Ottawa Citizen

A taste of summer can be found in a pot

Give a friend their own mini-garden, the fresh gift that keeps on growing

- BARBARA DAMROSCH

A summer garden is an instant source of gifts. A busy host will welcome the bowl of cherry tomatoes you bring for the table. A co-worker having a birthday would love a basket of fresh-picked corn. A recuperati­ng neighbour, fed up with hospital food, will welcome your strawberri­es as much as your visit. All of these take just minutes to pick as you’re heading out the door. To show extra love, throw in the bowl or basket as well.

Or, better yet, give someone a mini-garden. Choose an attractive container at a local garden centre — say, 30.5 cm to 46 cm wide — fill it with potting mix and plant it for someone who’d love to grow a bit of fresh salad fixings on their doorstep or sunny patio. (Most greens will grow in part shade, but four hours of sun a day is the bare minimum.)

Make sure the pot has a hole in the bottom for drainage.

The first potted mini-gardens I saw were in Australia at Bickleigh Vale Farm in McLaren Vale, designed by the owner, Diana Bickford. I’ve encountere­d others, often combining herbs and greens with colourful flowers, but Diana’s all-edible ones were just as beautiful, thanks to her skill in combining leaves of different colours and textures.

One pot contained beet greens, Swiss chard, arugula, mizuna and red and green lettuces. Another had romaine lettuces, frisée endive and red Russian kale, with its bluish leaves and striking red ribs.

For a pot this size, the only tomato plant I’d use is a patio type, draped over one edge. A little pepper plant with tiny hot peppers on it also might work. But I’d concentrat­e on greens. There are stunning lettuces you can choose.

But don’t stop at lettuce. Tuck in some purple-leaved Japanese mustard, beet leaves, the purple version of mizuna (a fernlike Asian green), bok choy and kale. And how about red-veined sorrel?

The best greens to grow in a pot are those that perform well as cut-and-come-again crops, such as kale and Swiss chard, repeatedly sprouting fresh leaves. Annual herbs such as basil and parsley and even perennials such as sage and garlic chives work well when snipped regularly to keep them compact.

For flowers, choose edible ones, such as Lemon Gem marigolds, or bright nasturtium­s, whose round leaves are edible, too.

If you don’t have leftover seedlings from your own garden that you can transplant, see what you can find at the garden centre while you’re there picking out the container. Get a bag of soilless potting mix, too.

In fact, make one for yourself. Even people with a garden out back can enjoy a year-round mini garden next to the kitchen door.

 ?? BARBARA DAMROSCH/ WASHINGTON POST ?? Diana Bickford, who owns a farm in Australia, combines leaves of different textures in her mini-gardens.
BARBARA DAMROSCH/ WASHINGTON POST Diana Bickford, who owns a farm in Australia, combines leaves of different textures in her mini-gardens.

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