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Kitchen garden

The traditional kitchen garden, vegetable garden, also known as a potager (from the French jardin potager) or in Scotland a kailyaird,[1] is a space separate from the rest of the residential garden – the ornamental plants and lawn areas. It is used for growing edible plants and often some medicinal plants, especially historically. The plants are grown for domestic use; though some seasonal surpluses are given away or sold, a commercial operation growing a variety of vegetables is more commonly termed a market garden (or a farm). The kitchen garden is different not only in its history, but also its functional design. It differs from an allotment in that a kitchen garden is on private land attached or very close to the dwelling. It is regarded as essential that the kitchen garden could be quickly accessed by the cook.

Typical potager (French intensive gardening) with its traditional scarecrow in the French countryside
Walled 17th-century kitchen garden at Ham House near London, with orangery in the distance.
An herbal garden at Beernem, Belgium

Historically, most small country gardens were probably mainly or entirely used as kitchen gardens, but in large country houses the kitchen garden was a segregated area, normally rectangular and enclosed by a wall or hedge, walls being useful for training fruit trees as well as offering shelter from wind.[2] Such large examples very often included greenhouses and furnace-heated hothouses for more tender delicacies, and also flowers for display in the house; an orangery was the ultimate type. In large houses, the kitchen garden was typically placed diagonally to the rear and side of the house, not impeding the views from the front and rear facades, but still quick to access. In some cases, hardy flowers for cutting were grown outside there, rather than in the flower garden. A large country house hardly expected to buy any vegetables, herbs or fruit, and the surplus was often distributed as presents; the walled example at Croome Court in England covers seven acres,[3] and the gardens have a large "Temple Greenhouse", an orangery in the form of a Roman Temple.

A symbol of American self-sufficiency and the colonial homestead, practical kitchen gardens were the center of home life in early America. In Europe, especially Britain, the difficulties in food supply during World War II resulted in a huge, if temporary, upsurge in growing vegetables in small gardens, with much encouragement from the government Ministry of Food. In modern gardening, there has been interest in integrating the growing of food plants within a mainly ornamental garden; fruit trees and cooking herbs are the simplest and most popular expression of this.[4]

Visibility edit

 
Part of the potager du roi at Versailles, with steps for mounting the wall at bottom right.
 
In Gera, a baroque orangery forms the western end of the Küchengarten (kitchen garden), which is the local pleasure garden.

In large country house gardens, the walls also served to hide the kitchen garden, as "a place of base labour ... from the more polite areas", which included the often very extensive fruit gardens and orchards.[5] The gardeners were often, depending on the season, the number of guests, and the whim of the owner, expected to keep out of the main "best garden" during the fairly predictable parts of the day when the family and guests were likely to be walking in the garden, and the kitchen garden provided somewhere for them to occupy themselves at these times. Mostly, visitors were probably not expected to venture inside without leave. But some owners, from Louis XIV downwards, liked to show guests the kitchen garden, especially if they knew they had an interest. In the gardens of Versailles, the enormous potager area, not contiguous with the main gardens, had a wall that was thick enough for visitors to accompany the king in walking along the top for a better view, as on castle battlements.[6]

History edit

The French doctor and printer, Charles Estienne, wrote in detail about the 16th century kitchen garden in Maison Rustique; his book was largely compiled from classical authors. This practical garden was to be separated from the pleasure gardens, enclosed by a thick hedge or wall. Estienne viewed hedges as more resilient, cost effective and were easier to repair and maintain, but at least in later periods, walls seem to have been more usual; some were hot walls, with a central cavity gently heated by furnaces. Certainly walls leave more traces behind for the garden archaeologist. The hedge, Estienne says, can be planted with red and white gooseberry bushes, medlar and olive trees, woodbine, whitethorn, wild apples, brambles, and eglantiness. Lattices were woven from willow branches and every year renewed, unless made with juniper poles that had been reinforced with charred oak.

In the Middle Ages, the kitchen garden was often a separate enclosure some way away from the main house. The Covent Garden area of London got its name as the kitchen garden for Westminster Abbey, though some distance from the abbey itself. In Renaissance times, the kitchen garden was rather close to the house, but by the mid-17th-century many were being moved further away, with a service road leading to the main house.[7] At Versailles a public road needs to be crossed to reach it.

