Double Duty Gardening – Growing Plants With More Than One Use

Garden With Planters Full Of Plants And Flowers

Image by James Andrews

Most of us are balancing a million things during the day, so shouldn’t our plants? Double duty gardening offers multiple uses from individual specimens. It affords dual purposes that maximize a plant’s potential and is especially useful in smaller gardens. Plants with more than one use might be culinary and ornamental, shading, and have winter interest, and many more combinations.

What is Double Duty Gardening?

Give your plants a workout. Multi-functional plant gardening lets plants provide not only their beauty but some other attribute. For instance, barberry, with its arching stems and bright reddish leaves, is a standout for color, but when planted under a window, its thorny stems make quite a burglar deterrent. There are many double duty plants– you just need to consider what jobs you need them to do before selecting specimens.

Your garden should be a place of beauty and peace. It can also be a fortress, a grocery store, a wildlife habitat, a pollinator attractor, an herbal apothecary, and much more. Every plant has its special attributes and purposes, but many of them have several.

Harnessing the abilities of plants can help you win the health, economic, and humdrum war. When you go to your local nursery to purchase plants, consider how you want your plant to perform. Choosing double duty plants will maximize your purchase and provide more than the pleasure of the plant’s company.

Tips on Multi-functional Plant Gardening

Whether you want a kitchen garden, butterfly plot, or any other purposed space, plants with more than one use can help. Think about the plants you want for the site but also consider what the space will look like through the seasons, if it provides color and texture, develops into a border, and much more.

Double duty plants are there to impart many functions. Even a native garden affords sensory delights of all kinds, while feeding and housing wildlife and insects. It might also supply a natural hedge or produce native herbal remedies or food for your kitchen. Developing a garden with double duty plants bestows many gifts.

Examples of Double Duty Plants

  • Herbs – culinary, aromatherapy, color, pollinator attractants, pest deterrents, borders
  • Nasturtium – great in salads, repels aphids and whiteflies
  • Butterfly weed – attracts butterflies, provides height and dimension
  • Blueberry – tasty berries, bright fall color
  • Yucca – defensive sword-like leaves, many have edible roots
  • Bamboo – hedges, ornamental, can be used as stakes or made into fabric and fiber, edible shoots
  • Hops – ornamental, screen, beer
  • Roses – dried wreaths, cut flowers, edible hips, defensive plant
  • Calendula – sunny flowers, insect repelling, edible

These are just a few possible double duty plants. If you look around your landscape and do some research, you can surely come up with more.

This article was last updated on 01/14/22
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Most of us are balancing a million things during the day, so shouldn’t our plants? Double duty gardening offers multiple uses from individual specimens. It affords dual purposes that maximize a plant’s potential and is especially useful in smaller gardens. Plants with more than one use might be culinary and ornamental, shading, and have winter interest, and many more combinations.

What is Double Duty Gardening?

Give your plants a workout. Multi-functional plant gardening lets plants provide not only their beauty but some other attribute. For instance, barberry, with its arching stems and bright reddish leaves, is a standout for color, but when planted under a window, its thorny stems make quite a burglar deterrent. There are many double duty plants– you just need to consider what jobs you need them to do before selecting specimens.

Your garden should be a place of beauty and peace. It can also be a fortress, a grocery store, a wildlife habitat, a pollinator attractor, an herbal apothecary, and much more. Every plant has its special attributes and purposes, but many of them have several.

Harnessing the abilities of plants can help you win the health, economic, and humdrum war. When you go to your local nursery to purchase plants, consider how you want your plant to perform. Choosing double duty plants will maximize your purchase and provide more than the pleasure of the plant’s company.

Tips on Multi-functional Plant Gardening

Whether you want a kitchen garden, butterfly plot, or any other purposed space, plants with more than one use can help. Think about the plants you want for the site but also consider what the space will look like through the seasons, if it provides color and texture, develops into a border, and much more.

Double duty plants are there to impart many functions. Even a native garden affords sensory delights of all kinds, while feeding and housing wildlife and insects. It might also supply a natural hedge or produce native herbal remedies or food for your kitchen. Developing a garden with double duty plants bestows many gifts.

Examples of Double Duty Plants

  • Herbs – culinary, aromatherapy, color, pollinator attractants, pest deterrents, borders
  • Nasturtium – great in salads, repels aphids and whiteflies
  • Butterfly weed – attracts butterflies, provides height and dimension
  • Blueberry – tasty berries, bright fall color
  • Yucca – defensive sword-like leaves, many have edible roots
  • Bamboo – hedges, ornamental, can be used as stakes or made into fabric and fiber, edible shoots
  • Hops – ornamental, screen, beer
  • Roses – dried wreaths, cut flowers, edible hips, defensive plant
  • Calendula – sunny flowers, insect repelling, edible

These are just a few possible double duty plants. If you look around your landscape and do some research, you can surely come up with more.

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