Pretty useful plants
Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2012 9:51 pm
A couple of comments on here recently and some comments outside of the forum have made me think about how easy or difficult is it to combine a productive garden with a pretty garden. Personally, I loved a programme made by the late Geoff Hamilton where he recreated a Victorian kitchen garden, combining useful plants in a pretty way.
So here's my list of plants that are both pretty and practical.
Lavender - even if you don't like the taste, it's useful in pot pourri and as an ingredient in hand creams and the like.
Oriental poppies - for the seeds and for the seed heads which are great in dried flower displays
Bronze fennel - beautiful foliage and great with fish
Alpine strawberries - pretty ground cover, lovely fruit, makes denser ground cover than normal strawberries
Medlar and quince trees - pretty flowers, great fruit and the leaves look great in autumn
Blueberries - pretty flowers, fruit and the leaves turn a lovely shade in autumn
Cherry plum - pretty flowers in early spring and lovely fruit - you can get a variety with dark red leaves but, in my garden at least, the fruit is pretty sparse.
Thyme and chamomile - great ground cover plants with herbal uses.
Rosemary - evergreen foliage, pretty blue flowers and great with lamb.
Roses - pretty flowers which can be dried for pot pourri or dried flower displays, depending on the variety, can use as a flavouring and hips in autumn.
Mahonia - very early yellow flowers, interesting, holly shaped leaves, berries for jam in autumn.
Logan berry - attractive climber, lovely autumn tinged leaves, great fruit.
Sorrell - unusual one perhaps but if you leave some of it to flower and set seed, the flower/seed heads are great and dry well for flower displays.
Curry plant, unusual shaped, grey leaved plant, a bit like lavender, lovely in savoury dishes
Bay tree - statuesque shrub, ideal for topiary, use the prunings in soups and stews
There's 15 to get us started, maybe we can come up with 101?
Zoe
So here's my list of plants that are both pretty and practical.
Lavender - even if you don't like the taste, it's useful in pot pourri and as an ingredient in hand creams and the like.
Oriental poppies - for the seeds and for the seed heads which are great in dried flower displays
Bronze fennel - beautiful foliage and great with fish
Alpine strawberries - pretty ground cover, lovely fruit, makes denser ground cover than normal strawberries
Medlar and quince trees - pretty flowers, great fruit and the leaves look great in autumn
Blueberries - pretty flowers, fruit and the leaves turn a lovely shade in autumn
Cherry plum - pretty flowers in early spring and lovely fruit - you can get a variety with dark red leaves but, in my garden at least, the fruit is pretty sparse.
Thyme and chamomile - great ground cover plants with herbal uses.
Rosemary - evergreen foliage, pretty blue flowers and great with lamb.
Roses - pretty flowers which can be dried for pot pourri or dried flower displays, depending on the variety, can use as a flavouring and hips in autumn.
Mahonia - very early yellow flowers, interesting, holly shaped leaves, berries for jam in autumn.
Logan berry - attractive climber, lovely autumn tinged leaves, great fruit.
Sorrell - unusual one perhaps but if you leave some of it to flower and set seed, the flower/seed heads are great and dry well for flower displays.
Curry plant, unusual shaped, grey leaved plant, a bit like lavender, lovely in savoury dishes
Bay tree - statuesque shrub, ideal for topiary, use the prunings in soups and stews
There's 15 to get us started, maybe we can come up with 101?
Zoe