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“Fig season?” you say. “You can grow figs in Kansas City?”

Yes, and now, in spite of the 100 degree temperatures, is the time we fig lovers have been waiting for. Once you taste a fresh fig, you’ll never go back. Fig Newtons don’t even begin to resemble the sweet, soft flesh of a ripe fig. In fact, you may have to do as I did, run out and get a tree of your own.

I have been growing a fig tree in a pot for about 10 years. The tree makes a great focal point for your garden with its hand-sized, bright green, 5-lobed leaf. Smooth gray bark covers rather gnarly, spreading branches giving it, in my mind, an old world look.

Three years ago the tree really started to bear fruit in abundance, so much in fact, that from one tree I can have a small bag of dried ones to stash for winter. The variety that I have is known as Italian Honey fig or Peter’s Honey fig. When ripe, the fruit is a lovely yellow-green with a luscious, honey-like flavor. Yum!

Italian Honey Fig in full yum mode

The honey fig prefers zones 7 – 11 and can get up to 15 feet tall and wide but my potted tree is about 6 feet tall. It tends to get root bound and needs root pruning every 2-3 years. Because of this tendency, the tree requires lots of water in the summer. Organic “Fish and Poop” is my current favorite fertilizer for all edible plants. I fertilize starting in March, with monthly doses during the growing season until September.

In the fall the leaves drop just like any other deciduous tree so I roll the pot in an unheated garage where it goes dormant until March.

About two years ago I decided to try another smaller fig. This time “Petite Negra,’ which has a dark fruit with rosy interior.  Another advantage is that PN starts setting fruit at 1 foot tall even though it will grow to 2 – 3 feet tall. This year, it has lots of little figgies so I’m eager for the taste experience to come.

The 'Petite Negra' in June. It's not ripe yet in August.

In case you are wondering what a fig flower looks like, so am I. The flower is inside the fruit so what you see are fully formed wee figs sprouting from the tree. The fruit will be upright as in the photo but when it is ripe, the fruit becomes soft and the stem will bend until it droops. This is a good clue if your figs are the green type.

Baby fig in spring

The honey fig gets a little bigger

In our climate, zone 5 or 6, many varieties of figs will grow directly in the ground. If you leave the plant to fend on it’s own the branches may die to the ground every year. But, if you want to keep previous year’s growth, many people put a large wire cage around the plant, fill it with leaves and wrap it. Some figs recommended for zones 5 or 6 are Brown Turkey, Desert King, Osborn Prolific, Hardy Chicago, Honey fig and Bornholm’s Diamond.

If anyone out there in the mid-west is growing figs, I would love to know what works for you and what varieties you like.

Anja the kitten, learns about homegrown produce.

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Laura O’Brien from Bridging The Gap in Kansas City! Congratulations, she wins a raspberry pixie daylily! She correctly answered Arum italicum, a plant native to the U.K. It’s in the Araceae family which threw a few contestants off. They thought it was the native Jack-in-the-pulpit—a very good answer, by the way. I love the common names for it which are Cuckoo Pint and Italian Lord-and-Ladies. If you’re in the U.K. stop in at the Cuckoo Pint Pub in Fareham to have a toast to its namesake plant.

I first noticed this plant with its summer berries a couple blocks from my house and I had to know what it was. I finally found one at a local nursery and it has been a success in the shade under my cherry tree. This fall it will send up new leaves that will last all winter to the end of spring.

This photos was taken in spring but the leaves look the same. Notice how much they look like the houseplant, Arrowhead vine, Syngonium. In the spring, a strange looking bloom will appear.

Thank you Wikipedia commons for this photo.

After the sheath goes away, the center thingy becomes the berries. If anyone can fill me in on what you call that vertical appendage, I would appreciate it.

So here we are in July with lovely orange-red berries. Even though my wikipedia source says this plant can be invasive in warm climates, I have never noticed that happening here in Kansas City. It also recommends planting with hostas so the new fall foliage will cover the spent leaves of hosta in the fall and remind you where you planted your hostas. I think the orange berry stalk would look smashing in between hosta leaves as well.

Here’s what Missouri Botanical has to say about it. Mobot to the rescue! That vertical thingy is called a spadix.