In the UK, by the 19th century, as the breeding of vegetable cultivars greatly increased, a plethora of magazines, societies and competitions in local or county fairs, supported what had become (and remains) a popular form of specialist gardening. Some gardeners concentrated on mere size, leading to monstrous (and largely tasteless) strains of vegetables such as leeks. The new allotments, small pieces of a plot of land made available by local councils or charities, often specified that only edible plants were to be grown.[8]

Plants edit

 
Companion planting of carrots and onions

According to Estienne, of the planted crops, turnips required the most room, and planted next to these were coleworts, and a path leading to plots of sorrel, arugula, parsley, spinach, beets, and orach, then separated from the greens another path to the root vegetables, leeks, onions, garlic, carrots, and scallions, and so on for edible flowers and winter potherbs like thyme, sage, lavender, rosemary, hyssop, southern wormwood, savoury, lemon balm, basil, costmary, spikenard, chamomile, and pennyroyal.

Marigolds could grow perennially in untilled fields, and their juice and flowers were reputed to have many benefits from soothing eye irritation to relieving tooth pain. Strawberry juice and wine were rumored to have similar benefits for the eyes, and, according to Estienne, the berries themselves had "no neede of greate toile or tilling". Modern researchers continue to study whether reduced tillage improves weed control and yield for strawberry plants.[9]

Other plants found in the kitchen garden: asparagus, artichoke, sow thistle, endive, chicory, watercress, scallions, chives, parsnips, purslane, smallage, tarragon, borage, bugloss, radishes, rapeseed, skirret, poppy, mustard, cucumbers and gourds.

Citrus and melons could be part of the kitchen garden also, if the conditions of soil and climate were such as to support their growth.

Modern potager garden edit

 
At the Château de Villandry, France, the old formal flower beds have been turned over in recent decades entirely to vegetables, giving a striking, if untypical, scene.

In some modern gardens, edible plants and especially herbs are planted alongside ornamental plants. Fruit trees are one of the most common ways of doing this.[4] The goal is to make the function of providing food aesthetically pleasing.

Plants are chosen as much for their functionality as for their color and form.[10] Many are trained to grow upward. A well-designed potager can provide food as well as cut flowers and herbs for the home with very little maintenance.[4] Potagers can disguise their function of providing for a home in a wide array of forms—from the cottage garden to the formality of a knot garden.

The owner of one of the Loire chateaux in France, the Château de Villandry decided many decades ago, to recreate a French formal garden with an elaborate geometrical scheme of beds surrounded by low hedges, but planted with kitchen garden plants (more recently the garden has been extended, the new areas mostly not planted with vegetables). This striking scheme has been highly effective in turning the gardens into a tourist attraction, but is in no way historically authentic.

Vegetable garden edit

 
A small vegetable garden in May outside Austin, Texas
 
Borage is commonly grown in herb gardens; its flowers can be used as a garnish
 
Cowbridge Physic Garden, Wales
 
Green lettuce in a kitchen garden on stilts in Laos

A vegetable garden (also known as a vegetable patch or vegetable plot) is a garden that exists to grow vegetables and other plants useful for human consumption,[11][12] in contrast to a flower garden that exists for aesthetic purposes. It is a small-scale form of vegetable growing. A vegetable garden typically includes a compost heap, and several plots or divided areas of land, intended to grow one or two types of plant in each plot. Plots may also be divided into rows with an assortment of vegetables grown in the different rows. It is usually located to the rear of a property in the back garden or back yard.[11] About a third of adults in the UK and America grow food in private or community kitchen or vegetable gardens.[13][14] In World War II, many people had a "victory garden" which provided food and thus freed resources for the war effort.[15]

With worsening economic conditions and increased interest in organic and sustainable living, many people are turning to vegetable gardening as a supplement to their family's diet. Food grown in the back yard consumes little if any fuel for shipping or maintenance, and the grower can be sure of what exactly was used to grow it.

