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Planning Your Urban Garden: Roadside Gardens

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urban-roadside-sunflowersIf you cannot tell what is on my mind lately by reading a recent post, then you should know that there is something about winter that brings out the dreamer in me in terms of what I will be doing in my small urban garden this next season. As a city dweller, I am a renter and as such, my dreams for my little garden will most likely never be realized as who knows how long I will live in this house, and hi, it’s not my house, so I don’t get to call the shots on major garden design and projects.

So, maybe someone out there can glean something from my grandiose plans for the grandiose problems that I have in “my” yard. I always believe in leaving a yard in better shape than that in which I found it, so my planning tends to go below the surface in many aspects of garden design. And if I were to undertake a major project this next spring, it would be to build and plant a raised bed garden along the roadside of my front yard. It would reduce noise from the street, increase privacy and add more plants that could be attractive to both wildlife and insects.

The first thing you should consider when building a roadside urban garden is that these plants are on the front lines of pollution from cars. I live on a quiet street that doesn’t not see much traffic, but many urbanites live on busy thoroughfares and should take pollution generated from traffic into consideration when choosing the plants you will use in your roadside garden.

ultimate-urban-roadside-garden

And like the “garden” above, there is no reason that you cannot have a little roadside garden. It may have to be a container (or many, many containers), but hey, it’s still a garden.

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One Response to “Planning Your Urban Garden: Roadside Gardens”

  1. Urban Ecoist » Blog Archive » Planning Your Urban Garden: Pollution-Tolerant Perennials Says:

    [...] for many years, unlike those prima donna annuals that need to be added every year. If you are an urbanite looking to add perennials to your garden space, then you need take into account the fact that city plants must be able to tolerate city pollution. [...]

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Highlighting products, services, and a growing number of "grassroots" ideas, Urban Ecoist is one blogger's attempt to document, examine, and explore the myriad ways an ecologically minded urbanite can reduce her impact on the world around her, while maintaining a comfortable way of life. Topics included will be environmental pollution and contamination, personal product reviews, recycling, upcycling, DIY recycling projects, alternative fuels, plastic bag and solid waste managment, green products, green services, with tips and tricks (every Tuesday on how you can do it too) thrown in. Anything 'Mother Earth' related is fair game...

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