Okay, so
you are learning to grow several types of flowers, but how do you put them
together to make a flower garden?
What Is
A Flower Garden?
Don't be
intimidated by the term "flower garden." Let's define the term as: any
planting of flowers. This could be the small patch by your front door- or
the border that runs the length of your property. It could be the group of
flower pots on your balcony or acres of wandering paths. The important thing
is: it's where you plant your flowers.
Designing Your Flower Garden
Many books
have been written on landscape design, garden design, plant combinations,
colors in the garden...it's enough to make a beginning gardener's head spin!
If you're thinking that there must be a "right" way to design your flower
garden and you don't know it, you are wrong!
True,
you're not going to design an award-winning flower garden with no
experience- but you weren't planning on inviting the garden society over
for tea this week, were you?
Regardless
of your experience, you can (and will!) have a beautiful display of flowers
if you follow these steps:
Imagine
Your Flower Garden
Close your eyes and
imagine your dream garden in the spot you have chosen. What colors are the
flowers? Is the general effect straight and orderly or soft and flowing?
Intense or romantic? Write down the characteristics you've imagined.
Choose
Flowers That Fit Your Image
If you picture an orderly
border, airy baby's breath won't fit in. Conversely, boxwood hedges are not
the best choice for a soft, romantic feel. This also applies to color- reds
and oranges will give an intense, vibrant feel to your garden, while pastels
are soft and calming.
Don't
Choose Flowers You Don't Like!
It's easy to get so wrapped up in finding the perfect flower for a certain
spot that you may overlook the fact that you just don't like it! Who cares
if the pre-designed flower garden in the magazine uses daisies? If you don't
like daisies (or you're allergic to them), don't use them!
Borrow
Some Ideas From Gardening Sources
Seed catalogs (and
some seed packets), gardening magazines, flower gardening websites, and even
flower shops can give you ideas. You can adapt pre-designed flower garden
plans to suit your tastes and needs. You can see pictures of flowers and
their foliage. You can also pick up ideas of flower combinations you'd like
to try. You might even want to cut out pictures and descriptions of flowers
and keep them in a "flower gardening journal" to give you ideas for later.
Arranging Flowers In Your Garden
Put the tall flowers in the back, mid-sized plants in the middle,
short-flowering plants in front...and then break this rule as you see fit.
Contrary
to what you may have heard, the world's not going to end if you put some
tall plants in the front, especially if they have airy foliage. Or if you
like the leaves so much you'd like to show them off. Or you want to be able
to reach the flowers because they're fragrant. Or...well, you get the point.
Don't
Be Afraid To Change
This is the biggest mind trap that beginning gardeners fall into. What you
do is not permanent. If you decide you don't like a plant where it is, you
can move it. If the flower combination you thought would be great looks
awful, you can change it. In fact, experienced gardeners know that a garden
is never finished- you add and subtract flowers. All the time.
And the
biggest rule of all- Please Yourself!
It's your garden! Do what
you want. Experiment. You'll never know exactly how it will look until you
do it- so put the books down, get off of the computer...and go get your
hands dirty! :-)
Shari Brown
Learning To Grow