Anonymous wrote: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?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, if I park my cars on the lawn, would that bother you?
Not the OP, but -- whose lawn? Please don't park your cars on my lawn. Feel free to park your cars on your lawn.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
What a strange post. I don't see how being highly educated and having a high income correlates to corn tolerance.
If anything, I would think the higher income types would NOT want the corn being grown on the front lawns of their neighborhood. Yikes! Talk about "bringing down the neighborhood"! etc.....
I am 40 and have a graduate degree from the London School of Economics, and I am one of the ones repeatedly saying "no" to front yard corn in this thread.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, if I park my cars on the lawn, would that bother you?
Not the OP, but -- whose lawn? Please don't park your cars on my lawn. Feel free to park your cars on your lawn.
Anonymous wrote:OP, if I park my cars on the lawn, would that bother you?