Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Theme Gardens Pt. 2

OK, got your theme yet? Here's a few suggestions with a little help from the Associated Press, to get you started.
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A Colonial garden: modeled after old-style New England. Divide a small patch of ground into squares separated by walkways and inter-planted with vegetables, herbs, fruits and flowers.

Or divide with shrubs, instead of or in addition to walkways, and form a more traditional English Cottage garden with a fountain, bird bath or statue in the center as a focal point.

Make a special perfumed garden near a bedroom window or anywhere you spend time outdoors. Go heavy on the lavender, lilacs, heritage roses, sage, or any other fragrant plant that you wish.

How about a Tea Garden using an herbal brew of plants that can be converted into enjoyable teas. That includes the flowers and foliage from basil, peppermint, rose hips, chamomile, lavender and lemon thyme, to suggest a few.

With the Fourth of July just around the corner (yes, it is ...) plant an explosive mix of the old red, white and blue with flowers patterned as a flag for a Patriotic Garden. The red, white and blue is a color combination I like to use in my garden each year.

Why not construct an Alphabet garden, a good learning tool for the whole family. Start with alyssum and work your way through the letters to zinnias.

A Friendship or Hand-Me-Down Garden can easily be created using clippings, seeds or divided perennials given to you by friends and family. Each plant becomes a reminder of that person. Keep a book with the date and name of each plant to share with your loved ones.

A Roof garden (for the more ambitious gardeners) can be put atop a sturdy outbuilding with a layer of sod sown liberally with wildflowers. Or use succulents, cactus and other drought resistant plants on the roof. Which reminds me ... how about a Southwest Garden? Use the aforementioned drought resistant plants, covered with gravel and maybe a coyote, gecko or sombrero statue to complete the look.

And there's also a growing trend in Bible gardens. Yes, Bible gardens. Although a Bible garden is not a theme recommended for the casual hobbyist. Cultivating every flower, shrub, food crop or fruit mentioned in the Scriptures is a daunting objective, especially if you're trying to be exacting about plant choice. Some suggestions for plants are grapevines, date palms, dill, olive trees, and apples (you remember the story of Adam & Eve). Photobucket
I don't have a Bible garden, but I do admit to owning two statues of St. Francis of Assisi, the patron saint of animalsm birds and the environment (according to wikipedia). I think it's good luck to have him watching over my garden and the wildlife that comes to visit. I have one out front and one in the back yard. Photobucket
So go ahead and have fun with whatever theme you come up with. Gardens are meant to be enjoyed, a labor of love, for everyone lucky enough to spend some time there.

Up next, time for a little maintenance ... Stake those lillies! Trim those mums! And tie up those grasses!

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Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Theme Gardens

Not sure what to do with that clump of dirt that you thought would make a great garden? Try adding a theme to it.

Theme gardens are a way to add interest to your landscape while expressing yourself creatively. They can also provide a local "escape" to your favorite vacation place. And for some, they're a reflection of values.
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Take, for instance, my beachy lighthouse garden, pictured here with my bichon-mix Bailey. I have always had a love for the shore and chose to add the lighthouse to a troubled spot in my garden. There used to be a beautiful Japanese flowering cherry tree at this spot. Shortly after our beloved Rudy (a maltese) passed away, the tree died too. We like to think that Rudy took the tree with him, as under it was his favorite spot to sit in the yard.

After adding the lighthouse, we planted ornamental grasses and surrounded it with Malibu gold stones to suggest that "beach" feeling. We added a spotlight to highlight the lighthouse at night (it also has a bulb in the windows at the top). I love to sit on our patio and look out at the lighthouse. It reminds me of my favorite vacation spot.

We have mostly shade along the back end of our yard. So after losing 23 8-ft. tall Arborvitae during a drought a few years ago, we built our two shade gardens. And I, like many of you out there, had taken to collecting Boyd's Bears ... so after the company started making lawn ornaments out of them, I had to get a few.
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At first I scattered them all throughout the yard, but last year, I decided to concentrate them all in our longer shade garden and voila - the Teddy Bear garden was created.
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When creating your theme garden, don't just think of the plants, add statues, a bird bath, small stones, bigger stones, gravel, pavers or even sand - it's up to you. Even old broken lawn ornaments can add interest. Turn something on its side ... I have a friend who picked up an old push-mower at a yard sale, painted it bright colors and put it in the middle of his garden. It looks whimsical. You might also want to include lighting in your plan, it'll make the garden intersting at night too.

At yet another end-of-summer sale I purchasedd a Buddha statue, so I had to create a Zen garden to go along with him. I chose the spot under the arbor we had erected two years before. It was always a pain to mow around the posts of the arbor, so with a couple of bags of river rock and some retaining wall blocks to hold it all in, the Zen garden came to life. Photobucket

I don't know if I've ever confessed this here, but my whole motivation for starting the gardens in the first place was less grass to mow! We do have less, and hopefully, there will be even less in the future. You don't have to do everything all at once. Just add something new each year and before you know it, you'll have a garden to be admired!

Look for Theme Gardens Pt. 2 tomorrow.

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