designing with vegetables - the oakville horticultural society

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Page 1: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Designing with

Vegetables

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

bull 900 hectares in total

bull 5 formal garden areas with 40 plant collections (Lilac Roses Iris Lilies Daffodils)

bull 810 hectares of natural lands with 27km of trails

Funded by the Ministry of the Environment

Go Green Fund

Opened at the Laking Garden

in July 2009

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This project has received funding support from the Government of Ontario Such support

does not indicate endorsement by the Government of Ontario of the contents of this material

Staples

Garden

Gardensrsquo Cafeacute

Kitchen Garden

9 Demonstration

Vegetable Plots

amp

Interpretive Zone

where visitors are

encouraged to take the

veg pledge

Iwe pledge to use

locally grown

produce in at least

one meal a week for

a year to help reduce

myour carbon

footprint

Edible Weekends ndash 2011

Vs

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

bullLine

bullBalance

bullTexture

bullColour

bullRepetition

bullVariety

bullFlow

bullSeasonality

bullSight lines ndash focal

points

bullArchitecture

Map it

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box 10rsquo

12rsquo

Make it easy use graph paper

Measure your yard

Decide what size each

square will represent

ndash only limiting factor

is the size of the page

My garden is 120 square feet

= 1 square foot

So my drawing is 10 squares

by 12 squares

(that was an easy one)

20rsquo

80rsquo

This space is 1600 square feet

= 2x2 = 4 square feet

So my drawing is 10 squares by

40 squares

If I divide the

longest dimension

by 1 do I have

enough squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2

That will work

30rsquo

150rsquo

This space is 4500 square feet

= 5x5 = 25 square feet

So my drawing is 6 squares by 30

squares

If I divide the longest

dimension by 1 do I

have enough

squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2 No

what about if I divide

it by 3 No What if

I divide by 5

That will work

10rsquo

12rsquo

Must Haversquoshellip

Identify SunShade ndash you will need more sun than

shade for vegetables

Make it functional ndash you will need to get in there to

weed and harvest

Veggies need good soil and lots of waterndash can you d

Would be nicehellip

bullCreate vistas and focal points ndash from inside and out

bullStyle - Parterre Linear Curves

Now that you

have your

garden beds ndash

letrsquos figure

out what

veggies we

are going to

put in them

Think about your

tummy first

2012

Vegetables bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

In a utilitarian vegetable

garden you would decide

how many tomato plants

will yield an amount of

tomatoes you can handle

and plant that many

In a stylized vegetable

planting you need to do it

backyardshellipthink about

style the yield is an after

thought

The recommend spacing

may not always provide you

with the aesthetic you want

This is especially true when

you are designing

containers

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

Colour

Repetition

Flow- Sight lines ndash

focal points

Variety

Seasonality

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 2: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

bull 900 hectares in total

bull 5 formal garden areas with 40 plant collections (Lilac Roses Iris Lilies Daffodils)

bull 810 hectares of natural lands with 27km of trails

Funded by the Ministry of the Environment

Go Green Fund

Opened at the Laking Garden

in July 2009

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This project has received funding support from the Government of Ontario Such support

does not indicate endorsement by the Government of Ontario of the contents of this material

Staples

Garden

Gardensrsquo Cafeacute

Kitchen Garden

9 Demonstration

Vegetable Plots

amp

Interpretive Zone

where visitors are

encouraged to take the

veg pledge

Iwe pledge to use

locally grown

produce in at least

one meal a week for

a year to help reduce

myour carbon

footprint

Edible Weekends ndash 2011

Vs

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

bullLine

bullBalance

bullTexture

bullColour

bullRepetition

bullVariety

bullFlow

bullSeasonality

bullSight lines ndash focal

points

bullArchitecture

Map it

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box 10rsquo

12rsquo

Make it easy use graph paper

Measure your yard

Decide what size each

square will represent

ndash only limiting factor

is the size of the page

My garden is 120 square feet

= 1 square foot

So my drawing is 10 squares

by 12 squares

(that was an easy one)

