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There are some great books on creating attractive edible landscapes---different from the "rows of vegetables in the 40 x 70 rectangular plot" of my southern childhood. This is one of my favorites:
http://www.amazon.com/Gaias-Garden-Home-Scale-Permaculture-Edition/dp/1603580298/ref=pd_sim_b_8 This one is particular good for lots the size of OP's. There are other books (The Bountiful Container e.g.) for those of us who live closer in. Why stop at corn, OP? |
| Go for it! Don't care. Have better things to worry about in my life than what my neighbors decide to plant. |
You're being sarcastic, right? |
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I don't think it's tacky. We have several neighbors here who have beautiful vegetable gardens in their front yard. Some even share their produce!
If we all could grow a small garden, we could help stamp out hunger. Unfortunately, I don't have a green thumb, so no garden here. |
+1 |
I really truly don't understand. Do you believe vegetables are ugly? Veggie plants are gorgeous, and a well-tended veggie garden is an extremely pretty piece of landscaping. |
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I wonder what the demographics are for the responses. I would expect those younger than 35 and more highly educated are probably more likely to not be bothered by front yard vegetables than the Clint Eastwood retired auto worker demographic.
For the record, I'm 40, highly educated and HHI of $500k and would be fine with tasteful gardening that includes vegetables wherever they would grow best. |
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Hi OP.
Nope, I don't think it's tacky. I think it's great. With the following caveat: depending on how far we're talking from the road, car exhaust and particulate matter can be a concern on your produce. |
| I would be all about growing corn in my front yard, to feed my backyard chickens! |
That's a strange assumption! I'm 33 with a grad degree and I think it's a great idea. Actually I'd bet the highly educated younger posters WOULD support this, knowing about the benefits of gardening (environmental, etc). |
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i live in the city and have wondered why more people dont utilize their yards this way. so many yards are just a wasted spot with no good seating or terrible landscaping.
i think it depends on your house and landscaping. |
| Isn't it late in the season to plant corn? Anyways, I think it's just fine. I agree veggie gardens can be beautiful. |
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On the off- off- off- chance OP is actually serious, I'd be more concerned about the safety ramifications. A locksmith and several others who came to my house told me the shoulder-high shrubs around the front were a good hiding place for someone up to no good.
I cut them down. I didn't want any surprises. If it had been just one person who said that, it'd be a different story. But every male who came around said the same thing. They all said the same thing about the skylights on my flat roof too - easy access to the inside - but I kept those. Corn might present the same type of shield. But this really depends on where you live. |
D through F are most assuredly irrelevant and will not happen. C could easily be executed with house plants. A is also pretty subjective if you know where to shop. Is it better than the crap at Safeway? Sure. Seriously, if we could make popcorn with unused corn from stalks, more people would do it, ditto for decorations. |
That's what this says - younger and better educated would support (or not mind) if their neighbors grew corn in their front yard. |