The beneficial effects on the sustainability of food as well as in reducing greenhouse gas emissions related to agriculture by growing one’s own food (for example, growing food locally reduces food miles, the distance food travels, and therefore reduces the greenhouse gas emissions associated with that travel[16]) can be increased through social contagion, the process through which behaviour, emotions, or conditions spread spontaneously through a group or network. A 2019 study found evidence that the spread of vegetable gardens in urban space displays was the result of neighbors seeing vegetable gardens near them and deciding to grow their own.[17] Once enough people in a network have been influenced to grow their own vegetables, the community can reach a tipping point, in which a majority of people transition to a new habit; a 2018 study published in Nature claims that with only 25 per cent of a population adopting a behavioral change, a minority perspective was able to overturn the majority.[18]

Organic horticulture, or organic gardening, has become increasingly popular for the modern home gardener.[19]

Herb garden edit

The herb garden is often a separate space in the garden, devoted to growing a specific group of plants known as herbs. These gardens may be informal patches of plants, or they may be carefully designed, even to the point of arranging and clipping the plants to form specific patterns, as in a knot garden.

Herb gardens may be purely functional or they may include a blend of functional and ornamental plants. The herbs are usually used to flavour food in cooking, though they may also be used in other ways, such as discouraging pests, providing pleasant scents, or serving medicinal purposes (such as a physic garden), among others.

A kitchen garden can be created by planting different herbs in pots or containers, with the added benefit of mobility. Although not all herbs thrive in pots or containers, some herbs do better than others. Mint, a fragrant yet invasive herb, is an example of an herb that is advisable to keep in a container or it will take over the whole garden.[20][21][22]

Some surviving walled kitchen gardens edit

These are open to the public.[23]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Scots "kailyaird" or "kailyard", means a small cabbage patch (see kale) or kitchen garden, usually adjacent to a cottage.--Cuddon, J. A. (1977) A Dictionary of Literary Terms. London: André Deutsch; p. 343.
  2. ^ "Flower garden - History of Early American Landscape Design". heald.nga.gov. Retrieved September 22, 2023.
  3. ^ BBC News (August 23, 2014), Croome Court Georgian walled garden opens for first time, BBC
  4. ^ a b c Titmarsh, Alan (January 26, 2014). "Grow your veggies in style! How to create a kitchen garden". The Express. Retrieved May 9, 2017.
  5. ^ Jacques, David, Gardens of Court and Country: English Design 1630-1730, p. 62, 2017, Yale University Press, ISBN 9780300222012
  6. ^ Mukerji, Chandra, Territorial ambitions and the gardens of Versailles, pp. 64-65, 1997, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 9780521599597, 0521599598, google books
  7. ^ Uglow, 234
  8. ^ Uglow, 193-199, and see index
  9. ^ McDermott, Laura. "Optimizing Strawberry Production With A Reduced Tillage System" (PDF). Cornell University Cooperative Extension.
  10. ^ Hendry, Ann Marie. "How to Design a Potager Garden". growveg.co.uk. Retrieved May 9, 2017.
  11. ^ a b Komar, Stephen (May 7, 2017). . New Jersey Herald. njherald.com. Archived from the original on May 7, 2017. Retrieved May 9, 2017.
  12. ^ "Planning a vegetable garden". rhs.org.uk. Retrieved May 9, 2017.
  13. ^ "'Rising numbers' growing own food". BBC News. May 17, 2012.
  14. ^ . Farmer Foodshare. Archived from the original on July 28, 2020. Retrieved March 20, 2019.
  15. ^ Pack, Charles Lathrop (1919). War Gardens Victorious. J. B. Lippincott. p. 15.
  16. ^ Li, Mengyu (June 20, 2022). "Global food-miles account for nearly 20% of total food-systems emissions". Nature Food. 3 (6): 445–453. doi:10.1038/s43016-022-00531-w. Retrieved February 21, 2024.
  17. ^ Shur-Ofry, Michal; Malcai, Ofer (June 17, 2019). "Collective action and social contagion: Community gardens as a case study". Regulation and Governance. 15 (1): 63–81. doi:10.1111/rego.12256. Retrieved February 17, 2024.
  18. ^ Centola, Damon; Becker, Joshua; Brackbill, Devon (June 8, 2018). "Experimental evidence for tipping points in social convention". Science. 360 (6393): 1116–1119. doi:10.1126/science.aas8827. PMID 29880688. Retrieved February 17, 2024.
  19. ^ Buckland, Toby (May 6, 2016). "The beginner's guide to starting a veg garden". The Telegraph. Retrieved May 9, 2017.
  20. ^ "Gardening Design". Neta Design. May 24, 2020.
  21. ^ "Mint and the Home Vegetable Garden". VegetableGardenHub.com. Retrieved May 19, 2012.
  22. ^ "Gardening Guide". Sunday, March 15, 2020
  23. ^ National Trust, "Top kitchen gardens"

