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A View for Every Season

Garden Gate

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Issue 184 - Fall 2025

Create beautiful flower-filled borders that look great from spring to frost.

A View for Every Season

It's all about the view This amazing panorama that includes Mount St. Helens isn't the only attraction in Lisa Graff's backyard. Take a seat on the patio or in the gazebo to enjoy the ever-changing borders, listen to the bubbling fountain or gaze at the pond and watch the wildlife that comes and goes.

Considering herself an English garden groupie, Lisa Graff has visited the United Kingdom several times to see gardens and take design classes. So when she and her husband, Brad, built their home in the hills around USDA zone 8 Portland, Oregon, 15 years ago, it was a given that she'd include design elements from her favorite English gardens: a beautiful borrowed view, curved pathways, a water feature, borders packed with flowers and the dry-stacked stone walls in photo 2. And her passion for flowering plants inspired her to start her business, Lux Perennials Nursery.

FRAME THE VIEW To emphasize the sight of Mount St. Helens in the distance, Lisa added the fountain and rill, or small stream, in photo 3. The water feature is centered on the house and flows down the slope, leading your eye to the mountain. Even if you aren't lucky enough to have a mountain vista, you can take advantage of a nearby flowering tree or stately evergreen by selectively pruning a hedge or keeping a fence at a lower height in one spot. You could also lead the eye with colorful containers to the scenery from a nearby park or greenbelt.

imageTerracing the slope near the patio using dry-stacked stone walls provided level areas that are easier to plant and maintain.

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This award-winning garden is rooted in personal connections.

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Issue 185 - Winter 2025

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Epimedium

This tough shade perennial provides year-round, deer-resistant beauty where few others thrive.

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Issue 185 - Winter 2025

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Reader Tips - GREAT IDEAS FROM SMART GARDENERS

JoAnne found a simple way to keep delicate stems from flopping over: She cuts the bottom off a clear disposable plastic cup, then makes a slit up the side and slips it around the plant's stem. It's a great way to provide a house plant, newly planted perennial or new cutting extra support as it grows.

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Issue 185 - Winter 2025

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Winter Survival Strategies

If you're worried about the effects the weather might have on your garden this year, find ways to make sure plants are off to a strong start in spring!

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1 min

Issue 185 - Winter 2025

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3 SMALL-SPACE GARDENS

Here are three 14x14-foot patio plans, each with its own distinct flavor, because a small space doesn't have to limit your style.

time to read

5 mins

Issue 185 - Winter 2025

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SHARED WISDOM

My “stone age” began in my childhood, when my dad would take our family on hikes to the creek behind our house.

time to read

7 mins

Issue 185 - Winter 2025

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Light Up the Shade

This is the plant for you if you're looking for something unusual for your shade garden. Carolina pink is native to the southeastern United States, but it is becoming increasingly rare in the wild. Luckily, it's starting to take off as a garden plant, and a striking one at that.

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2 mins

Issue 185 - Winter 2025

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WHICH shade ANNUAL IS RIGHT FOR YOU?

THIS or THAT: IMPATIENS VS. BROWALLIA

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2 mins

Issue 185 - Winter 2025

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Pretty Permaculture

After some home construction, Joseph and Shalyn Donofro’s zone 5 backyard was left with low-quality, compacted soil and not much of anything else. They envision a beautiful space that supports their young family’s healthy lifestyle goals, teaches responsibility to their children and enables them to spend quality time outdoors together. They want the cottage garden aesthetic, as well as the benefits of basic permaculture practices, which encourage sustainability and enrich the well-being of both the garden and the gardeners.

time to read

4 mins

Issue 185 - Winter 2025

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