kitchen garden flowers
When I started my vegetable garden I embraced the tradition of planting “kitchen gardenflowers” to make it look pretty. A potager is beautiful enough in and of itself, the bean flowers come in charming hues and the squashes keep you well stocked with little drops of sunshine throughout the summer. The cabbages, cauliflower heads, Swiss chards and rhubarbs provide accents of color, while the graceful seed heads of anise and dill offer texture.
Even so gardeners like to embellish, but in a practical, harvest oriented sort of way. This is how nasturtiums and marigolds became the time-honored flowers of the veggie patch. Nasturtiums because they are edible and give a pleasant peppery spice to salads. Marigolds because they are great at keeping predators at bay with their pungent smell and make great companion plants for the tomatoes, peppers and eggplants. I’d say gardeners are just looking for an excuse to keep their vegetable yards pretty.