What is Wild Garden

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

Most gardeners understand what is meant by a wild garden even though it is really a contradiction in terms. How can a garden, a man-made creation, be truly wild? The main characteristic is that nature is apparently allowed to have the upper hand over the gardener, but in a successful wild garden Read more...

Using Color in the Garden

Monday, November 16th, 2009

As harmony is to a tune, so colour is to a garden: it gives a more precise feeling and mood to the under¬lying design. Colour alone cannot make a garden, but it can enrich the design and highlight different parts of the scheme at different times. It can attract atten¬tion by means of bright Read more...

How to Recognize the Fragility of Soil Structure in your Garden

Saturday, November 14th, 2009

Inexperienced gardeners often fail to recognize the fragility of soil structure. While some soils are less stable than others, all are liable to damage. The main problem is compaction. This results from mechanical pressure which forces the particles together, driving out air and spoiling the Read more...

How to Increase your Garden’s Size by the Manipulation of Scale

Friday, November 13th, 2009

It is a rare gardener indeed who wishes to make a gar¬den look smaller than it is, unless he or she is moti¬vated by an underlying passion for bonsai landscapes. Most wish to increase the apparent size; others to make a broad site with little depth appear longer than it is, or to make a long Read more...

Rock garden plants

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

The rock garden reached its apogee, in England, in the period spanning the latter part of the nineteenth century through to the First World War. At this time labour, in comparison to materials and transport, was inexpensive and large amounts of money were expended on creadng monumental rock Read more...

How to Build an All-Green Garden

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

From time to time most gardeners long for an all-green garden. It is a longing for clarity and simplicity, for a rest from the business of gardening. The in¬spiration may be found in a formal garden: picture a white-painted weatherboard house with a long veran¬dah overlooking still trees and Read more...

How to Build a Victorian Gardens

Monday, November 9th, 2009

The interiors of Victorian houses were known for their fussiness and crowding detail; so it was with the gardens of the high Victorian period. Labour was cheap and numerous gardeners could be employed, removing worries about whether a garden style might be labour intensive or not. The period was Read more...

How to Build a Topiary Garden

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

Despite the vituperations of those who regarded topiary as “pastry cooks’ gardening”, it has always had a loving following somewhere. Whatever topiary might do for the style of a garden, there is always pleasure to be taken in the sheer craftsmanship of creating and maintaining Read more...

How to Deal with Climate and Microclimate in your Garden

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

Geographical location
Climate is all-important because it dictates the kinds of plants you can grow and exerts an immense in¬fluence on design. If you have moved to a new area it is easy to discover average temperatures and rainfall, but you must always allow for extremes.

Regional Read more...

How to Build a Single-Color Garden

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

These have become popular in recent years in the wake of such famous examples as the white garden at Sissinghurst. They represent an extremely disci¬plined form of gardening in that the gardener has to work with a very limited palette. This can have its advantages: the emphasis is thrown back on Read more...