The Impatient Gardener

30 May 2014

FEATURE FRIDAY: CHELSEA FLOWER SHOW 2014

I'm declaring it here: Someday I will go to the Chelsea Flower Show. This annual event is a veritable utopia for gardeners who go to take in the show gardens (from large to small), and special booths often featuring specific plants. The only thing keeping me from booking a ticket for next year is the crowds. I'd have to figure out a way to avoid the public days because after watching some shows on it, I would go nuts dealing with all those people.

Continuing my addiction to BBC gardening shows, I watched almost all 14 hours of Chelsea Flower Show programming on Youtube last week (go here to watch most of them) and while much of it was repetitive, it gave me the best look at the show I've ever had. The website has a handful of photos of each garden (not nearly enough, in my opinion), videos and, best of all, a few gardens provide plant lists (this should be mandatory for every garden, I think).

What amazed me was how the large show gardens, all designed and sponsored by different people, seemed to have so much in common. A blue, white and yellow color scheme (in other words, very soothing) seemed to be everywhere (this was just fine with me because I'm learning that is my favorite, for now, anyway). The planting styles were also very similar. Giant chunky drifts of plants (as we've been taught to plant in and I have preached here, although sometimes still struggle to do in my own garden) seem to have given way to a more naturalistic style of planting. Many of the gardens seemed to have a small number of plant varieties, but mixed them up and repeated them throughout. It's one way to make a garden that I feel is always successful, but it requires far more restraint than I'll ever have.

My favorite garden was the Hope on the Horizon garden designed by Matthew Keightly, who is just 29. It won the People's Choice award and I can see why.

This is my favorite part of it.

The Galloping Gardener photo

The combination of the granite blocks, the ethereal Mexican feather grass (which I'm now obsessed with and in search of for my own garden even though it's only an annual here and relatively invasive in warmer zones), the white agapanthus and the pops of blue is just amazing. I think the plant selection in this garden is absolutely amazing.



There was a very similar color palette used on the Best in Show garden, the Laurent-Perrier garden designed by Luciano Giubbilei. I don't care for this garden nearly as much but clearly the judges didn't agree.



Another garden that I liked was the Telegraph garden, which the design brief says is a modern interpretation of an Italian garden. If this is what a garden in Italy is like, I consider that one more reason to get there soon.

My favorite thing in it is the lime trees (Tilia x europaea 'Pallida' aka European linden) that have been trained to form a roof. What amazing structure they add! And they make the perfect spot to sit for a cappuciano. I also quite like what I'm calling the ottoman boxwoods. We've seen boxwoods pruned into just about every shape imaginable, but this is the first time I've seen them all squatty. The planting is great, and while straight lines aren't usually my thing, I think they make perfect sense in this garden.




As much as I love that color scheme, even after looking at these three gardens, I'm a little sick of it. Thank goodness for this Japanese garden by Kazuyuki Ishihara to change it up.





Chelsea gardens aren't meant to be real, of course. Every plant is coddled to be at its peak for the show, a situation you could never reproduce in a real garden. But it's incredibly inspirational. I wish I could see them with my own eyes.

Labels: , ,

09 May 2014

FEATURE FRIDAY: CONTAINER DESIGN

It seems incomprehensible to me that I have given basically no thought to container plantings this year. By this time of the year I usually know exactly what I'll be doing in all of my containers, but I'm just first starting to think about it now. Certainly the weather is partly to blame, but I've also had other gardening projects on the brain.

It could also be because I still haven't finished the planter we've been building. It's so close to finished, but I keep dragging my feet on it. Hopefully this will be the weekend that I'm able to declare it finished and share it with you.

My greatest source of inspiration for container planting is always looking at photos of other containers. I can't think of a time that I've ever copied a container planting exactly, but I usually see something I like and use that as a jumping off point for creating the look I'm after.

So, for Feature Friday, I'm sharing some pretty container design photos. I hope they'll spark a design for you as much as for me.

Source 
Not sure on the source but I think this is a Deborah Silver design.

Deborah Silver



Deborah Silver

Pot Inc.
Edens Gate Gardening





A note about sources: Many of these photos came from my Pinterest Container Gardening board and the pins I then pinned for this board don't seem to go back to the original source. If you know the source, please let me know and I will be sure to give proper credit.


Labels: ,

25 April 2014

FEATURE FRIDAY: WATER IN THE GARDEN

First of all, thank you all so much for your kind words about the loss of our dog Hudson. So many of you shared stories of your beloved pets and I know that you know just what we're feeling.