References edit

Further reading edit

  • Bartley, Jennifer R. (2006). Designing the New Kitchen Garden: An American Potager Handbook. Portland: Timber Press. ISBN 978-0-88192-772-6.
  • Davies, Jennifer (1987). The Victorian Kitchen Garden. London: BBC Books. ISBN 978-0-563-20442-8.
  • M. D. (1901) "Formation of the Fruit and Kitchen Garden", in: Thompson, Robert The Gardener's Assistant; new edition, revised ... under the direction and general editorship of William Watson. Vol. IV, pp. 1–32. London: Gresham Publishing Company.
  • Giles, Dorothy (1926). The Little Kitchen Garden. Boston: Little, Brown & Co.
  • Shewell-Cooper, W. E. (1947) The A.B.C. of Vegetable Gardening London: English Universities Press (first published 1937).
  • Wilson, C. A. (ed.) (1998). The Country House Kitchen Garden 1600–1950: How Produce Was Grown and How it Was Used. Sutton Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7509-1423-9.

External links edit

  • Urban Leaf: A useful knowledge base for aspiring gardeners with a lot of information about getting started
  • Kitchen Gardeners International: A nonprofit group promoting kitchen gardens worldwide
  • Walled Kitchen Gardens Network
  • Kitchen Gardens, Science Tracer Bullet, Library of Congress
  • The History of Kitchen Gardens in America, Cornell University, Mann Library
  • Herb Society of America
  • National Herb Garden February 22, 2018, at the Wayback Machine, United States National Arboretum
  • , University of Washington, USA

