Showing posts with label arbor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arbor. Show all posts

Friday, April 21, 2017

The Creative Side of Gardening


So often the creative side of gardening is overshadowed by the more practical aspects of planting and nurturing flowers, fruits and vegetables.It's important to remember that gardening is not just work, it can be fun and inventive as well.

Gardeners can be a resourceful lot. They look around them to the materials at hand and see a creative potential. This post celebrates different ways to add whimsical or rustic touches to a garden using found objects and materials. Some of these ideas make use of natural items such as twigs, branches and tree stumps in a host of clever and unique ways. In other examples, everyday objects and industrial materials, like metal, have been re-imagined and given a second life.



Natural Ways to add Rustic Touches to a Garden


Even in death and decay, nature has an eerie beauty. Trees, with their twisted and gnarled roots, retain some of their majesty and grandeur even in death. Not surprisingly then, there is an old tradition of using tree stumps in a garden.

The first known "stumpery" was created in the 1850's by Edward William Cooke, an artistic gardener working on a large estate garden. In a flash of inspiration, Cooke saw a fresh use for tree stumps that had been unearthed when a section of the Batemen estate was cleared. Cooke piled the roots of these trees into a wall of stumps and then interplanted them with ferns. Very quickly the Batemen estate became known for its "stumpery." The delicate beauty of the green ferns emerging from the decaying wood was not only strikingly beautiful, it was a reminder, on a more spiritual level, that life can spring from death.

A modern stumpery that includes clay pots.

Making a garden stumpery grew to become a fashionable way to creat the perfect habitat for hardy ferns. Decaying wood returns nutrients to the soil providing the perfect rich, loamy environment that these woodland plants love.


At present stumperies are enjoying a resurgence in popularity do, in large part, to the efforts of Prince Charles who created a stumpery at his home at Highgrove House. In this instance, the Prince used sweet chestnut roots to create a shade garden filled with a large collection of hosta, ferns and hellebores.

The dramatic architecture of a tree's roots is more than just an ideal home for plants. Their mysterious and somewhat melancholy aesthetic can suggest a spiritual significance. One of the most dramatic examples I have seen is in the picture above. The stunning view is a reminder of nature's beauty and the ring that surrounds the large silvery-grey tree stump is a reference to the circle of life.


Tree stumps and driftwood can have modern uses as well. The only limitation is a gardener's imagination. Here on the edge of a pond (above) a weathered bit of wood suspends lanterns over the water. In the image below, a birdbath is nestled in the centre of a large, inverted stump that has been aged by the elements.





A large tree trunk can also make a fine pedestal for an object... 



or a pot filled with flowers.


A dead tree trunk can also make a tall apartment building for birds.


Logs and tree branches can find architectural uses as well. These rough wooden structures can sometimes have a large, imposing scale. There is something about this pergola that makes me think of Stonehenge.


The face that presides over this arbor again makes reference to that other worldly quality of rough, unfinished wood. In this example and the next, the faces reference fantastical creatures and the world of myths and legends.



Young saplings can be pliable. They can be bent into a curve or woven to make a fence or gate.


Here spruce saplings have been used to create a fence and arbor for this vegetable garden.



The tradition of making low woven fences for a vegetable or herb garden stretches back to Elizabethan times. In this modern example, branches have been woven to make a frame for an urn that sits in the centre of a formal herb garden.


Willow is particularly pliable and is often used to make rustic furniture, structures and even abstract sculptural figures like the ones you see below.



As well as more decorative uses, twigs can also be configured into an obelisk that provides support for climbing plants.


Even on a very basic level, twigs can make a very natural looking plant support.


In this final example a mix of different branches and a upright log support a couple of different types of clematis.


Found objects and Rustic Industrial Touches


Aren't these metal buckets hung on a length of chain a rather whimsical way to channel rainfall? In the second part of this post, we will focus on ways everyday objects and industrial materials have been repurposed.


The roof of this long rectangular birdhouse is a old rusted piece of metal. A row of maple syrup spigots provide a place for birds to land.


 Below the birdhouse, an old wagon wheel becomes a abstract sculptural object.


Ladders make terrific plant supports of one kind or another.



A window with an nice patina can be used as an abstract architectural sculpture.



An old milk can makes a rustic container for a planting of succulents.


In this instance old bottles are have been scattered through a shade garden.