20rsquo

80rsquo

This space is 1600 square feet

= 2x2 = 4 square feet

So my drawing is 10 squares by

40 squares

If I divide the

longest dimension

by 1 do I have

enough squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2

That will work

30rsquo

150rsquo

This space is 4500 square feet

= 5x5 = 25 square feet

So my drawing is 6 squares by 30

squares

If I divide the longest

dimension by 1 do I

have enough

squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2 No

what about if I divide

it by 3 No What if

I divide by 5

That will work

10rsquo

12rsquo

Must Haversquoshellip

Identify SunShade ndash you will need more sun than

shade for vegetables

Make it functional ndash you will need to get in there to

weed and harvest

Veggies need good soil and lots of waterndash can you d

Would be nicehellip

bullCreate vistas and focal points ndash from inside and out

bullStyle - Parterre Linear Curves

Now that you

have your

garden beds ndash

letrsquos figure

out what

veggies we

are going to

put in them

Think about your

tummy first

2012

Vegetables bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

In a utilitarian vegetable

garden you would decide

how many tomato plants

will yield an amount of

tomatoes you can handle

and plant that many

In a stylized vegetable

planting you need to do it

backyardshellipthink about

style the yield is an after

thought

The recommend spacing

may not always provide you

with the aesthetic you want

This is especially true when

you are designing

containers

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

Colour

Repetition

Flow- Sight lines ndash

focal points

Variety

Seasonality

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 3: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Funded by the Ministry of the Environment

Go Green Fund

Opened at the Laking Garden

in July 2009

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This project has received funding support from the Government of Ontario Such support

does not indicate endorsement by the Government of Ontario of the contents of this material

Staples

Garden

Gardensrsquo Cafeacute

Kitchen Garden

9 Demonstration

Vegetable Plots

amp

Interpretive Zone

where visitors are

encouraged to take the

veg pledge

Iwe pledge to use

locally grown

produce in at least

one meal a week for

a year to help reduce

myour carbon

footprint

Edible Weekends ndash 2011

Vs

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

bullLine

bullBalance

bullTexture

bullColour

bullRepetition

bullVariety

bullFlow

bullSeasonality

bullSight lines ndash focal

points

bullArchitecture

Map it

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box 10rsquo

12rsquo

Make it easy use graph paper

Measure your yard

Decide what size each

square will represent

ndash only limiting factor

is the size of the page

My garden is 120 square feet

= 1 square foot

So my drawing is 10 squares

by 12 squares

(that was an easy one)

20rsquo

80rsquo

This space is 1600 square feet

= 2x2 = 4 square feet

So my drawing is 10 squares by

40 squares

If I divide the

longest dimension

by 1 do I have

enough squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2

That will work

30rsquo

150rsquo

This space is 4500 square feet

= 5x5 = 25 square feet

So my drawing is 6 squares by 30

squares

If I divide the longest

dimension by 1 do I

have enough

squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2 No

what about if I divide

it by 3 No What if

I divide by 5

That will work

10rsquo

12rsquo

Must Haversquoshellip

Identify SunShade ndash you will need more sun than

shade for vegetables

Make it functional ndash you will need to get in there to

weed and harvest

Veggies need good soil and lots of waterndash can you d

Would be nicehellip

bullCreate vistas and focal points ndash from inside and out

bullStyle - Parterre Linear Curves

Now that you

have your

garden beds ndash

letrsquos figure

out what

veggies we

are going to

put in them

Think about your

tummy first

2012

Vegetables bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

In a utilitarian vegetable

garden you would decide

how many tomato plants

will yield an amount of

tomatoes you can handle

and plant that many

In a stylized vegetable

planting you need to do it

backyardshellipthink about

style the yield is an after

thought

The recommend spacing

may not always provide you

with the aesthetic you want

This is especially true when

you are designing

containers

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

Colour

Repetition

Flow- Sight lines ndash

focal points

Variety

Seasonality

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 4: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This project has received funding support from the Government of Ontario Such support

does not indicate endorsement by the Government of Ontario of the contents of this material

Staples

Garden

Gardensrsquo Cafeacute

Kitchen Garden

9 Demonstration

Vegetable Plots

amp

Interpretive Zone

where visitors are

encouraged to take the

veg pledge

Iwe pledge to use

locally grown

produce in at least

one meal a week for

a year to help reduce

myour carbon

footprint

Edible Weekends ndash 2011

Vs

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

bullLine

bullBalance

bullTexture

bullColour

bullRepetition

bullVariety

bullFlow

bullSeasonality

bullSight lines ndash focal

points

bullArchitecture

Map it

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box 10rsquo

12rsquo

Make it easy use graph paper

Measure your yard

Decide what size each

square will represent

ndash only limiting factor

is the size of the page

My garden is 120 square feet

= 1 square foot

So my drawing is 10 squares

by 12 squares

(that was an easy one)

