Through time, by nature or circumstance, gardeners and their gardens evolve, as does their opinion of what the perfect garden is. As I work in different people's gardens, I must remember the details that are important to them. What one person considers a weed, another considers a treasured plant and maybe wants seedlings dug up to share. Where one person wants plants left at the end of the season for winter interest, another wants everything cut perfectly at ground level. Their gardens range from one of everything to specific collections, from cottage to formal. That is the beauty of my work. Getting to do different things to see what I want to incorporate into my own garden.
When I first started gardening, as many gardeners, I was the one of everything type. Free plants were especially desirable. I wanted to try everything. As time went by, I determined I had to narrow down plants. Though an extensive list looks nice on paper, there is not room in my small yard for everything. Especially when they are plants that love to spread ... the type you most often get for free. One lady I work for laughs that it took her seventy years to get to the point that she did not have to have every plant, but could be content to say, "I grew that once." Needless to say, by this point, some more invasive plants are very well established and it can be overwhelming to get rid of them.
Through the one of everything phase I did get a good idea of how plants behave and the type I like. Without fully realizing it, I amassed some nice collections. In the evolution of the garden, I took out plants that were not spectacular and grouped various collections together to compliment each other as well as show the extent of the collections. Because of the work I do, I still get lots of free plants, but I always verify first that they are not invasive.
I suppose that now my perfect garden is an organized cottage garden. I like the lush informal look of the cottage garden, but I also like specific gardens. Regardless of how the next gardening year turns out, I can already see my shade gardens overflowing with hostas, accented with heucheras, ferns and various shade plants ... rose gardens filled with fragrance and complimented by peonies, day lilies, mums and a wide variety of perennials and self-sowing annuals ... the xeroscape garden lush with grasses, sedums, iris and other hardy plants ... hens and chicks running over in the Sempervivum bed ... a bountiful crop in the veggie and herb gardens. I am reminded of a joke that they once did an autopsy on a gardener and found she was full of "next years."
When I first started gardening, as many gardeners, I was the one of everything type. Free plants were especially desirable. I wanted to try everything. As time went by, I determined I had to narrow down plants. Though an extensive list looks nice on paper, there is not room in my small yard for everything. Especially when they are plants that love to spread ... the type you most often get for free. One lady I work for laughs that it took her seventy years to get to the point that she did not have to have every plant, but could be content to say, "I grew that once." Needless to say, by this point, some more invasive plants are very well established and it can be overwhelming to get rid of them.
Through the one of everything phase I did get a good idea of how plants behave and the type I like. Without fully realizing it, I amassed some nice collections. In the evolution of the garden, I took out plants that were not spectacular and grouped various collections together to compliment each other as well as show the extent of the collections. Because of the work I do, I still get lots of free plants, but I always verify first that they are not invasive.
I suppose that now my perfect garden is an organized cottage garden. I like the lush informal look of the cottage garden, but I also like specific gardens. Regardless of how the next gardening year turns out, I can already see my shade gardens overflowing with hostas, accented with heucheras, ferns and various shade plants ... rose gardens filled with fragrance and complimented by peonies, day lilies, mums and a wide variety of perennials and self-sowing annuals ... the xeroscape garden lush with grasses, sedums, iris and other hardy plants ... hens and chicks running over in the Sempervivum bed ... a bountiful crop in the veggie and herb gardens. I am reminded of a joke that they once did an autopsy on a gardener and found she was full of "next years."