southern living october 2015 article
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Southern Gardening Plants and Solutions for Outdoor LivingTRANSCRIPT
Snuth.e!m
GARDENING PLANTS AND SOLUTIONS FOR OUTDOOR LIVING
by KAYLEE HAMMONDS - photographs by ROGER FOLEY
'THE SECRET
VEGGIE GARDEN
OCTOBER 2015 I SOUTHERNLIVINC.COM I 55
Page: 2 I 4
GARDENING I DESIGN LESSONS
raditionally, we favor our flower gardens for their colorful beauty
and our vegetable beds for their bounty of edibles. But combining
both is something that garden designer, author, and television
personality P. Allen Smith wants you to know how to do.
"This idea of making the vegetable garden attractive, compel
ling, and very productive has always been extremely appealing
to me," he says. Those who have toured Smith's Moss Mountain
Farm in Roland, Arkansas, know that he designed it as a/erme
ornee, or ornamental farm, an idea that dates to 18th-century
England. It's not important, he says, that people be able to
replicate his entire I-acre garden but rather that they can pull
out some of his techniques as design inspiration to apply at their own homes. In that spirit, Smith
shares with us some of the principles and ideas that help keep his vegetable garden gorgeous-even
in the fall when beds typically start to look a little haggard.
56 I SOUTHERNLIVINC.COM I OCTOBER 2015
•EASYIDEA1
Buy your fairy-tale arbor at a feed store. Don't want to build an expensive
and complicated archway? Con
sider raiding a feed store or hard
ware store for inexpensive cattle
panels instead. Bend the panels
over a path, and stabilize with
simple stakes like the arbor above.
This simple solution provides a
structure for asparagus beans to
grow on and vines to climb. It also
creates a shaded walkway from
one side of the garden to the next.
<IEASYIDEA2
Punctuate your garden with colorful leaves. A patch of bright purple coleus
(visible here in the middle ground)
acts as an exclamation point in
a sea of green. It's mixed with a
casual ef fusion of vegetables and
flowers to create contrast in the
beds, while stately cedar tuteurs
add structure and formality.
"Diversity is important in gardening," says P. Allen Smith.
"I like to have a wide sampling of flowers, vegetables, and herbs."
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GARDENING DESIGN LESSONS
" EASY IDEA 3
Treat pumpkins as sculptures and stumps as pedestals. "Laying out a garden is a little bit like painting a picture," says Smith. "You want to have all of your paints in front of you before you start." Here, his "palette" consists of raised beds, pumpkins, and stumps, which combine prettily to create a tableau with multiple focal points. And the pathways between the beds converge into a single, dramatic burst of coleus in a simple wire urn. Creating several focal points ensures that no matter where you are in the garden, there's always something lovely to see.
58 I SOUTHERNLIVING.COM I OCTOBER 2015
VISIT THIS GARDEN!
To schedule a tour of P. Allen Smith's Arkansas farm,
J visit pallensmith.com.
<4 EASY IDEA 4
Hide your veggies amid pretty flowers. Marigolds and zinnias dot this fall garden with merry bursts of color and can camouflage less attractive plants. But many leafy vegetables (like kale, lettuce, and cabbage) and flowering herbs (like chives, fennel, and borage) are both pretty and delicious. So as you plan, remember: There is no "wrong side of the bed" in the garden. By all means, go for a wide variety of flowers, veggies, ai:id herbs.�
LEFT: Concrete chickens, handpainted by Smith, stand sentry over marigolds and peppers.
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