Hudson loved water as all Newfs do. In fact they love it so much that having a water feature in my yard would be an invitation to a constantly wet dog. Plus, some water features can be a bit more maintenance than I'm interested in, so beyond the natural creek that runs through the yard, we don't have a water feature. But there is nothing like water in the garden, and water features are so much more than overgrown ponds or tri-level Italian-style fountains. In fact, I found some really creative water features ranging from quite large and complicated to simple but beautiful.

Enjoy.
















And then there is this absolutely amazing work of art from Deborah Silver's Branch Studio. You must visit her blog to see how this fountain was created. I hope this ends up in a garden that is created around it, because it is just that special.


Do you have water in your garden? What would your dream water feature be?

Labels: ,

11 April 2014

FEATURE FRIDAY: GARDEN ORNAMENTS

I love garden ornaments and sculpture. The right piece in the right place adds another dimension to a garden. There's a place for serious sculpture and whimsical ornaments in any garden, but I think the key is to know when to stop. Nothing makes a garden look a little bit like a junk yard with plants growing in it faster than too much stuff laying around in it. Ornaments should always compliment the plants, not the other way around.

I love using driftwood in my garden and I have a collection of interesting pieces that some day I'd like to turn into something. The problem is, I don't know what that is.

But I'm also adding a little something to the garden hopefully this weekend that I hope will say "sculpture" and not "random junk from the side of the road" when it's finished. I'm not even going to tell you about it yet because I really have no idea how this is going to go.

In the meantime, I thought we'd look at some great garden ornaments for a bit of inspiration this spring Friday.

I think this is a great example of the plantings and the sculpture being perfect for one another.


This one is just downright cool. In the comments on this photo, several people asked how you make such a sphere but the artist isn't saying.


I like this cow. I once saw a concrete pig (almost life sized) in a garden and I've been somewhat infatuated with concrete pigs ever since. And no, I'm not adding a pig to my garden (not this weekend anyway).


This falls in the creepy-but-cool category for me.


How can you not love this gravity-defying sculpture?



While I'm not sure I love the sculpture itself (I'm a bit concerned about this women's head), I love the siting of it. Something so modern and geometric in a woodsy area is so interesting.




What's your favorite kind of garden ornament?


Labels: , ,

04 April 2014

FEATURE FRIDAY: MIXED BORDERS

I'm  sorry the posting has been a bit sporadic lately. Although a deadline a work certainly has much to do with that, I've also been spending some blog time working on a redesign. It's almost finished and I hope to launch it soon so don't be alarmed if you visit The Impatient Gardener soon and it looks different. Same blog, same gardener, different look.

I've been staying up late at night watching all the BBC gardening shows I can find on youtube, and one was on herbaceous borders. The examples they showed were stunning, although I detest such borders when they have a bowling alley of grass down the middle. Anyway, it got me thinking, and I believe that a mixed border is my favorite kind of garden.

Tracy diSabato-Aust has several wonderful books and one of my favorite is The Well-Designed Mixed Garden. In particular, I love the mix of textures in mixed garden, especially when a few evergreens are mixed in. Even just seeing the trunk of a tree does something really interesting for a mixed garden.

So that's what this week's Feature Friday is about.



Photo source

Photo source



Labels: , ,

21 March 2014

FEATURE FRIDAY: SPRING HAS SPRUNG

The declaration in the headline might be more optimistic than realistic, but I thought it would be appropriate to mark the first full day of spring with some shots of spring bulbs in full bloom, even it will be several weeks before such a thing happens in my area.


When I did the garden design styles series, one reader had a comment that had me laughing so hard and I've not forgotten it. Now every time I see a photo of a garden with a boxwood hedge I think of it.

Casa Mariposa said, "I don't like structured, formal gardens and little boxwood hedges drive me nuts. I just want to take a pair of shears to the side and cut an escape route for all the plants penned up inside." 

The image of cutting an escape route for the plants stuck in boxwood jail (such as the tulips below) brings a smile to my face every time.







Looking at these photos, I'm a bit sad that I don't grow more tulips, but it seems like a worthless cause when every critter around seems to line up to eat them.

I've discovered some of the fancier kinds of daffodils and that helps me forgot that I'm missing tulips. I love the doubles and many of them have a lovely fragrance too.

The Impatient Gardener photo
Every spring I tell myself that I'm going to plant more spring bulbs come fall and then every fall I decide that I have too many other chores to do in the garden so I skip it. The only negative about spring bulbs as far as I'm concerned is having to deal with the foliage after the flowers have faded. The more daffodils I have, the more braiding of leaves I have to do and that gets tiresome. Still I doubt that few things can stir a gardener's soul more than the springs first flowers.

What are your favorite spring bulbs?

All photos from Houzz.com. Click on the photo for more information.

Labels: , , , , ,