New Edible Plants for the Side Beds
October 2009
On a post I put in pictures of the work My husband Carl did to fix a drainage problem on the north side of the house. The project was done earlier this summer. I have since landscaped with more edibles in the beds.
There is a large overhang on the roof. About 10 inches closest to the house does not receive water when it rains. Unless of course the wind should drive it in.
The chameleon plants (Houttuynia cordata ‘Chameleon‘) grew a bit this summer. They are in the middle so get rain. We did not have a lot of rain at the beginning of the summer but the weather made up for that later on.
I transferred my two wood millets and wild ginger here from the front beds as these plants tend to like more shade. I figured I would try them in the beds. As summer progressed the sun shifted more southward making this bed in total shade for a good part of the day. The soil is shallow here and roots have nowhere to go but sideways after they hit the sidewalk. It will be interesting to see if the plants will survive winter. I plan on adding more composted manure and topping it with a nice layer of straw to conserve moisture and help insulate the plants.
The biggest surprises were the volunteer tomato plants that started to grow in the bed shortly after we finished the project. I let them grow to see what they would do. They stayed quite small for a while as it had not really rained. Finally we had some rain and it seemed like within a couple of weeks they had really started to spring up. This was around mid to late July I believe.
The vegetative growth really impressed me considering they were in the shade except late afternoon when the sun past the house. They actually produced some fruit. Not large but still impressive for the struggle they had to endure to grow here. The plants themselves were very strong and not too leggy. It got me thinking. The clay soil we used had all been broken up to fill the area. I had added some compost to the clay. Actually I took a picture the other day of our clay soil compared to the composted manure I add to the soil. Here it is :
The clay is the lighter colored CHUNKS of soil.
Now I presume that breaking up the clay to fill the area allowed air pockets, good for plant roots. The small amount of composted manure added could only help. And here we have a few tomato plants that actually produced fruit. Not bad. Now think if I had actually given these plants ANY attention, some fertilizer and water, maybe they would have produced a lot better! And this in the shade for the better part of the day. Interesting!
- Tomatoes in side bed
I took this picture a couple of days ago when I finally pulled them out of the bed. I had already pulled one out when I thought ” I should take a picture!” You can see a red tomato in front.
Also interesting… we have had a couple of light frosts, maybe the overhang helps a bit.

- Last of the tomatoes
In the basket are the last of the tomato harvest for this year. The two larger tomatoes are not from the side bed plants. The rest came from the volunteer plants.
I found this great basket at a yard sale for one dollar last week. I love it!
Back to the subject.
Other edibles that I planted in the beds this fall are as follows:
Primroses: Primula veris - flowers , young leaves edible- Evergreen
Primula vulgaris (English Primrose) flowers and leaves
Creeping Bramble: Rubus pentalobus it’s rated for Zone 6 so I hope it will survive (another reason for a nice thick mulch for winter). Also evergreen [Depending on which zone map you consult my zone is 5 to 6]
Creeping Juniper: Juniperis horizontalis. I’ll have to find the purchase slip to tell you the cultivar. Evergreen (seeing a theme here?)
Edible Sedums: Dragon’s Blood
Carl wanted evergreen coverage in the beds. I’m trying to appease him because he wanted to put the ivy (hedera species )or grass in the bed so it would be green all year. We have hedera ivy that grows up the side of the porch(it was here when we moved in). Yuck! besides they are not edible. So my quest for edible evergreen coverage began.