20rsquo

80rsquo

This space is 1600 square feet

= 2x2 = 4 square feet

So my drawing is 10 squares by

40 squares

If I divide the

longest dimension

by 1 do I have

enough squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2

That will work

30rsquo

150rsquo

This space is 4500 square feet

= 5x5 = 25 square feet

So my drawing is 6 squares by 30

squares

If I divide the longest

dimension by 1 do I

have enough

squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2 No

what about if I divide

it by 3 No What if

I divide by 5

That will work

10rsquo

12rsquo

Must Haversquoshellip

Identify SunShade ndash you will need more sun than

shade for vegetables

Make it functional ndash you will need to get in there to

weed and harvest

Veggies need good soil and lots of waterndash can you d

Would be nicehellip

bullCreate vistas and focal points ndash from inside and out

bullStyle - Parterre Linear Curves

Now that you

have your

garden beds ndash

letrsquos figure

out what

veggies we

are going to

put in them

Think about your

tummy first

2012

Vegetables bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

In a utilitarian vegetable

garden you would decide

how many tomato plants

will yield an amount of

tomatoes you can handle

and plant that many

In a stylized vegetable

planting you need to do it

backyardshellipthink about

style the yield is an after

thought

The recommend spacing

may not always provide you

with the aesthetic you want

This is especially true when

you are designing

containers

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

Colour

Repetition

Flow- Sight lines ndash

focal points

Variety

Seasonality

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 5: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Staples

Garden

Gardensrsquo Cafeacute

Kitchen Garden

9 Demonstration

Vegetable Plots

amp

Interpretive Zone

where visitors are

encouraged to take the

veg pledge

Iwe pledge to use

locally grown

produce in at least

one meal a week for

a year to help reduce

myour carbon

footprint

Edible Weekends ndash 2011

Vs

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

bullLine

bullBalance

bullTexture

bullColour

bullRepetition

bullVariety

bullFlow

bullSeasonality

bullSight lines ndash focal

points

bullArchitecture

Map it

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box 10rsquo

12rsquo

Make it easy use graph paper

Measure your yard

Decide what size each

square will represent

ndash only limiting factor

is the size of the page

My garden is 120 square feet

= 1 square foot

So my drawing is 10 squares

by 12 squares

(that was an easy one)

20rsquo

80rsquo

This space is 1600 square feet

= 2x2 = 4 square feet

So my drawing is 10 squares by

40 squares

If I divide the

longest dimension

by 1 do I have

enough squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2

That will work

30rsquo

150rsquo

This space is 4500 square feet

= 5x5 = 25 square feet

So my drawing is 6 squares by 30

squares

If I divide the longest

dimension by 1 do I

have enough

squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2 No

what about if I divide

it by 3 No What if

I divide by 5

That will work

10rsquo

12rsquo

Must Haversquoshellip

Identify SunShade ndash you will need more sun than

shade for vegetables

Make it functional ndash you will need to get in there to

weed and harvest

Veggies need good soil and lots of waterndash can you d

Would be nicehellip

bullCreate vistas and focal points ndash from inside and out

bullStyle - Parterre Linear Curves

Now that you

have your

garden beds ndash

letrsquos figure

out what

veggies we

are going to

put in them

Think about your

tummy first

2012

Vegetables bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

In a utilitarian vegetable

garden you would decide

how many tomato plants

will yield an amount of

tomatoes you can handle

and plant that many

In a stylized vegetable

planting you need to do it

backyardshellipthink about

style the yield is an after

thought

The recommend spacing

may not always provide you

with the aesthetic you want

This is especially true when

you are designing

containers

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

Colour

Repetition

Flow- Sight lines ndash

focal points

Variety

Seasonality

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 6: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Edible Weekends ndash 2011

Vs

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

bullLine

bullBalance

bullTexture

bullColour

bullRepetition

bullVariety

bullFlow

bullSeasonality

bullSight lines ndash focal

points

bullArchitecture

Map it

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box 10rsquo

12rsquo

Make it easy use graph paper

Measure your yard

Decide what size each

square will represent

ndash only limiting factor

is the size of the page

My garden is 120 square feet

= 1 square foot

So my drawing is 10 squares

by 12 squares

(that was an easy one)

