I am no green thumb. There you go. I’ve never owned a plant or kept a garden. Well, actually Jacob’s parents bought me a beautiful jasmine vine a few months ago and so far, it’s still alive! But other than that, nothing green has ever grown because I’ve willed it to.
This is what our backyard looks like now.
A most beautiful plum tree grows in the southwest corner, but that’s pretty much it. This year, Jacob and I really want to start a vegetable garden. It’s been a secret dream of mine for a while and now that we have the space, we can’t wait to get our hands dirty. Unlike other new ventures I’ve taken on in my life, I felt that starting a garden required Internet research. I don’t Internet research many subjects, but gardening? I mean, come on! I can birth and raise a baby without consulting the Googles, but a vegetable garden?! With live, growing vegetables?! Now it’s just silly to do that alone!
And so, after some research and poking about the yard, we’ve decided that a raised garden is best. Cleveland soil is yucky and an in-ground garden would be a lot of digging for poor Jacob. Then I came across this amazing idea straight out of Africa - keyhole gardens. Semi-circular, self-sustaining, raised gardens that work in just about any kind of landscape. Keyhole gardens can be small or large, but still give more planting space than their counterpart row-by-row beds. All of the surface area in the circular garden is accessible and there is no need for pathways or walkways within the bed.
I’ve found a great tutorial here. I’m not sure yet that we will do a true keyhole garden in the sense that it wouldn’t be waist-high. But I definitely love the concept and aesthetic of this kind of vegetable garden.
We’ve yet to decide on brick, stone, bamboo, wood or Poppy’s old socks as border material, but one thing is for sure, we are excited to get going! I’ll keep you updated and hopefully I’ll be munching on some yummy cucumbers by the end of the season.





these are beautiful!! I love the top one — what a sweet concept!!!
[...] we’re not quite here yet, but we have a vegetable garden and I’m so [...]