Design

Our specialty is designing lush, informal gardens with lots of food-producing plants blended tastefully into a balanced whole. Grant has many years experience working with a wide range of edibles, from the standard garden vegetables to less-known varieties of both annuals and perennials.

pilot house overview

This client wanted maximum food production in a creative layout. The pie-shaped raised beds contain tomatoes, carrots, beets, beans, squash and marigold. In the top right corner is a tayberry, a relative of the raspberry with long, sweet berries. More tomatoes reside in pots on the left. Grant is raking a blueberry patch and in the forground raspberry, strawberry and culinary herbs are visible. Anika is removing a small pine tree to make room for apple and gooseberry.

vegetable patch

A structured vegetable garden with a red brick path under construction). Kale, chard and lettuce on the left, raspberries, and border plants on the right. A grape is climbing the garage wall, and is being trained to follow the fence on wrought iron trellises. This garden is bordered by a rail fence that can be seen on the Construction page.

herb patch

A herb patch blended in with ornamentals. Thyme, rosemary, oregano, strawberry and chives blend with forget-me-nots, spanish lavendar and yucca.

lilies, brassicas, mock orange

A front yard detail showing a mix of ornamental and edible. In the forground adjacent to the public sidewalk is a row of bulbs and annual flowers selected by the client. Behind that is a brick raised bed with lacinato kale (dark green leaves), collards, onions, etc and in the background is wisteria climbing the hand rail, yew, rhodo and mock orange.

Design process

  • free initial consultation
  • work with you to identify your tastes, priorities, time commitment and budget
  • site assessment
  • draft options onto plan diagrams and project summaries
  • review and refine
  • install
  • maintain, teach