20rsquo

80rsquo

This space is 1600 square feet

= 2x2 = 4 square feet

So my drawing is 10 squares by

40 squares

If I divide the

longest dimension

by 1 do I have

enough squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2

That will work

30rsquo

150rsquo

This space is 4500 square feet

= 5x5 = 25 square feet

So my drawing is 6 squares by 30

squares

If I divide the longest

dimension by 1 do I

have enough

squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2 No

what about if I divide

it by 3 No What if

I divide by 5

That will work

10rsquo

12rsquo

Must Haversquoshellip

Identify SunShade ndash you will need more sun than

shade for vegetables

Make it functional ndash you will need to get in there to

weed and harvest

Veggies need good soil and lots of waterndash can you d

Would be nicehellip

bullCreate vistas and focal points ndash from inside and out

bullStyle - Parterre Linear Curves

Now that you

have your

garden beds ndash

letrsquos figure

out what

veggies we

are going to

put in them

Think about your

tummy first

2012

Vegetables bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

In a utilitarian vegetable

garden you would decide

how many tomato plants

will yield an amount of

tomatoes you can handle

and plant that many

In a stylized vegetable

planting you need to do it

backyardshellipthink about

style the yield is an after

thought

The recommend spacing

may not always provide you

with the aesthetic you want

This is especially true when

you are designing

containers

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

Colour

Repetition

Flow- Sight lines ndash

focal points

Variety

Seasonality

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 7: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Vs

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

bullLine

bullBalance

bullTexture

bullColour

bullRepetition

bullVariety

bullFlow

bullSeasonality

bullSight lines ndash focal

points

bullArchitecture

Map it

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box 10rsquo

12rsquo

Make it easy use graph paper

Measure your yard

Decide what size each

square will represent

ndash only limiting factor

is the size of the page

My garden is 120 square feet

= 1 square foot

So my drawing is 10 squares

by 12 squares

(that was an easy one)

20rsquo

80rsquo

This space is 1600 square feet

= 2x2 = 4 square feet

So my drawing is 10 squares by

40 squares

If I divide the

longest dimension

by 1 do I have

enough squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2

That will work

30rsquo

150rsquo

This space is 4500 square feet

= 5x5 = 25 square feet

So my drawing is 6 squares by 30

squares

If I divide the longest

dimension by 1 do I

have enough

squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2 No

what about if I divide

it by 3 No What if

I divide by 5

That will work

10rsquo

12rsquo

Must Haversquoshellip

Identify SunShade ndash you will need more sun than

shade for vegetables

Make it functional ndash you will need to get in there to

weed and harvest

Veggies need good soil and lots of waterndash can you d

Would be nicehellip

bullCreate vistas and focal points ndash from inside and out

bullStyle - Parterre Linear Curves

Now that you

have your

garden beds ndash

letrsquos figure

out what

veggies we

are going to

put in them

Think about your

tummy first

2012

Vegetables bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

In a utilitarian vegetable

garden you would decide

how many tomato plants

will yield an amount of

tomatoes you can handle

and plant that many

In a stylized vegetable

planting you need to do it

backyardshellipthink about

style the yield is an after

thought

The recommend spacing

may not always provide you

with the aesthetic you want

This is especially true when

you are designing

containers

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

Colour

Repetition

Flow- Sight lines ndash

focal points

Variety

Seasonality

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 8: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

bullLine

bullBalance

bullTexture

bullColour

bullRepetition

bullVariety

bullFlow

bullSeasonality

bullSight lines ndash focal

points

bullArchitecture

Map it

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box 10rsquo

12rsquo

Make it easy use graph paper

Measure your yard

Decide what size each

square will represent

ndash only limiting factor

is the size of the page

My garden is 120 square feet

= 1 square foot

So my drawing is 10 squares

by 12 squares

(that was an easy one)

