STRONG on structure
The Gardener|April 2020
The difference between mere vegetation and a space called a garden is structure …
STRONG on structure

If you’ve spent extensive hours working in your yard, achieved some success in specific seasons but miss the consistent visual impact your garden could have all year long, you may have a structural shortfall.

What is garden structure?

The structure of a garden is how different components in it relate to each other or are linked together to form a complete picture – not unlike the interior décor of a pretty room inside the house. These ‘components’ can be planting designs teamed up with hard materials to create mini gardens within a garden.

Here are 9 ideas to add structure to your garden

1 Divide your garden into rooms

Add comfortable pathways to lead to different sections of your garden. Remember that a pathway should never lead nowhere.

A pretty garden arch covered with a climbing plant is another element to entice the onlooker and lure them further into your garden.

2 Use trees

Planting a beautiful specimen tree in a prominent spot is the first step to giving your garden backbone.

Planting small trees in groups to form a corpse is another way to create a strong element.

Identifying an existing tree in your garden and creating a planting design around its base will focus attention.

You can use the strong structure of a tree to house interesting elements like bird feeders, kokedamas, hanging baskets and dramatic epiphytes like staghorn ferns.

This story is from the April 2020 edition of The Gardener.

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This story is from the April 2020 edition of The Gardener.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

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