventures in semiurban agriculture
One of the main things that caught our attention when we first saw our current house was its backyard. Originally, at least, it would all be for Kooper: he could run to his heart’s content, playing and chasing squirrels and whatnot. Of course, nothing ever works out according to the original plan, and before long I had sketched out designs for a vegetable garden, an herb garden, an apple tree guild, and miscellaneous plantings around the front, back, and sides of the house.
Once spring started to arrive, once I built the raised bed for the vegetables, and once we cleared out some of those atrocious landscaping rocks (six inches deep, seriously) and concrete slabs (??), I was able to start planting. So here’s what I have growing. Most of these started from seed; I’ve marked the ones that didn’t with asterisks.
In the vegetable garden:
- pumpkins
- carrots
- nasturtium, planted here to deter pests
- beans
- red onions
- cucumbers
- leaf lettuce
- parsnips
- marigolds, planted here to deter pests
- bell peppers
- butternut squash
- watermelon
- tomatoes*
- zucchini
In the herb garden:
- lavender*
- hyssop
- yarrow
- lemon balm
- rosemary*
- tansy
- holy basil
- chamomile
- creeping thyme*
In the apple tree guilds, which were originally going to be one big one but which worked out better as two nearby smaller ones:
- a McIntosh apple tree sapling*
- a Golden Delicious apple tree sapling*
- borage
- comfrey*
- garlic*
- daffodil*
- primrose*
Elsewhere:
- ornamental poppies in a box near the garage. These aren’t the opium kind, in case you were wondering, but they are similar.
- variegated vinca* in the very back of the yard. I need a good part-shade ground cover there to keep the dog from digging. So far it kinda works.
- St. John’s wort* and Lewis flax near the downspout. Both should absorb a lot of the runoff that’d otherwise sink into the ground near the foundation.
- red clover, crimson clover, California poppies, and Flanders poppies in some otherwise-unused boxes on the side of the backyard and on the side of the house. This is temporary (a “cover crop”, if you will). The clover is leguminous and will add nitrogen to the soil for future plantings, and the poppies will look pretty among the clover.
- nasturtium in some wide, shallow pots along the driveway
- holly* and sweet woodruff* next to the front porch. The holly will grow into a windbreak; during the winter the north winds were intense near the door, so an extra screen nearby will help. The woodruff will choke out weeds beneath the holly while smelling AMAZING (seriously, find some and smell it).
- dianthus* and sempervivum near the back steps
As we clear out some more of that frakking ornamental rock, we’ll be planting more. I have some creeping phlox ready to go in once there’s space, and there’s been talk of replacing the grass in the front yard with something less mower-intensive (Roman chamomile, perhaps). In the meantime, though, I have to keep plucking up maple seedlings (one neighbor has a very… fertile… tree) and making sure the dog stays out of the different plots.
Working on pics now. In the meantime, I can explain plants, plant choices, et al.; just ask.

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How is the harvesting going?