20rsquo

80rsquo

This space is 1600 square feet

= 2x2 = 4 square feet

So my drawing is 10 squares by

40 squares

If I divide the

longest dimension

by 1 do I have

enough squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2

That will work

30rsquo

150rsquo

This space is 4500 square feet

= 5x5 = 25 square feet

So my drawing is 6 squares by 30

squares

If I divide the longest

dimension by 1 do I

have enough

squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2 No

what about if I divide

it by 3 No What if

I divide by 5

That will work

10rsquo

12rsquo

Must Haversquoshellip

Identify SunShade ndash you will need more sun than

shade for vegetables

Make it functional ndash you will need to get in there to

weed and harvest

Veggies need good soil and lots of waterndash can you d

Would be nicehellip

bullCreate vistas and focal points ndash from inside and out

bullStyle - Parterre Linear Curves

Now that you

have your

garden beds ndash

letrsquos figure

out what

veggies we

are going to

put in them

Think about your

tummy first

2012

Vegetables bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

In a utilitarian vegetable

garden you would decide

how many tomato plants

will yield an amount of

tomatoes you can handle

and plant that many

In a stylized vegetable

planting you need to do it

backyardshellipthink about

style the yield is an after

thought

The recommend spacing

may not always provide you

with the aesthetic you want

This is especially true when

you are designing

containers

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

Colour

Repetition

Flow- Sight lines ndash

focal points

Variety

Seasonality

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 9: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Map it

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box 10rsquo

12rsquo

Make it easy use graph paper

Measure your yard

Decide what size each

square will represent

ndash only limiting factor

is the size of the page

My garden is 120 square feet

= 1 square foot

So my drawing is 10 squares

by 12 squares

(that was an easy one)

20rsquo

80rsquo

This space is 1600 square feet

= 2x2 = 4 square feet

So my drawing is 10 squares by

40 squares

If I divide the

longest dimension

by 1 do I have

enough squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2

That will work

30rsquo

150rsquo

This space is 4500 square feet

= 5x5 = 25 square feet

So my drawing is 6 squares by 30

squares

If I divide the longest

dimension by 1 do I

have enough

squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2 No

what about if I divide

it by 3 No What if

I divide by 5

That will work

10rsquo

12rsquo

Must Haversquoshellip

Identify SunShade ndash you will need more sun than

shade for vegetables

Make it functional ndash you will need to get in there to

weed and harvest

Veggies need good soil and lots of waterndash can you d

Would be nicehellip

bullCreate vistas and focal points ndash from inside and out

bullStyle - Parterre Linear Curves

Now that you

have your

garden beds ndash

letrsquos figure

out what

veggies we

are going to

put in them

Think about your

tummy first

2012

Vegetables bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

In a utilitarian vegetable

garden you would decide

how many tomato plants

will yield an amount of

tomatoes you can handle

and plant that many

In a stylized vegetable

planting you need to do it

backyardshellipthink about

style the yield is an after

thought

The recommend spacing

may not always provide you

with the aesthetic you want

This is especially true when

you are designing

containers

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

Colour

Repetition

Flow- Sight lines ndash

focal points

Variety

Seasonality

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 10: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box 10rsquo

12rsquo

Make it easy use graph paper

Measure your yard

Decide what size each

square will represent

ndash only limiting factor

is the size of the page

My garden is 120 square feet

= 1 square foot

So my drawing is 10 squares

by 12 squares

(that was an easy one)

20rsquo

80rsquo

This space is 1600 square feet

= 2x2 = 4 square feet

So my drawing is 10 squares by

40 squares

If I divide the

longest dimension

by 1 do I have

enough squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2

That will work

30rsquo

150rsquo

This space is 4500 square feet

= 5x5 = 25 square feet

So my drawing is 6 squares by 30

squares

If I divide the longest

dimension by 1 do I

have enough

squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2 No

what about if I divide

it by 3 No What if

I divide by 5

That will work

10rsquo

12rsquo

Must Haversquoshellip

Identify SunShade ndash you will need more sun than

shade for vegetables

Make it functional ndash you will need to get in there to

weed and harvest

Veggies need good soil and lots of waterndash can you d

Would be nicehellip

bullCreate vistas and focal points ndash from inside and out

bullStyle - Parterre Linear Curves

Now that you

have your

garden beds ndash

letrsquos figure

out what

veggies we

are going to

put in them

Think about your

tummy first

2012

Vegetables bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

In a utilitarian vegetable

garden you would decide

how many tomato plants

will yield an amount of

tomatoes you can handle

and plant that many

In a stylized vegetable

planting you need to do it

backyardshellipthink about

style the yield is an after

thought

The recommend spacing

may not always provide you

with the aesthetic you want

This is especially true when

you are designing

containers

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

Colour

Repetition

Flow- Sight lines ndash

focal points

Variety

Seasonality

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 11: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