kitchen, garden, kailyard, redirects, here, grouping, scottish, literature, kailyard, school, potager, redirects, here, racehorse, potager, horse, soup, chef, brigade, cuisine, traditional, kitchen, garden, vegetable, garden, also, known, potager, from, french. Kailyard redirects here For the grouping of Scottish literature see Kailyard school Potager redirects here For the racehorse see Potager horse For a soup chef see Brigade de cuisine The traditional kitchen garden vegetable garden also known as a potager from the French jardin potager or in Scotland a kailyaird 1 is a space separate from the rest of the residential garden the ornamental plants and lawn areas It is used for growing edible plants and often some medicinal plants especially historically The plants are grown for domestic use though some seasonal surpluses are given away or sold a commercial operation growing a variety of vegetables is more commonly termed a market garden or a farm The kitchen garden is different not only in its history but also its functional design It differs from an allotment in that a kitchen garden is on private land attached or very close to the dwelling It is regarded as essential that the kitchen garden could be quickly accessed by the cook Typical potager French intensive gardening with its traditional scarecrow in the French countryside Walled 17th century kitchen garden at Ham House near London with orangery in the distance An herbal garden at Beernem Belgium Historically most small country gardens were probably mainly or entirely used as kitchen gardens but in large country houses the kitchen garden was a segregated area normally rectangular and enclosed by a wall or hedge walls being useful for training fruit trees as well as offering shelter from wind 2 Such large examples very often included greenhouses and furnace heated hothouses for more tender delicacies and also flowers for display in the house an orangery was the ultimate type In large houses the kitchen garden was typically placed diagonally to the rear and side of the house not impeding the views from the front and rear facades but still quick to access In some cases hardy flowers for cutting were grown outside there rather than in the flower garden A large country house hardly expected to buy any vegetables herbs or fruit and the surplus was often distributed as presents the walled example at Croome Court in England covers seven acres 3 and the gardens have a large Temple Greenhouse an orangery in the form of a Roman Temple A symbol of American self sufficiency and the colonial homestead practical kitchen gardens were the center of home life in early America In Europe especially Britain the difficulties in food supply during World War II resulted in a huge if temporary upsurge in growing vegetables in small gardens with much encouragement from the government Ministry of Food In modern gardening there has been interest in integrating the growing of food plants within a mainly ornamental garden fruit trees and cooking herbs are the simplest and most popular expression of this 4 Contents 1 Visibility 2 History 3 Plants 3 1 Modern potager garden 4 Vegetable garden 5 Herb garden 6 Some surviving walled kitchen gardens 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksVisibility edit nbsp Part of the potager du roi at Versailles with steps for mounting the wall at bottom right nbsp In Gera a baroque orangery forms the western end of the Kuchengarten kitchen garden which is the local pleasure garden In large country house gardens the walls also served to hide the kitchen garden as a place of base labour from the more polite areas which included the often very extensive fruit gardens and orchards 5 The gardeners were often depending on the season the number of guests and the whim of the owner expected to keep out of the main best garden during the fairly predictable parts of the day when the family and guests were likely to be walking in the garden and the kitchen garden provided somewhere for them to occupy themselves at these times Mostly visitors were probably not expected to venture inside without leave But some owners from Louis XIV downwards liked to show guests the kitchen garden especially if they knew they had an interest In the gardens of Versailles the enormous potager area not contiguous with the main gardens had a wall that was thick enough for visitors to accompany the king in walking along the top for a better view as on castle battlements 6 History editThe French doctor and printer Charles Estienne wrote in detail about the 16th century kitchen garden in Maison Rustique his book was largely compiled from classical authors This practical garden was to be separated from the pleasure gardens enclosed by a thick hedge or wall Estienne viewed hedges as more resilient cost effective and were easier to repair and maintain but at least in later periods walls seem to have been more usual some were hot walls with a central cavity gently heated by furnaces Certainly walls leave more traces behind for the garden archaeologist The hedge Estienne says can be planted with red and white gooseberry bushes medlar and olive trees woodbine whitethorn wild apples brambles and eglantiness Lattices were woven from willow branches and every year renewed unless made with juniper poles that had been reinforced with charred oak In the Middle Ages the kitchen garden was often a separate enclosure some way away from the main house The Covent Garden area of London got its name as the kitchen garden for Westminster Abbey though some distance from the abbey itself In Renaissance times the kitchen garden was rather