This row of tomatoes are made more dramatic with a striking backdrop. The fence looks like it's rusted metal, doesn't it? But as you can from the closeup below, it is just a clever paint job on an ordinary wood fence. The oxidized metal stakes behind the tomatoes add to the effect.



It seems fitting to end this post with a few spring container plantings. This first one makes use of an old blue pot.


This is a re-imagined use for a rusty toolbox.


I hope this post will encourage you to get creative with found objects and natural materials. Remember, a garden is the perfect excuse for a grown-up to have fun express their imagination.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

An Artist's Garden

Morning Glory Vine.

The unique arbor entrance, in the garden I am about to show you, caught my eye as I was driving past one day. I determined to go back on the following weekend to ask if I might make arrangements to photograph the garden. 

Asking permission to photograph someone's garden is a bit of an unusual request. I always worry that people will greet me with suspicion, but just the opposite is true. Gardeners, on the whole, seem exhibit a certain generosity of spirit and happily invite me into their private outdoor spaces. Such is the case with Eleonora.

After a few minutes of casual conversation, Eleonora and I discovered that we actually had a lot in common. Not only did we share a love of gardening, she was also an artist (see some of her artwork here) and had a background in interior design. In Eleanor's case, she was working as an interior decorator for many happy local clients.


I asked her about the garden's history.

"My parents were gardeners-my father concentrated on the vegetable garden and my mother on the flowers-they would argue over the footage. This is my childhood home and after the death of my parents, my husband and I purchased it from my sisters. My husband and I continue in the same way in the same location.", she told me.

View A: The construction phase looking into the garden.  See the completed front of the garden in view A above. View B: Construction looking from inside the garden back to the road.

"In 2010, we made major changes to the garden, added rocks and fencing, an arbor entry and raised beds. In fact, it was my nephew who set the plan in motion, and together we mapped out where everything would go.", she continued. 

Eleonora and her husband determined were four important criteria that they wanted to incorporate into the new design: 

1. Raised beds to house herbs,vegetables, and flowers along the borders.
2. Gravel paths to remind them of a trip to Tuscany.
3. A "living" fence that was inspired by a photo of an English garden.
4. An arbor entry. (Eleonora designed the arbor to echo the peaked shape of the roof of the house.)

This is not quite the same angle as the construction photo B (above right), but this picture shows the right hand corner of the garden as it is now. The transformation from the 2010 picture of B is impressive, isn't it?


"With the stonescaping and fencing completed quite beautifully by my nephew, the task of filling in the gardens seemed daunting at first to my husband and I. We painstakingly saved as many perennials from my mother's garden as possible- peonies, hosta, sedum, Virginia creeper, rhubarb, phlox, iris, daylilies, red and yellow tulips and daffodils."

"Some plants are old and some plants are newly purchased: Butterfly bush, purple sand cherry, more varieties of hosta and hens & chicks."

Sweet Peas on the living fence and Morning Glories on the arbor entrance.

Plantings at the front fence include hosta, canna lilies, snap dragons, and the coleus below.


Such an odd color combination, but it works!



A sunflower peaks up above the front fence.

Herbs and flowers mix together with a pretty burgundy birdbath.


Vegetables and herbs intermingle with the flowers.

A pretty soft yellow dahila.

Another dahlia and yellow tansy on the right.

White Phlox

Purple alyssum and yellow Moss-Rose, Portulaca grandiflora 
spill over the edges of the raised beds.


A bright orange-red Moss-Rose, Portulaca grandiflora




I asked Eleonora about future plans for the garden.

"The garden has passed through phase 1 and we are gearing up for phase 2 and 3 in the coming summer months and subsequent year. The garden is always changing and we look forward to the season ahead."

More Information and Links:

Eleonora Gattesco Roberts is an interior decorator and artist. She is a high honours graduate from the Interior Decorating Program at Sheridan College and has a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Toronto's Art and Art History Program.
Please visit Gattesco House.com for more information about Eleonora, to see a sampling of her artwork and work as an interior decorator. Eleonora also has many lovely images of the garden she has taken herself on the website.


Streetsville Horticultural Society: Eleonora is a member of the Streetsville Horticultural Society which meets every 2nd Tuesday of the month (Sept-Dec, Feb-June). Please click the link for further details on the Society.