20rsquo

80rsquo

This space is 1600 square feet

= 2x2 = 4 square feet

So my drawing is 10 squares by

40 squares

If I divide the

longest dimension

by 1 do I have

enough squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2

That will work

30rsquo

150rsquo

This space is 4500 square feet

= 5x5 = 25 square feet

So my drawing is 6 squares by 30

squares

If I divide the longest

dimension by 1 do I

have enough

squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2 No

what about if I divide

it by 3 No What if

I divide by 5

That will work

10rsquo

12rsquo

Must Haversquoshellip

Identify SunShade ndash you will need more sun than

shade for vegetables

Make it functional ndash you will need to get in there to

weed and harvest

Veggies need good soil and lots of waterndash can you d

Would be nicehellip

bullCreate vistas and focal points ndash from inside and out

bullStyle - Parterre Linear Curves

Now that you

have your

garden beds ndash

letrsquos figure

out what

veggies we

are going to

put in them

Think about your

tummy first

2012

Vegetables bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

In a utilitarian vegetable

garden you would decide

how many tomato plants

will yield an amount of

tomatoes you can handle

and plant that many

In a stylized vegetable

planting you need to do it

backyardshellipthink about

style the yield is an after

thought

The recommend spacing

may not always provide you

with the aesthetic you want

This is especially true when

you are designing

containers

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

Colour

Repetition

Flow- Sight lines ndash

focal points

Variety

Seasonality

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 12: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

30rsquo

150rsquo

This space is 4500 square feet

= 5x5 = 25 square feet

So my drawing is 6 squares by 30

squares

If I divide the longest

dimension by 1 do I

have enough

squares

No what about if I

divide it by 2 No

what about if I divide

it by 3 No What if

I divide by 5

That will work

10rsquo

12rsquo

Must Haversquoshellip

Identify SunShade ndash you will need more sun than

shade for vegetables

Make it functional ndash you will need to get in there to

weed and harvest

Veggies need good soil and lots of waterndash can you d

Would be nicehellip

bullCreate vistas and focal points ndash from inside and out

bullStyle - Parterre Linear Curves

Now that you

have your

garden beds ndash

letrsquos figure

out what

veggies we

are going to

put in them

Think about your

tummy first

2012

Vegetables bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

In a utilitarian vegetable

garden you would decide

how many tomato plants

will yield an amount of

tomatoes you can handle

and plant that many

In a stylized vegetable

planting you need to do it

backyardshellipthink about

style the yield is an after

thought

The recommend spacing

may not always provide you

with the aesthetic you want

This is especially true when

you are designing

containers

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

Colour

Repetition

Flow- Sight lines ndash

focal points

Variety

Seasonality

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 13: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

10rsquo

12rsquo

Must Haversquoshellip

Identify SunShade ndash you will need more sun than

shade for vegetables

Make it functional ndash you will need to get in there to

weed and harvest

Veggies need good soil and lots of waterndash can you d

Would be nicehellip

bullCreate vistas and focal points ndash from inside and out

bullStyle - Parterre Linear Curves

Now that you

have your

garden beds ndash

letrsquos figure

out what

veggies we

are going to

put in them

Think about your

tummy first

2012

Vegetables bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

In a utilitarian vegetable

garden you would decide

how many tomato plants

will yield an amount of

tomatoes you can handle

and plant that many

In a stylized vegetable

planting you need to do it

backyardshellipthink about

style the yield is an after

thought

The recommend spacing

may not always provide you

with the aesthetic you want

This is especially true when

you are designing

containers

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

Colour

Repetition

Flow- Sight lines ndash

focal points

Variety

Seasonality

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 14: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Must Haversquoshellip

