Houzz Call: Home Farmers, Show Us Your Edible Garden
We want to see where you grow tomatoes, salad greens and beautiful berries are growing – surprise us with an out-there spot!
Edible gardens flourish during the summer, and farmers markets seem to overflow with fresh fruits and vegetables. We want to know – what does your edible garden look like right now? Are your herbs, vegetables and fruits thriving? Do you have a backyard, balcony or rooftop garden? Are you growing your edibles in decorative planter boxes or right in the ground?
Homeowners: Post photos to the Comments that show us what you’re growing and where – silverbeet on the roof, herbs on the balcony, or tomatoes in your suburban backyard, your country garden or even at the back of a ramshackle ute!
Professionals: Have you designed any edible gardens for your clients? Upload a picture to the Comments and tell us what makes them work for your clients.
Homeowners: Post photos to the Comments that show us what you’re growing and where – silverbeet on the roof, herbs on the balcony, or tomatoes in your suburban backyard, your country garden or even at the back of a ramshackle ute!
Professionals: Have you designed any edible gardens for your clients? Upload a picture to the Comments and tell us what makes them work for your clients.
House Nerd Blogger, Maya Anderson, uses her suburban backyard to grow vegetables and herbs such as lettuce, broccoli, Asian greens, kale, spinach, garlic and chives.
Further afield, this backyard greenhouse in the Bernal Heights neighbourhood of San Francisco is thriving. Owners Tom Cowan and Lynda Smith grow a wide variety of edibles given their small space: lettuce, radicchio, dandelions (Italian heirloom), onions, strawberries, raspberries, garlic, mint, kale, mustard, curly kale, watercress, basil, parsley, sage, thyme, chives and sorrel.
See more of this urban greenhouse
Your turn: Whether it’s a container on your balcony or the ground on your backyard farm, we want to see where you’re growing the food you’re eating.
Homeowners: Where does your edible garden thrive? Post pictures to the Comments of your rooftop gardens, raised beds, planter boxes or countryside field of greens.
Professionals: Show us an edible garden you’ve designed for your clients.
More guides to edible gardening
See more of this urban greenhouse
Your turn: Whether it’s a container on your balcony or the ground on your backyard farm, we want to see where you’re growing the food you’re eating.
Homeowners: Where does your edible garden thrive? Post pictures to the Comments of your rooftop gardens, raised beds, planter boxes or countryside field of greens.
Professionals: Show us an edible garden you’ve designed for your clients.
More guides to edible gardening
Goodall’s edibles include silverbeet, fennel, beets, capsicums, rhubarb, kale, cauliflower, corn, eggplant, zucchini, Japanese turnips, lemons and herbs.
A family of ducks provides fresh eggs for Goodall and her family and fertiliser for the garden.
See more of this garden and its home in the Southern Highlands