close to the house but by the mid 17th century many were being moved further away with a service road leading to the main house 7 At Versailles a public road needs to be crossed to reach it In the UK by the 19th century as the breeding of vegetable cultivars greatly increased a plethora of magazines societies and competitions in local or county fairs supported what had become and remains a popular form of specialist gardening Some gardeners concentrated on mere size leading to monstrous and largely tasteless strains of vegetables such as leeks The new allotments small pieces of a plot of land made available by local councils or charities often specified that only edible plants were to be grown 8 Plants edit nbsp Companion planting of carrots and onions According to Estienne of the planted crops turnips required the most room and planted next to these were coleworts and a path leading to plots of sorrel arugula parsley spinach beets and orach then separated from the greens another path to the root vegetables leeks onions garlic carrots and scallions and so on for edible flowers and winter potherbs like thyme sage lavender rosemary hyssop southern wormwood savoury lemon balm basil costmary spikenard chamomile and pennyroyal Marigolds could grow perennially in untilled fields and their juice and flowers were reputed to have many benefits from soothing eye irritation to relieving tooth pain Strawberry juice and wine were rumored to have similar benefits for the eyes and according to Estienne the berries themselves had no neede of greate toile or tilling Modern researchers continue to study whether reduced tillage improves weed control and yield for strawberry plants 9 Other plants found in the kitchen garden asparagus artichoke sow thistle endive chicory watercress scallions chives parsnips purslane smallage tarragon borage bugloss radishes rapeseed skirret poppy mustard cucumbers and gourds Citrus and melons could be part of the kitchen garden also if the conditions of soil and climate were such as to support their growth Modern potager garden edit nbsp At the Chateau de Villandry France the old formal flower beds have been turned over in recent decades entirely to vegetables giving a striking if untypical scene In some modern gardens edible plants and especially herbs are planted alongside ornamental plants Fruit trees are one of the most common ways of doing this 4 The goal is to make the function of providing food aesthetically pleasing Plants are chosen as much for their functionality as for their color and form 10 Many are trained to grow upward A well designed potager can provide food as well as cut flowers and herbs for the home with very little maintenance 4 Potagers can disguise their function of providing for a home in a wide array of forms from the cottage garden to the formality of a knot garden The owner of one of the Loire chateaux in France the Chateau de Villandry decided many decades ago to recreate a French formal garden with an elaborate geometrical scheme of beds surrounded by low hedges but planted with kitchen garden plants more recently the garden has been extended the new areas mostly not planted with vegetables This striking scheme has been highly effective in turning the gardens into a tourist attraction but is in no way historically authentic Vegetable garden edit nbsp A small vegetable garden in May outside Austin Texas nbsp Borage is commonly grown in herb gardens its flowers can be used as a garnish nbsp Cowbridge Physic Garden Wales nbsp Green lettuce in a kitchen garden on stilts in Laos A vegetable garden also known as a vegetable patch or vegetable plot is a garden that exists to grow vegetables and other plants useful for human consumption 11 12 in contrast to a flower garden that exists for aesthetic purposes It is a small scale form of vegetable growing A vegetable garden typically includes a compost heap and several plots or divided areas of land intended to grow one or two types of plant in each plot Plots may also be divided into rows with an assortment of vegetables grown in the different rows It is usually located to the rear of a property in the back garden or back yard 11 About a third of adults in the UK and America grow food in private or community kitchen or vegetable gardens 13 14 In World War II many people had a victory garden which provided food and thus freed resources for the war effort 15 With worsening economic conditions and increased interest in organic and sustainable living many people are turning to vegetable gardening as a supplement to their family s diet Food grown in the back yard consumes little if any fuel for shipping or maintenance and the grower can be sure of what exactly was used to grow it The beneficial effects on the sustainability of food as well as in reducing greenhouse gas emissions related to agriculture by growing one s own food for example growing food locally reduces food miles the distance food travels and therefore reduces the greenhouse gas emissions associated with that travel 16 can be increased through social contagion the process through which behaviour emotions or conditions spread spontaneously through a group or network A 2019 study found evidence that the spread of vegetable gardens in urban space displays was the result of neighbors seeing vegetable gardens near them and deciding to grow their own 17 Once enough people in a network have been influenced to grow their own vegetables the community can reach a tipping point in which a majority of people transition to a new habit a 2018 study published in Nature claims that with only 25 per cent of a population