Identify SunShade ndash you will need more sun than

shade for vegetables

Make it functional ndash you will need to get in there to

weed and harvest

Veggies need good soil and lots of waterndash can you d

Would be nicehellip

bullCreate vistas and focal points ndash from inside and out

bullStyle - Parterre Linear Curves

Now that you

have your

garden beds ndash

letrsquos figure

out what

veggies we

are going to

put in them

Think about your

tummy first

2012

Vegetables bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

In a utilitarian vegetable

garden you would decide

how many tomato plants

will yield an amount of

tomatoes you can handle

and plant that many

In a stylized vegetable

planting you need to do it

backyardshellipthink about

style the yield is an after

thought

The recommend spacing

may not always provide you

with the aesthetic you want

This is especially true when

you are designing

containers

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

Colour

Repetition

Flow- Sight lines ndash

focal points

Variety

Seasonality

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 15: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Now that you

have your

garden beds ndash

letrsquos figure

out what

veggies we

are going to

put in them

Think about your

tummy first

2012

Vegetables bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

In a utilitarian vegetable

garden you would decide

how many tomato plants

will yield an amount of

tomatoes you can handle

and plant that many

In a stylized vegetable

planting you need to do it

backyardshellipthink about

style the yield is an after

thought

The recommend spacing

may not always provide you

with the aesthetic you want

This is especially true when

you are designing

containers

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

Colour

Repetition

Flow- Sight lines ndash

focal points

Variety

Seasonality

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 16: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Think about your

tummy first

2012

Vegetables bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

In a utilitarian vegetable

garden you would decide

how many tomato plants

will yield an amount of

tomatoes you can handle

and plant that many

In a stylized vegetable

planting you need to do it

backyardshellipthink about

style the yield is an after

thought

The recommend spacing

may not always provide you

with the aesthetic you want

This is especially true when

you are designing

containers

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

Colour

Repetition

Flow- Sight lines ndash

focal points

Variety

Seasonality

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 17: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

2012

Vegetables bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

In a utilitarian vegetable

garden you would decide

how many tomato plants

will yield an amount of

tomatoes you can handle

and plant that many

In a stylized vegetable

planting you need to do it

backyardshellipthink about

style the yield is an after

thought

The recommend spacing

may not always provide you

with the aesthetic you want

This is especially true when

you are designing

containers

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

Colour

Repetition

Flow- Sight lines ndash

focal points

Variety

Seasonality

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 18: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

In a utilitarian vegetable

garden you would decide

how many tomato plants

will yield an amount of

tomatoes you can handle

and plant that many

In a stylized vegetable

planting you need to do it

backyardshellipthink about

style the yield is an after

thought

The recommend spacing

may not always provide you

with the aesthetic you want

This is especially true when

you are designing

containers

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

Colour

Repetition

Flow- Sight lines ndash

focal points

Variety

Seasonality

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 19: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

The recommend spacing

may not always provide you

with the aesthetic you want

This is especially true when

you are designing

containers

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

Colour

Repetition

Flow- Sight lines ndash

focal points

Variety

Seasonality

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 20: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

Colour

Repetition

Flow- Sight lines ndash

focal points

Variety

Seasonality

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 21: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Lettuce

lsquoSangriarsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Zucchini

lsquoEight Ballrsquo

Lettuce

lsquoAnnapolisrsquo

Okra

lsquoLittle

Lucyrsquo

Summer

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

Fuzzy

Cucumber

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 22: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Can be achieved with plants pathways

layout or structures

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 23: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

bullMake sure the

pathways lead to a

logical place

bullCreate a surprise of

two

bullFocal points can be

plants containers art

structure etc

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 24: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Early season crops

-lettuce radishes asparagus rhubarb spinach

Mid season crops

-beets cabbage peas beans eggplant peppers potatoes tomatoes

Late season crops

-tomatoes squash cucumbers corn carrots turnips melons broccoli

cauliflower

Long Season VegetablesHerbs

Herbs ndash basil rosemary oregano thyme parsley cilantro

Kale chard

Succession Sowing

Lettuce radishes spinach kohlrabi

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 25: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

bullCompanion planting

bullCrop rotation

bullHeritage Varieties

bullYear round harvest

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 26: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Planting complimentary plants can help boost

grow and minimize pests

Basil helps tomatoes with insects and disease an

boosts growth and flavor

Broccoli does better when planted with Rosemary

or other aromatic herbs

Cabbage benefits from Celery

A few radishes in a cucumber hill can deter

cucumber beetles

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 27: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Why is this important

bull Confuse pests

bull Different plants take different things from the soil

bull Rotation between different families of plants works well as different families have different feeding habits and susceptibilities

Isnrsquot that for

famers

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 28: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Heavy Feeders

broccoli Brussels sprouts cabbage cauliflower celeriac celery chard cucumber endive kohlrabi leek

lettuce spinach squash corn

Soil Improvers

broad beans lima beans bush and pole beans peas

Light Feeders

beet carrot radish rutabaga turnip

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 29: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

