Landscaping around the house is beautiful, but can you eat it? Foodscaping is a new trend in the integration of edibles into ornamental landscapes, and it has benefits for your home and stomach.
Imagine walking out of your front door with a cup of coffee and admiring your garden. A cherry tomato plant, ripe with shiny red fruit, has grown so large and sprawling that the white staircase ...
Examples for success and beauty in foodscaping - or landscaping to include edibles. Mingling food crops with your front yard ornamental garden is not only practical, it can add more visual appeal too!
Noted horticulturist and foodscape expert Brie Arthur will speak at a March 23 program in Uniontown. Hosted by Penn State Master Gardeners of Fayette County, the event is scheduled for 9:30 a.m.-2 p.m ...
Aiken Master Gardeners Lunch Box lecture series has featured two speakers so far this gardening season. In April, the guest speaker will be Brie Arthur whose topic will be Awesome Combinations for ...
Forget traditional garden rows and Pinterest-perfect raised beds. A new wave of gardeners—fueled by the rise of “chaos gardening”—is embracing a freer, wilder approach. Culinary plants are breaking ...
Brie Arthur doesn't need a tractor or combine to grow a crop of peanuts. She doesn't even need to plant rows. Her one-acre "suburban foodscape" also yields golden rice, cane sorghum, soy beans and ...
RALEIGH, N.C. | Traditionally, farming and country life go hand in hand: In the popular imagination, agriculture and hands-on, dirt-in-the-fingernails cultivation happen well outside urban centers, ...
Brie Arthur, left, in the front yard of her Fuquay-Varina suburban home. Arthur maximizes her single-acre patch of suburbia through foodscaping with wheat and oats interspersed among poppies and roses ...
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