Tomatoes, summer squash, cucumber, several herbs (in hanging baskets because the local critters are gourmets), pumpkin, cabbage, impatiens, petunias, fuschia, sweet potato vine, sweet peppers, native wild flowers.
You've got a nice mix going on there, Khan! I've found that having native wildflowers attracts all sorts of 'good bugs', especially all of the various bees and wasps....and the bees and wasps not only help pollinate the veggie plants, but they also feed on the 'bad bugs' like aphids and such. And
Braconid Wasps lay their eggs
IN those big green
tomato horn worms, and the larvae feed on the worm, which terminates the green critter.....with NO chemical pesticides needed. I normally don't use any chemical pesticides in
any of my gardens, because I've found that if nature is in control, so are the pests.
My veggies are intermingled amongst my flowers......or maybe it's that my flowers are intermingled with my veggies......I don't know!
I have somewhere around 200 different varieties of plants, shrubs, and trees in my gardens and landscape......and I try to major on 'natives'. The veggies this year include:
Early Girl Bush Tomatoes (4 plants)
Small Frye Cherry Tomatoes (4 plants plus a few 'volunteers' from last year)
Better Belle Green Peppers (10 plants)
Sweet Banana Peppers (6 or 8 plants....don't remember at the moment)
Cayenne Peppers (4 plants)
Anaheim Hot Peppers (4 plants)
Jalapeños Peppers (4 plants)
Mesclun (mixed salad greens)
Yellow Onions (continually planting all season - every week or two)
Parsnips
Zucchini Squash (8 or 10 plants)
Garlic
Basil
Parsley (grown mostly for the swallowtail butterfly caterpillars to eat
)
Radishes (continually planting all season - every week or two)
Rhubarb
Lemon Balm, Bee Balm, & Peppermint (all to use in iced tea)
I think that's all....I hope!
The Early Girls, both Balms, Peppermint, and rhubarb are planted in regular 'ground level' gardens....onions, garlic, and half the Better Belle Peppers and half the Zucchinis are in raised beds....
everything else is in containers! It's the same deal with all the flowers, shrubs, and trees, too.....'in ground', raised beds, and containers.