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Gutter Garden: Growing Your Food in a Small Space
Juneau Empire

42909guttergarden1.jpgWe love a good small-space garden design challenge, especially when it involves finding new and creative ways to grow your own food. Suzanne Forsling of Juneau, Alaska, wanted to grow vegetables, but only a tiny sliver of her outdoor space—an alleyway between her house and the neighbors'—gets any kind of sun. Wanting to save money, maximize heat and protect her plants from wildlife, she came up with the idea of using rain gutters as planters along the wood siding. Details, and more small-space kitchen garden inspiration, after the jump...

 
 

42909guttergarden2.jpg

Suzanne's solution is inexpensive and practical, of course, but we actually think it's got aesthetic appeal too. We love the look of the long, narrow planter boxes lined up under the window. She shared her solution in the Juneau Empire; you can click over there for the whole story and detailed instructions, but here are a few tips we gleaned:

• Drill plenty of holes in the gutters for drainage.
• The first time you water, allow water to drip between the gutters and the siding (this time only!) in order to wash out any soil that might be trapped against the siding.
• Each time afterwards, water cautiously, with a watering wand or can, to prevent water from becoming trapped against the siding, and to avoid excess drainage... you don't want water pooling up so close to the foundation of the house. (You could also use drip irrigation for even better control.)

We'd love to know if anyone else has tried this. Here's some more inspiration from Apartment Therapy for those looking to grow this year's vegetables in a small space:

10 Inspiring Gardens for Growing Food in Small Spaces (from The Kitchn)
The Small Space Raised Garden
Vegetable Garden Using Repurposed Furniture
Planning the Garden: Vegetables (and the Occasional Strawberry!)
Food Map Containers: Portable Vegetable Gardening

(Via NotCot)

Photos: Suzanne Forsling

Tags

gardening, plants & flowers, container gardening, vegetable garden, rain gutter

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Comments (30)

That is a pretty cool idea.
Keeps the bunnies out of the greens too.

posted by peekay on April 29th 2009 at 9:15pm
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great idea. it's like walking down the aisle at the grocery store.

posted by nkr707 on April 29th 2009 at 9:26pm
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This is pretty clever, and so simple. Genius. I sort of want to try it

posted by fatalefemme on April 29th 2009 at 9:43pm
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pretty GREAT idea!

posted by beantown_brad on April 29th 2009 at 9:56pm
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I love this idea completely. It's also a great way to salvage building materials. :)

posted by Kimber on April 29th 2009 at 9:57pm
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Wow that's smart.

posted by canadian in swedish clothing on April 29th 2009 at 10:16pm
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Very clever. Hmmm. I may add it to my project list.

posted by umeboshi on April 29th 2009 at 10:56pm
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this is really cool i could see it working well on an apartment balcony.

You could probably improve the drainage situation by doubling up the bottom row with another gutter with no drainage holes. The ones above would just drain into the lower ones and with careful watering and drainage hole placement any excess water would just end up in the bottom doubled up gutter, which could drain int a bucket or other reservoir if tilted slightly.

posted by adamwa on April 29th 2009 at 11:17pm
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brilliant.

adamwa's idea to collect the runoff is clever too!

posted by thegeneral on April 29th 2009 at 11:23pm
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wow. so beautiful in its simplicity.

posted by SpanishOlives on April 30th 2009 at 1:43am
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Thanks for sharing this very clever idea!

posted by sassydo on April 30th 2009 at 3:49am
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This is too cool.

posted by SunnyBlue on April 30th 2009 at 6:47am
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This is also good for a window flower box on a small window. Thanks.

posted by Joan52 on April 30th 2009 at 7:55am
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I really like this idea and the look of it could even rival some of those living walls. I think if I were going to try this I would first build a simple wooden grid and then attach the gutters to that instead of directly to the house. Might alleviate some of the drainage concerns around the siding and foundation.

