Who doesn’t love vegetable soup or a great salad? It’s even better when the ingredients are harvested from a garden of your own design, one that’s beautiful as well as productive. Join Jennifer in learning how to nurture, prepare and consume fresh produce. It may positively impact your whole life!

Window Boxes in Brooklyn



My urban friend once confessed she couldn’t resist snitching a flower that was growing near the sidewalk as she walked home from the subway stop. She received a scolding from the vigilant neighbor who was hovering over her tiny garden behind her wrought iron fence. When I was a young student, I walked back to my dorm on the Ohio State campus merrily and obliviously collecting daffodil, tulip and crab apple blossoms for my spring bouquet. A solemn official tapped me on the shoulder. Who knew it was illegal to pick flowers? These stories remind me that we crave the beauty of flowers and green plants. We desire the tactile and fragrant enjoyment of growing gardens… even if we live in an apartment in the middle of the city and… especially if we live in an apartment in the middle of the city.

Is it possible to have your own miniature kitchen garden when you don’t own a plot of soil? Can you grow herbs and vegetables when you have no space? I just spent a lovely, not too rainy or cold, fall weekend in the borough of Brooklyn, New York. Even in this dense neighborhood it’s possible to catch a glimpse of enclosed gardens with trees and roses or an overflowing container on a stoop or balcony. Consider planting a window box on your window ledge. You’ll be surprised what you can grow in such a tiny space.

Sara and I decided to fill her window boxes with some herbs and cool weather plants that would last through the winter. We visited a local store called Sprout Home at 44 Grand Street in Brooklyn. (www.sprouthome.com). They carry all sorts of containers and the perennials, shrubs and evergreens that grow in them. They will even design and plant them for you if you wish. We gathered up a collection of potted herbs, flowering pansies and purple cabbages. We had our own brilliant scheme in mind- which turned out to be to cram as much as we could in the box. Who would have guessed you could fit four cabbage plants, two parsley plants, two pansy plants, one pot of lavender and one pot of thyme in this tiny space? Double that for Sara’s two window boxes and she will enjoy a snip of something fresh everyday.

In the spring replant the window boxes, adding fresh soil. Synthetic soil from a bag is fine. Recheck the drainage holes in the window box. A quick way to kill your plants is to plug up the drainage holes allowing the roots to sit in soggy soil. You will have to water daily to make sure the soil does not dry out. Use a slow release fertilizer or use an organic fertilizer if you prefer. Vegetables, flowers and herbs in containers need adequate nutrition for fruit and flower production.

After the frost free date in the spring try planting ‘Lipstick’ or ‘Apple’ peppers- just the perfect petite size for a small garden. A tiny eggplant is ‘Bambino’. Cherry tomatoes like ‘Gold Nugget’ will do well as they flow down the wall. I am eager to try ‘Red Currant’ which is a wild currant tomato from South America. Mix in parsley, basil and thyme. Throw in some colorful flowers that will spill over the sides.

Imagine if every window in Brooklyn was filled with a miniature garden. The city would soon be green and each of us would have our own flowers to pick and herbs to snip.


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Jennifer Bartley

Jennifer Bartley is a registered landscape architect and founder of the design firm, American Potager. She creates gardens that feed the soul as well as the stomach, convinced that borrowing the design and seasonal philosophy of the French potager can transform our properties into productive havens- harvest some flat leaf parsley, pick a few tomatoes and then spend the rest of the afternoon in the garden watching the bees pollinate the lavender and the hummingbirds flutter above the scarlet runner beans. She is working on her second book for Timber Press entitled, Seasonal Harvest.


Growing Soil
Harvesting Garlic
Chives: Pretty in the Border
Why I plant poisonous plants in the kitchen garden
Basil: Use it now, freeze for later or preserve by drying
What grows in chilly weather?
Evergreens for winter color
What is a potager?
Time to order seeds: vegetables, herbs and flowers
Plant the Kitchen Garden Near the Kitchen
Make Room for Asparagus, Rhubarb, Blueberries and Currants
Flowers That Attract Beneficial Insects
Plant Peas When the Daffodils Bloom
I Just Planted Dandelions
I Think My Lavender is Dead
What About Tomato Cages?
Oh, Green Garlic...
Slow Food. Slow Garden.
Time to Plant Warm Season Vegetables... Almost.
Purple, Orange and Green Cauliflower
My Broccoli is Blooming!
A Peek at my Brother's Garden
Heirlooms Tell a Story
Let Some Things Go To Seed
It's An Outdoor Room Alright...
An Alaskan Kitchen Garden
Cold Climate Kitchen Garden
This is Not the Year of the Tomato
Zucchini Heaven
Pickle Insecurity
Or, We Could Just Eat In...
Edible Shrubs at the Brine Garden
Sustainable Edible Garden Design
Keep the Good and Rip Out the Bad
Real Tex-Mex Pico de Gallo
Voracious Praying Mantis
Green Tomatoes, Asters and Goldenrod
Ohio was Warm and Sunny so I Went South for Cold and Rain
To Do: Plant Garlic. Make Pumpkin Soup
Craft an Easy Container for Artichokes
Starting Seeds Indoors
Take Stock then Prepare Beds
Grow Citrus Trees in Pots
Sow Spring Salad Greens Now
Planting the Spring Garden
Delectable Cherimoya
Dinner? Something With Spinach
Designing with Herbs
Edible, Evergreen and Ornamental
Container of Culinary Herbs
Those Cute White Butterflies
Enclose the Garden
Squishing Bugs While I Hand Water
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gopher

gopher: 1/12/2009, 4:24 PM

My wife and I have a decorative stand that holds a large metal tub that we use as a planter. Would it make sense to drill some drainage holes so that the soil doesn't get soggy as you mentioned in your post?

Thanks!

Jen

Jen : 1/14/2009, 3:19 PM

Gopher,

Yes, I would recommend drilling holes for drainage. You didn't say if this planter was inside or outside. Just be sure to put a tray under the planter to catch water- especially indoors.

Jennifer