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The Garden Center Association Open Garden Tour of my garden was a success considering the temperature was 90+. I had a great time. What gardener doesn’t love showing off her/his personal plot. We had twice as many visitors than the GCA usually has for these events. I’ll have another post about that. But, for now, I want to show some photos of the garden and some things that people found most interesting.

People loved the bike wheel fence and the bicycle gate (not shown). This photo includes from bottom left Kaleidoscope lemon coleus, purple basil and a meyer improved lemon tree with green lemons. To the right of the fence is parsley, chives, pepper and oregano.

I love growing plants up a tuteur. Barely visible this one is covered with pole beans and burgundy sunflowers inside. Surrounding it are broccoli, peppers and eggplants. Behind is a montmorency cherry tree.

Doesn’t every dog need a patio for sunning themselves? Actually this area has become a slope so the mulch would never stay put. I dug it out a bit and put the limestone, filling the cracks with mexican black rocks. The irregular edge makes a nice transition from the concrete to the free shapes of the garden.

Speaking of mulch, people really enjoyed the ingredients of wine corks, peach pits and wooden nickels. Who would have thought it so fascinating?

Nothing edible here but soul-satisfying none the less. From the back, Nikko blue hydrangea, hardy geranium, amaryllis and sedum mixed with hens and chicks.

This dramatic plant is lemongrass, the same plant used in southeast asian cooking. I think you could make some fabulous faux lemonade with it but have yet to try. Anyone have a recipe? Right a miniature rose, front China doll polyanthus rose and more sedum.

Here’s the “garden magazine” shot. I just can’t resist mixing purple plants with green. Lime green really makes a striking accent to the garden. Purple opal basil with Kaleidoscope lemon coleus share a pot with New Zealand phormium.

An eggplant still attached to the mother plant. Leaves always get chewed by flea beetles. French tarragon peeks out from behind the eggplant.

Squash blossom with visitors. A bee does its job pollinating the lower flower. These are winter squash. Cross your fingers to see if they live because I’ve had to do stem surgery to remove vine borers and then there are always the evil squash  bugs that many time frustrate efforts to grow yummy fruits. But, we can enjoy the flowers. Aren’t they wonderful?

The tomatoes are in! These luscious beauties are Country Taste, a hybrid that is supposed to have the old-timey taste of heirloom tomatoes with disease resistance. Looks like a little of ever-present leaf blight got them too.

And last but not least, many people were intrigued by this plant. Do you know what it is? Let me know your answer and if you guess correctly you can be a winner of a raspberry pixie daylily as a prize. Here’s my favorite site for looking up plants: The Missouri Botanical Garden. Sorry, only local delivery.

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Next weekend, July 24 from 10 am to 1 pm, my garden will be open for touring. This is the first time that I’ve done this but I think it will be fun. I’ve been growing food mixed with ornamental plants for years and now it’s trendy. Woohoo! My cue came from Rosalind Creasy who wrote a wonderful book published in 1982 called The Complete Book of Edible Landscaping. I’m a designer, artist, environmentalist and pragmatist so of course, this idea appeals to me.

Edible landscaping is hardly a new idea. It dates back to ancient times in Egypt and and Persia where people combined fragrance, beauty and food in their gardens. It has gone in and out of fashion ever since.

Truly until recently most people haven’t had the luxury of landscaping just to look at it unless they were wealthy. But, because we in America don’t have to grow our own food, our lack of connection from the source of our foods, our relative wealth and increased leisure time, we can afford to plant gardens purely for pleasure. Gardens that in many cases try to emulate estates of the wealthy except on a smaller scale.

We in the US, where lawns are an ingrained part of our culture, have never seemed to wrap our brains around the idea of combining food with beauty in the yard. Even proponents of food growing seem to find the need to separate the two. The food growers want to grow all food in as big a patch of land as possible and the ornamental lovers seem to relegate food plants to pots on the porch or a hidden spot in the yard. As for tearing out your grass for either flowers or food? Well, that’s almost sacrilegious.

My garden is about beauty, about creative expression, about fresh organic produce. It’s about having a wonderful, soothing place to hang out when the work is done. It’s even about having a great place to party. It’s not about whoever has the most money wins or about perfection.

The garden in 2009. Upper left chard, center top broccoli, pink flowers are Autumn Joy sedum with red chard at right and at left rosemary.

Come over to see it. Contact me if you don’t know where I live.

Petite nigra fig with lemongrass in the back

Daylilies and oregano

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