posted by home body on April 30th 2009 at 8:41am
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I haven't put anything into my windowboxes yet. Lettuce! I love it! Let me add to the chorus of praise for this idea.

posted by JoanneM on April 30th 2009 at 8:57am
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she must use some intensely rich soil to get plants to grow in such a tiny amount! i wonder if they'd blow right out of the gutter in a strong gust.

posted by darlingcaro on April 30th 2009 at 9:19am
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WOW. I love this so much.

posted by JasmineIsDomestic on April 30th 2009 at 9:32am
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I love this too. But I'd rather see it on a fence than attached to the house siding. In fact you could make a "living fence," with the gutters just attached to posts. On the house, I'd be a bit worried about toxic runoff into the soil, from the siding's paint. Attaching the gutters to brackets that held them a little away from the wall might get around that.

posted by twoshakes on April 30th 2009 at 10:12am
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That looks fantastic. But, I can't help but wonder - won't it make a perfect buffet for neighborhood deer?

posted by m_j_s72 on April 30th 2009 at 10:29am
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Combine this with gray water drip irrigation and viola! Its perfect!

posted by Heather C on April 30th 2009 at 11:41am
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Love the look of this too....but my worry is insects. I know you're supposed to trim any tree branches that brush your house or touch your roof because they are a prime source of arts (destructive carpenter ants and others)... would fear that house-affixed gardening would have the same risk. Anyone have opinions on that?

posted by ljbmonkey on April 30th 2009 at 1:43pm
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peekay, you have it all wrong. This is the perfect way to grow veggies FOR my bunnnies! (Arthur and Lyta. Mini lops. HUNGRY mini lops!) ;^)

posted by SherryBinNH on April 30th 2009 at 2:05pm
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This is perfect. I've been trying to figure a way to use the vertical space on my fireescape- a little chicken wire and I'll almost have a full garden. Thanks!

posted by ebbunny on April 30th 2009 at 2:17pm
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wow, this is great! applause!

posted by maike on April 30th 2009 at 2:41pm
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I love this idea, but my first question with such small planters was how hard is it for her to keep these watered, especially if they're on the sunny side of her house? At my house in the dead of summer we have a hard time keeping 30 gallon pots moist enough (depending on the plants inside), much less things this small--sometimes we had to water 2 times a day just to keep things alive, and that's neither easy nor green. I wonder if she has problems with that? Otherwise, I'd love to give this a try--very clever.

posted by hyzen on April 30th 2009 at 2:48pm
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This woman is a complete genius.

posted by Owl on April 30th 2009 at 5:38pm
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I LOVE that idea!

I have plenty of space in my garden, but I might give this a whirl when the season for lettuce spins around here in the southern hemisphere. The soil in my garden is not great, plus, I am a terrible gardener - I always forget about things and don't take care of them like I should. Maybe it's wishful thinking but I think that having plants in such a gorgeous installation, and at eye level, might help with that!

I'm renting, so I wouldn't be able to attach them to the house, but there are plenty of fences in my garden, or maybe I could even make a free-standing frame for them. Should't be too hard!

Can I second Hyzen's question, though? Maybe having them off the grouns would mean being able to do an earlier crop, since frost wouldn't be as big a problem?

posted by Kaviare on April 30th 2009 at 9:57pm
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Yeah, I love this idea, but I'm with Hyzen - this wouldn't work in my area - I have to water my hanging baskets 2x a day in the summer. And I'm in Ottawa, Canada. If I lived in a climate like Vancouver or Seattle, I would be all over this idea.

posted by ChzPlz on May 1st 2009 at 7:07am
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Ah... she's in Alaska. I'm guessing they don't get quite the same baking heat in the summer that I get.

posted by ChzPlz on May 1st 2009 at 7:10am
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I too am thinking about this for a balcony railing. It is rather shallow though--would have to be the right kind of crop.

posted by art on May 1st 2009 at 11:18am
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