Winter -
the best time to plan your garden!
Shirley
Lindsey
Adams County
Master Gardener
Yes, you can garden
in the winter. Actually it is the best
time for making plans as well as viewing
your landscape and making decisions
about what wonderful effects you want to
create in your garden next year. When
the leaves fall and the flowers are
gone, you can see the "bare bones" of
your garden and imagine just where a
nice arbor or water feature might go.
My definition of a garden structure is
anything in the garden that does not
grow there. This leaves room for lots of
lovely additions to your garden. One
might question how anything could add to
the beauty of flowers, trees and shrubs.
The idea is not to surpass, but to
enhance those beautiful natural plants.
There are several reasons for using
structures in the garden. One that many
of us can identify with is maximizing
space. Like most gardeners I do not want
to be greedy, but I would really like to
have (at least) one of every plant in
existence. That not being practical, I
want to make the most of the gardening
area that I have. Since most of us have
fairly limited areas in which to garden,
we can use the space effectively by
placing garden structures at strategic
points.
In addition to making our gardening
space seem bigger, structures lend
variety to the garden. Probably no two
people see eye-to-eye on what is
beautiful. But you may enjoy, as I do,
natural features in the garden. I have
several very large white rocks placed
around the flower garden. They make a
nice contrast to the predominately green
background. Some people prefer wooden
decorations - an old bench or wooden
planter or tree stump. If you take a
garden path and find it leads to some
attractive statuary, it makes a pleasing
surprise.
Another advantage of garden structures
is that they often enhance the beauty of
the plants themselves. Where would the
delightful clematis or climbing rose be
without a trellis or arbor to climb on?
Plants creeping over a stone wall make a
charming combination. These types of
structures help us to appreciate the
natural beauty of the flowers.
Remember the attraction of the structure
itself. An English trough garden or an
old Adirondack chair lends a rustic
appeal and emphasis to a garden.
Similarly a formal fountain or tall
metal arbor can give a more formal
garden a nice exclamation point.
Sometimes we have an idea what we want
in our garden, but we just don’t know
where to put it. This is one reason why
we need time to mull over our decisions
on garden structures.
You may have been reading recently about
"Garden Rooms." This is the concept of
small and intimate areas in the garden,
which are separated from each other. You
could locate an arbor or pergola or a
gate at the "entrance" of a garden room
to surprise and delight viewers as they
come through.
Another type of structure, perhaps a
man-made fence or a natural hedge of
shrubs, is often used to screen off
areas that are more work-oriented, such
as a driveway or the area where you keep
the garbage cans or your heat pump. It
is important to note here that you do
not want to place anything too close to
your heat pump or its efficiency will be
affected.
Often we like structures as focal points
themselves. You may want to draw your
guests into the garden to the water
garden, or perhaps you have a
particularly lovely or unusual piece of
statuary you want to lead them to. My
large rocks make a statement on their
own as well as serving as backdrops for
flowers.
Keep in mind the location from where you
will view your garden structure. Will it
be placed so you can see it from your
deck, porch, kitchen or dining nook?
Where will you enjoy it the most? These
are all questions to consider when
deciding on and placing a garden
structure. You may decide to place your
structure in front of the house if it is
something unique that you would like
identified with your home. We have a
cannon at our house. Even though we
don't keep it in the front yard, it is a
great conversation piece.
Some typical structures used in gardens
include arbors, pergolas, vine poles,
trellises, special lighting equipment,
sun dials, weather vanes, bird baths and
feeders, plant hangers, water gardens,
water features, fountains, rocks, mill
wheels and wagon wheels. You can use
bricks or wood to outline beds, rock
walls, fences, walls, statuary,
decorative wooden items, unusual
planters (wheel barrows, whiskey
barrels, old crocks, wash tubs), and
paths covered with grass, stone, brick,
wood chips and stepping stones.
Your imagination is the only limitation
to what you may decide to put in your
flower garden to call attention to the
natural beauty of your plants. A caveat
I would offer is that you never want to
add so much 'stuff' that you detract
from the loveliness of the plants
themselves.
Winter is definitely the best time to be planning what you may want to do to make your garden more fun for the coming season. Personally I need several months
lead time to convince my husband that he wants to build whatever I decide is absolutely necessary for next summer’s garden.
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