High yield

Suited to mechanical harvesting

Fertilizer response

Withstand chemical pest and disease control

Shipping qualities

Open pollinated (able to produce seed)

Wide variety of choices

Many varieties with better tasteflavour

Aesthetic value (green tomatoes blue potatoes)

Preserve our heritage and culture

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 30: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

lsquoLittle

Greenrsquo

lsquoListada

De

Gandiarsquo

lsquoHanselrsquo

lsquoFairytalersquo

lsquoGretelrsquo

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 31: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

lsquoOriole

Orangersquo

lsquoBright

Lightsrsquo

lsquoSilverado

rsquo

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 32: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

lsquoCarmenrsquo

lsquoCajun

Bellersquo

lsquoPurple

Starrsquo

lsquoOrange

Blazersquo

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 33: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

lsquoChocolate

Habanerorsquo

lsquoWhite

Habanerorsquo

lsquoLemon

Yellow

Habanerorsquo

lsquoCaribbean

Redrsquo

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 34: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

lsquoMedusarsquo

lsquoCalypso

Red

Yellow

Orangersquo

lsquoBlack

Pearlrsquo

lsquoPurple

Flashrsquo

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 35: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

lsquoVeronicarsquo

lsquoCheddarrsquo

lsquoGraffitirsquo

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 36: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Basil

lsquoSpicy

Globersquo

amplsquoRed

Rufflesrsquo

Basil

lsquoBoxwoodrsquo

Basil

lsquoSiam

Queenrsquo

Basil

lsquoPesto Perpetuorsquo

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 37: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Pumpkin

lsquoJamboreersquo

Squash

lsquoCream of

the Croprsquo Squash

lsquoLunarrsquo

Squash

lsquoBush

Delicatarsquo

Squash

lsquoPapaya

Pearrsquo

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 38: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

lsquoBig Beefrsquo

lsquoHusky

Goldrsquo

lsquoJersey

Giantrsquo

lsquoGreen

Zebrarsquo

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 39: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Kale

lsquoStarborrsquo

Kale

lsquoGlamour

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoRedborrsquo Kale

lsquoRussian

Redrsquo Kale

lsquoNero Di

Toscanarsquo

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 40: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Line

Texture

Architecture Height

= 1 square foot

2012

Vegetables

bullTomatoes

bullKale

bullCucumbers

bullZucchini

bullRadishes

bullLettuce

bullPeppers

bullSwiss Chard

bullBeans

bullPeas

Colour

Repetition

Variety

Seasonality

Flow- Sight lines ndash focal points

Companion planting

Crop rotation

Heritage Varieties

Year round harvest

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 41: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 42: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Subhead

Body text

You can change the colour of this background box

RBG colour pallette is provided in the Colours dialogue

box

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 43: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

This fine Italian pepper was grown each year

by Giuseppe and Angella Nardiello at their

garden in the village of Ruoti in Southern

Italy In 1887 they set sail with their one-

year-old daughter Anna for a new life in the

USA When they reached these shores they

settled and gardened in Naugatuck

Connecticut and grew this same pepper

that was named for their fourth son Jimmy

This long thin-skinned frying pepper dries

easily and has such a rich flavor that this

variety has been placed in The Ark of

Taste by the Slow Food organization

Ripens a deep red is very prolific and does

well in most areas

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 44: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

bullWilliam Dam Seeds

bullBaker Creek

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullStokes

bullJVK

bullBall Horticultural

bullThe Cottage Gardener

bullTerra Edibles

Seedy Saturdays

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 45: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Parterre Garden

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 46: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Potager

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 47: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Parterre

Garden -

Scotland

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 48: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Martha

Stewarts

Herb

Garden at

NYBG

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 49: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Chicago

Botanical

Garden

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 50: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Atlanta Botanical

Garden

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 51: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Veggie Village ndash Urban Edibles

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 52: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Veggie

Village ndash

Global

Garden

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 53: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Veggie Village ndash

Daversquos Herbal

Delight

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 54: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Veggie Village ndash

On the balcony

with Emma

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening

Page 55: Designing with Vegetables - the Oakville Horticultural Society

Thanks for

listening

Happy

Vegetable

Gardening