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Bog Garden Vegetables: Growing An Edible Bog Garden

Bog Garden Vegetables: Growing An Edible Bog Garden

If you have a water feature on your property, you may be wondering if you can put it to good use by growing water garden veggies. The answer is yes. You can grow many types of vegetables in a bog garden.

How to Create an Edible Bog Garden

While the term “bog” generally refers to wet, muddy areas that tend to be poorly oxygenated and low in nutrients, a bog filter garden is a water feature designed as a natural method for cleaning and filtering backyard ponds.

Bog filter gardens are built adjacent to a backyard pond and use pea gravel, which acts as a biological and physical filter. Water is pumped from the pond into the gravel bed where bacteria “digest” organic waste. The water in bog filter gardens is highly oxygenated and nutrient-rich. It’s the perfect place to grow bog garden vegetables.

Planting vegetables in a bog garden is not much different than planting in regular garden soil. Simply dig a small hole in the pea gravel, remove the plant from the pot and insert the root ball into the hole. Finish filling the hole with pea gravel ensuring the bottom of the roots are in the water and the crown of the plant is above the water line.

Edible Plants for Bog Gardens

When choosing edible plants for a bog garden, select those that prefer a moisture rich environment. Many types of garden plants, like lettuce and tomatoes, do well in a bog filter garden. If you’re feeling adventurous, you can try growing these moisture-loving bog garden vegetables:


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