Make your salad tasty from the day you plant
Bibb lettuce – burpee seed If you grow your own favorite salad ingredients, you might want to consider a new planting pattern this season that lets you toss the salad when you plant it. The results will yield a healthier harvest and more flavorful combo when ultimately, you toss the salad in the kitchen.
Plant the same staple ingredients as always – tomatoes, lettuce and herbs – but this year, toss your salad plants and herbs into a different growing pattern.
Mix up your plants so they help one another
#1 – Plant lettuce underneath tomatoes
As tomatoes mature, they will create shade for the lettuce which is a cool-season crop. Lettuce leaves will like being kept cooler and shaded as temperatures continue to warm.
#2 – Plant basil nearby
Basil and tomatoes are companion plants that are beneficial for one another. Basil improves the growth and flavor of tomatoes and helps repel thrips – a common Colorado garden pest.
#3 – Add traditional herbs to the mix
Include common herbs to enhance a winning garden combo because they promote health of other plants and repel common insects – not to mention their versatility in the kitchen.
- Parsley repels harmful insects and attracts beneficial ones. If left to flower and go to seed, parsley will attract predatory wasps and hoverflies that will kill caterpillars and other garden pests. NOTE: Avoid planting mint and parsley close together as they are not good companions. Planted in proximity, neither plant will thrive.
- Oregano is not only a flavorful herb for salads and sauces, but it provides pest protection throughout the garden.
Chives repel aphids from tomatoes. - Tarragon is especially useful because few pests like it. If space permits, plant it throughout the garden as it enhances growth and flavor of vegetables while repelling pests.
Keep your veggie garden pollinator friendly
- Allow some herbs to flower to attract pollinators into the garden
- Plant lavender to attract butterflies and bees – but plant it away from doorways, walks and places where people gather. At the end of the season, collect dried flowers for fragrant potpourri and sachet pouches.
- Plant zinnias to attract hummingbirds, bees and other insect pollinators. To promote more blooming, snip them to use as cut flowers in bouquets.
To get more great ideas on planting your garden this summer, and some landscaping project ideas, be sure to check out our website portfolio here.
Designscapes would be more than happy to bounce ideas around, and help get your garden planted this year. Feel free to send us an email at info@designscapes.org or call us at (303) 721-9003.