Edibles

A garden you can eat from. These are the fruiting trees, shrubs, and vines that pull double duty, ornamental in leaf and flower and then generous with something worth picking. Beauty and harvest from the same plant, chosen to thrive in Southern heat and humidity.

62 plants in this collection

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About the Edibles Collection

An edible garden does not have to look like a vegetable plot. The trees, shrubs, and vines gathered here carry flowers, foliage, and fruit worth a place in any ornamental border, and hand you a harvest besides. We favor the kinds suited to Southern gardens, at home in heat and humidity, and we lean toward the uncommon: heritage fruit and rare edibles you will not find on a grocery shelf.

In the landscape these plants work as ornament first and orchard second. A fruiting tree gives shade and spring bloom; a berrying shrub earns a place in the border on looks alone; an edible vine turns a fence or arbor into something productive. Sited among the rest of the garden rather than fenced off in rows, they let a small property carry both beauty and food.

We grow edibles because a productive garden is a resilient one. Fruiting plants feed pollinators in bloom and birds and people in season, deepen a household's connection to what it eats, and reward patience with decades of return. Many are tough, low-input choices that fit a water-wise, regionally adapted garden rather than fighting against the climate.

Site fruiting plants for sun and good drainage, and give them room to size up. Underplant with something water-wise from our Drought-Tolerant Plants, reach into Sub-Tropicals for warm-climate rarities, and train productive climbers with help from our Vines collection. Read each listing for zone and pollination notes, since a few of these crops fruit best with a partner nearby.