Edible Landscaping Tips for Beginners

It doesn't take much to blend food production into an ornamental flower garden.

lettuce and marigolds together in a garden bed
Lettuce and marigolds in the same garden bed.

Philippe S. Giraud / Getty Images

Edible landscaping, as the name suggests, is all about incorporating food-producing plants into a garden design. Landscaping usually focuses on creating visual appeal. But as you will learn, edible landscaping can be beautiful and useful, too. Blending the practical and the aesthetic is what edible landscaping is all about.

As a garden designer, I help people to develop such plans. Today, I would like to share a few tips to help beginners get started on an edible landscaping scheme wherever they live.

Design for Site: Edible Landscaping Options Suit a Wide Range of Environments

First and foremost, it is vital to design for a specific site. The edible options available to you will depend on where you live and the conditions to be found there. 

It is easy to see how a forest or woodland environment might be adapted to grow a wide range of food. But it is important to recognize that foods can be found in many diverse settings. From arid xeriscaping schemes to edible pond and wetland plants, there are many options to consider. Even a wild lawn might produce food for you and your family to eat.

It is always important to design and plant according to specific conditions. But here are some general tips which apply to wherever you are and whichever plants are appropriate to your location.

Embrace Perennial Food Sources

No matter which environmental conditions you are dealing with, one of the most important things in edible landscaping is recognizing that growing your own food at home is not just about growing annual crops in a vegetable garden.

The most familiar perennial edibles, like fruit trees, fruiting canes, and fruit bushes, can be a good place to begin for many sites. But there are plenty of other edible perennials to embrace, too.

Be sure to seek out perennial alternatives to traditional annual crops when it comes to leafy greens, alliums, root crops, and more. These can look wonderful in mixed landscaping, and provide food not just over a single season but year after year. 

Blend Annual Crops and Flowers

Many gardeners will rely on bedding plants of annual flowers (or flowers treated as annuals) to create beautiful beds and borders. But polycultures of annual fruits, vegetables, herbs, and flowers can provide food in addition to looking good. 

cherry tomatoes on a patio

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By growing edible annual crops (as well as plenty of perennials) in their growing areas, gardeners can create diverse and attractive displays which are as useful as they are attractive. Annual food production certainly does not always have to mean growing annual fruits and vegetables in neat and orderly rows. 

Layering Is Important In Edible Landscaping

When trying to make edible landscaping as low-maintenance, productive, and beautiful as possible, layering is key. You should layer edible planting, including, for example:

  • Productive trees, i.e. fruit and nut trees and trees with edible leaves
  • Shrubs and fruit bushes
  • Edible climbers and vines
  • Edible herbaceous plants, both taller and ground covering species (this includes perennial vegetables and herbs, which grow in a range of environments, as well as more typical and widely known annual crops)
  • Edible roots and tubers (and perhaps even edible fungi in suitable spots) 

Within each edible landscaping design, it is important not only to consider each species to be included in isolation, but how to combine them in beneficial ways to create thriving systems which can sustain themselves over time.

Plant For Pollinators and Other Beneficial Wildlife

When creating edible landscaping, the most successful schemes are those which cater not only to human needs, but also to the needs of other occupants and users of the space.

Gardening for wildlife will not only be beneficial for that wildlife, but can also increase the yields possible in the space. Healthy biodiversity means that pollinators will be around to pollinate key food producing plants, and will also help with natural, organic pest control.

Flowering plants are not only beautiful; they help with wildlife attraction. Many of those new to edible landscaping are also surprised to learn just how many flowers usually considered to be ornamental options are actually edible. These plants, sometimes called "edimental" plants, are both beautiful and provide an edible yield.

It is important to recognize that there need be no distinction between "ornamental" gardens and food-producing ones. With the right landscaping scheme, a garden can be both.