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When was the last time you gave a garden tour?

 
gardener
Posts: 1817
Location: Proebstel, Washington, USDA Zone 6B
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I think that one of the most powerful ways to encourage other people to garden is to bring them out to your own garden. Let them see, smell and taste the fruit of the earth. When they experience how much better homegrown vegetables are, they might catch the gardening bug, too!

So, when was the last time you showed off your garden to somebody?
 
Jeremy VanGelder
gardener
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Location: Proebstel, Washington, USDA Zone 6B
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I'll start. The last time I showed off my garden was a few months ago. My brother is sharing our garden right now so that he can cross off a few things from his list of goals. So we showed him his garden bed and what we were planting in the remainder. He has already experienced fresh radishes, and he will get to eat fresh peas very soon.

Speaking of peas, is there a better plant to show to gardeners who don't know they are gardeners yet? They are sweet and crunchy and delicious! This is the first time we are growing both snap peas and shelling peas. And they are both so good. As the snap pea season continues, we will get to eat some every time we visit the garden.
20250714_202726.jpg
Plump fresh peas against a pine tree and grey sky background
Who wouldn't want to garden after eating some fresh peas?
 
Posts: 10381
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it was 10 days ago  https://permies.com/t/281041/sharing-flowers#3059593

and before that maybe a month...our oldest son is here in town so we tour his garden frequently and he tours ours every couple weeks.

Otherwise, it's random and on a whim, like when evangelists come by we take them to the gardens and I talk plants non stop 🙃
 
steward
Posts: 18945
Location: USDA Zone 8a
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I like this idea.

Unfortunately this would not work for me.

Though I have a suggestion.  When giving a tour do you offer things for sale?

I would love homemade pickles and preserves, something you have harvested, or just about anything homemade, and some pretty flower bouquets.

 
master gardener
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Location: Carlton County, Minnesota, USA: 3b; Dfb; sandy loam; in the woods
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About two years ago, my dad and his partner came up for a visit and we did a thorough tour. I periodically show off bits and pieces to my granddaughter who lives in the city and is terrified of all bugs (but will play with crawdads) so doesn't help much.
 
master gardener
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Location: Zone 5
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It was yesterday for me.

One thing people comment on is how wild it looks. I may not have a ton of cultivated food (yet) but oftentimes people love the atmosphere of it. When they say it feels wilder than a wilderness that makes me especially joyful. I do hope that my one yam spreads… right now it is mostly root vegetables and wildflowers with some tree seedlings and berry bushes. And swales, lots of them. That is essential.

I saw there is a second viper’s bugloss and I’m so excited to get seeds! They are one of my favorite flowers.

Actually I do tend to focus on wild foods, but it helps that parsnips are ubiquitous in the wild. I should have harvested a lot more last fall; would have been spared some boils and blisters…
 
pollinator
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Location: Canadian Prairies - Zone 3b
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It's been a couple of years. Young local couples with kids who stripped the gardens and fruit patches of anything edible. When they came back a year later the kids knew *exactly* where to go for loot. Like little black bears, they never forget a food source.

But these couples have busy, busy lives. I'm just a neighbour. I have no intention of hounding them like some old geezer desperate for company. Mostly my gardens will now support their initial attempts at gardening -- raspberries are next on the list. And we need to talk about giving trucked-in soil a big nutritional boost. So I'll be going there instead.
 
pollinator
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Last Mon., a week ago, my best friend and her family were in town from FL, they all got excited and my little nieces by her got to try fresh snap peas.  One of them has been growing some plants but they all died while she was on this trip, so she'll start over.  My garden isn't much yet, but people love that I'm trying and learning as I go.
 
steward
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It was just a few weeks ago! We had friends watching over our chicks while we were at a family reunion, and I took them (mom & four kids) on an adventure through our property, showing them all the berries we can eat. One of the kids said, "I want a place like this when I grow up. There's just food outside!"

Sometimes I forget how magical it is to have so many edible things outside. It's been a busy year, as I'm now teaching multiple classes at my kids' homeschool co-op. My garden is a disaster. Buttercup is covering the flower beds, and the only annuals that grew are peas and tomatoes....if you don't count the self-seeding kale & radishes and the wheat that sprouted from my duck bedding mulch! We didn't even manage to mow the paths, and many might think it looks messy.

But, even without having time to spend in my garden, my perennials are doing great. There's: honeyberries, strawberries, blackcap raspberries, red & gold raspberries, thimbleberries, jostaberries, red huckleberries, blue huckleberries, trailing blackberries, salmonberries, mulberries, currants, blueberries, and cherries all ripe right now. There's nettle to eat (we cooked some up for our guests and the kids said it was the best vegetable they'd ever eaten and they wanted to grow some, too). Soon there will be plums and peaches and pears and apples and potatoes.

The real strength in permaculture, I think, is that it makes food even when you don't have time, especially when it's established. And, there's just something magical about stepping outside and being surrounded by tons of edible foods ♥.
 
Jeremy VanGelder
gardener
Posts: 1817
Location: Proebstel, Washington, USDA Zone 6B
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I'm thinking about why we haven't shown our garden off so much this year. Certainly we have had many friends and acquaintances over. Most of the answer is that our big annual garden is a long way away. You have to cross the patio, a field and go behind the barn. It is definitely out in zone 3. Meanwhile, there are all kinds of interesting things between here and there. Most recently my brother-in-law set up his urban farm here. So there are quail and rabbits in that barn. And my sister's horse. So most of the time we simply don't get out that far.