adopting a behavioral change a minority perspective was able to overturn the majority 18 Organic horticulture or organic gardening has become increasingly popular for the modern home gardener 19 Herb garden editSee also List of culinary herbs and spices Herb farm and Physic garden The herb garden is often a separate space in the garden devoted to growing a specific group of plants known as herbs These gardens may be informal patches of plants or they may be carefully designed even to the point of arranging and clipping the plants to form specific patterns as in a knot garden Herb gardens may be purely functional or they may include a blend of functional and ornamental plants The herbs are usually used to flavour food in cooking though they may also be used in other ways such as discouraging pests providing pleasant scents or serving medicinal purposes such as a physic garden among others A kitchen garden can be created by planting different herbs in pots or containers with the added benefit of mobility Although not all herbs thrive in pots or containers some herbs do better than others Mint a fragrant yet invasive herb is an example of an herb that is advisable to keep in a container or it will take over the whole garden 20 21 22 Some surviving walled kitchen gardens editThese are open to the public 23 Croome Court Gibside NT some now used as volunteer allotments Ham House NT mostly used for vegetables Clumber ParkSee also editList of garden types The Victorian Kitchen Garden tv series Subsistence agricultureNotes edit Scots kailyaird or kailyard means a small cabbage patch see kale or kitchen garden usually adjacent to a cottage Cuddon J A 1977 A Dictionary of Literary Terms London Andre Deutsch p 343 Flower garden History of Early American Landscape Design heald nga gov Retrieved September 22 2023 BBC News August 23 2014 Croome Court Georgian walled garden opens for first time BBC a b c Titmarsh Alan January 26 2014 Grow your veggies in style How to create a kitchen garden The Express Retrieved May 9 2017 Jacques David Gardens of Court and Country English Design 1630 1730 p 62 2017 Yale University Press ISBN 9780300222012 Mukerji Chandra Territorial ambitions and the gardens of Versailles pp 64 65 1997 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521599597 0521599598 google books Uglow 234 Uglow 193 199 and see index McDermott Laura Optimizing Strawberry Production With A Reduced Tillage System PDF Cornell University Cooperative Extension Hendry Ann Marie How to Design a Potager Garden growveg co uk Retrieved May 9 2017 a b Komar Stephen May 7 2017 Some tips as you prepare your spring vegetable garden New Jersey Herald njherald com Archived from the original on May 7 2017 Retrieved May 9 2017 Planning a vegetable garden rhs org uk Retrieved May 9 2017 Rising numbers growing own food BBC News May 17 2012 Gardening Boom 1 in 3 American Households Grow Food Farmer Foodshare Archived from the original on July 28 2020 Retrieved March 20 2019 Pack Charles Lathrop 1919 War Gardens Victorious J B Lippincott p 15 Li Mengyu June 20 2022 Global food miles account for nearly 20 of total food systems emissions Nature Food 3 6 445 453 doi 10 1038 s43016 022 00531 w Retrieved February 21 2024 Shur Ofry Michal Malcai Ofer June 17 2019 Collective action and social contagion Community gardens as a case study Regulation and Governance 15 1 63 81 doi 10 1111 rego 12256 Retrieved February 17 2024 Centola Damon Becker Joshua Brackbill Devon June 8 2018 Experimental evidence for tipping points in social convention Science 360 6393 1116 1119 doi 10 1126 science aas8827 PMID 29880688 Retrieved February 17 2024 Buckland Toby May 6 2016 The beginner s guide to starting a veg garden The Telegraph Retrieved May 9 2017 Gardening Design Neta Design May 24 2020 Mint and the Home Vegetable Garden VegetableGardenHub com Retrieved May 19 2012 Gardening Guide Sunday March 15 2020 National Trust Top kitchen gardens References editUglow Jenny A Little History of British Gardening 2004 Chatto amp Windus ISBN 0701169281Further reading editBartley Jennifer R 2006 Designing the New Kitchen Garden An American Potager Handbook Portland Timber Press ISBN 978 0 88192 772 6 Davies Jennifer 1987 The Victorian Kitchen Garden London BBC Books ISBN 978 0 563 20442 8 M D 1901 Formation of the Fruit and Kitchen Garden in Thompson Robert The Gardener s Assistant new edition revised under the direction and general editorship of William Watson Vol IV pp 1 32 London Gresham Publishing Company Giles Dorothy 1926 The Little Kitchen Garden Boston Little Brown amp Co Shewell Cooper W E 1947 The A B C of Vegetable Gardening London English Universities Press first published 1937 Wilson C A ed 1998 The Country House Kitchen Garden 1600 1950 How Produce Was Grown and How it Was Used Sutton Publishing ISBN 978 0 7509 1423 9 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kitchen gardens Urban Leaf A useful knowledge base for aspiring gardeners with a lot of information about getting started Kitchen Gardeners International A nonprofit group promoting kitchen gardens worldwide Walled Kitchen Gardens Network Kitchen Gardens Science Tracer Bullet Library of Congress The History of Kitchen Gardens in America Cornell University Mann Library Herb Society of America National Herb Garden Archived February 22 2018 at the Wayback Machine United States National Arboretum Medicinal Herb Garden University of Washington USA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kitchen garden amp oldid 1221027277, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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