But we have rhubarb at the corner of the house. And herbs in pots that are waiting to be planted in the hugel I built across the driveway. So we get to talk about those quite often. I think any gardening effort that I can show off helps other people see that gardening is a good idea.
 
steward and tree herder
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I usually have people looking at my land once or twice a year. The last time was when my friends came up in the spring to help with sowing and mulching.
Tomorrow I have a group visit, which will be a bit different for me as they are not people I know, but the leader found me through permies. They are based at the South end of the island, so have similar challenges in growing. I hope what I do will be useful for them to see. I also hope to learn from them too, as I'm told at least one is a skilled horticulturist! I've already warned them that it is not a show garden. I have been improving the access through the front garden and the fruit jungle for them, which was OK for me, but not great for less able footed. I'm glad to have done it too, since it means I can get the wheel barrow round now too!
 
pioneer
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Best of luck! A friend of mine visited our community & own allotment for the first time yesterday.
 
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Hi. Last month.  Folks lingered at our food forest row, planted along the back of our 1/3 acre in an HOA. New to everyone and so fun to share!
 
Steward of piddlers
Posts: 7777
Location: Upstate New York, Zone 5b, 43 inch Avg. Rainfall
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Our village has a local volunteer group that beautifies the public spaces in the area. They raise money by selling tickets to a garden tour that folks can volunteer to host as a stop. I did not participate this year but I have plans for next year!
 
gardener
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Location: France, Burgundy, parc naturel Morvan
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Friends and family are always eager to see my garden. And just like with children people say it grew so much! Last week old time friends came by and i have to really watch not to overload people with information or they zone out. Sometimes people get jealous and are happy things don't turn out as i want, like my hazelnut trees still not producing, while they find loads in the wild.
A neighbor lady invites herself to harvest in the garden she would have wanted but cannot have (too much work), she gives me part of her marmelades, so it's fine.
Some people i know give paid tours in their garden, i like to keep it simple, not too many.

 
Jeremy VanGelder
gardener
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Location: Proebstel, Washington, USDA Zone 6B
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Our garden became a community garden again. One of my brothers got married last year. So he and his wife were interested in sharing the garden space with us. So we showed them around a few weeks ago and agreed on the new dividing lines. There wasn't much to show with the beds all covered in leaves. But since then we have planted almost all of it.

Has anyone else given garden tours this year?
 
Nancy Reading
steward and tree herder
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I had family staying locally for a holiday recently and showed them all round what I'm up to. I've got a little off road invalid scooter now, which my Mum wasn't keen on, but one of my sisters appreciated.
Last week I did a very quick tour for some people that may be giving a good home to my old polytunnel. Their kids loved the stepping stones in my new tunnel, and soon disappeared into the trees in the tree field. Luckily the deer fence keeps kids in as well as deer out!
I see new things everytime I show people round, especially in spring. I think I have female flowers on one of my walnut trees again.
 
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Last week, showed a neighbour around. She kept asking what everything was and I realised how much I take for granted knowing what's growing where. The best bit was when she tasted a gooseberry straight off the bush — that face of surprise is always worth it.
 
pollinator
Posts: 91
Location: Zone 7b, 600', Sandy-Loam, Cascadian Maritime Temperate
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I sometimes walk in the garden at its height of growth and marvel at how full of life and beauty it is, and I wish others could see it and appreciate it too.  I love the idea of giving people a tour of my garden and food forests.  
However, whenever anyone comes around it when I'm out there, I usually try to make a quick exit.
If I'm working, I am in a zone of communion with the land, and it gets altogether too 'talkative' with others present.

Partly I get bothered by all the questions and the asking of me to name this and name that - even though at other times I'm happy to wax poetic explaining about plants and permaculture type things.  If it is my nieces or nephews, I am much more tolerant, happy to encourage their love of nature and gardening.  Also, if it is with another experienced gardener, I find it enjoyable.
But when it feels like 'small-talk' I balk and try to end it as soon as politeness allows - especially if the questions are focused on numbers and names of things.
If the visitor shows an attitude of reverence for the miracle of diverse life exemplified in the place, then I feel more comfortable.

I know this is my own personal idiosyncrasy, and I regret not being able to share my knowledge and work with others.
I promise I'm not wholly a curmudgeon.  I do like when people go out into my garden when I'm not present and enjoy the fruits of my labor (as long as they stay on the paths!) and I hope that they can learn from my examples if not from my words.
 
 
pollinator
Posts: 480
Location: zone 5-5
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I give garden tours pretty often.  I grow extra and usually grab a bag before the tour.

I gave another tour this morning.
Wow you have mullein?
I didn't plant it.
So he was excited to get one of those in a pot.
Also went home with a Bob Gorden elderberry that I potted last year but didn't have a spot for.
He brought me a couple dozen eggs from his chickens.

I kinda laugh when I take someone on a garden tour and they reach down and start pulling a few weeds.
Now that's a real gardener.
Doesn't happen very often.
 
Let me tell you a story about a man named Jed. He made this tiny ad:
grow your own garden and build your own home in the gardening gardeners program
https://wheaton-labs.com/bootcamp
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