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gardenhoe

by Lis Friemoth

Crossing the border: Make your landscape plans now

Now is the time to start planning next year’s garden landscape — from the comfort of your living room!

Let’s start with borders. Landscape borders define space and delineate real and/or representational boundaries. Borders can invite or they can deter. They can be practical or just plain fun. To some gardeners, borders are a medium for expression of balance between the horticultural and the manmade environments: homes, outdoor living space, areas of community interaction.

Historically, formal garden borders have been fixtures within civilizations for thousands of years; documentation first places them between 4000 and 3000 B.C. In western cultures, early formal borders were used to define space, provide food, and mimic architectural forms. The size and contents of formal border gardens followed the fashionable architectural and landscape design tenets of the day.

In large estate gardens, formally structured borders were important in providing an exterior aesthetic visually complementing the affluent lifestyle. They provided the physical delineation for exterior rooms of respite enjoyed by the household and guests. As an added bonus, border plant material was chosen and planted to provide additional food in the form of fruits, nuts and vegetables for the dining tables. For the average household garden, formally structured borders functioned primarily as production area that provided a large percentage of the household’s yearly food supply.

Because it was important to provide a reliable water supply throughout the growing season, irrigation systems were frequently used. Those early systems, by design and due to a limited flow capacity, had to run in straight lines — as did the borders relying on them. As irrigation systems improved, the formal border went from linear to flowing forms, making the formal border all about style and clean lines.

Orderly repetition and a controlled appearance is key in successfully achieving that formal look. Attention to regular maintenance is the key to successfully keeping it. Look for plant materials that provide balance in scale to the landscape. All materials used in formal borders should be those that either keep a rather regimented form on their own or respond well to repeated trimmings. Before choosing any plant for a hedge, be sure to look at mature height.

Although a tenacious gardener can prune away and keep most plants to a smaller stature than nature intended, using dwarf varieties for lower height borders is a better idea.

Choosing whether to use evergreens or deciduous plants for a formal border is a personal design choice. Both can offer the appropriate structure needed to convey that orderly repetition necessary for a sense of formality. Buxus (boxwood), Juniperus (juniper), Taxus (yew), and Thuja (arborvitae) have long been evergreen staples for hedging and border use for good reason. They are consistent performers when appropriately chosen and placed. Some evergreens that are not often thought of for formal border hedging, but should be, are Chamaecyparis (false cypress), Ilex (holly), and Tsuga canandensis (hemlock).

If the style and design of your border do not call for evergreens, there are many deciduous plants that respond beautifully to the structure of a border. As always, look for those that are cold-hardy, heat-tolerant and fit your landscape and environmental requirements (see related graphic). Be aware that many deciduous plants that are good for hedging can also be somewhat invasive; that’s what makes them good growers that respond well to repeated trimming.

In order to keep the borders looking full and well kept, fill plants in formal borders need to perform well throughout the season. With most perennials, that will mean careful planning to achieve continuity in flower and foliage interest. You may want to think about incorporating annuals to heighten the appeal and reinforce the appearance.

Do not forget the beauty and function that herbs can add to even the most formal of plantings. Herbs that respond well to repeated trimming are basil, leaf lettuce, and parsley. Try bay, chamomile, chives, kale, lavender, ornamental peppers, rosemary, sage, and thyme.

For a more modern take on a formal garden, ornamental grasses project consistent, clean lines with interesting movement and will provide excellent impact when appropriately placed.

If symmetrical repetition, perfection and architectural mimicry through plants is not what you are looking for in a border design, take a look at informal borders as an option.

The informal style was made famous by Gertrude Jekyll’s artistic approach to gardening early in the 20th century. Now commonly employed in Western gardens around the world, the informal border is a romantic, modified fusion of formal and naturalistic styles. This type of planting requires artistic choices in use of plant materials.

The casual appearance is the result of an intense study of environment, investigation into plant properties, and manipulation of color and balance. Prior to Jekyll’s influence, borders were often a way to showcase a collection of preferred or specific plants rather than a way to use color and form. There is no set plant list for the informal border; instead, the focus is on knowledge, patience, and of course, implementation.

If formal or informal borders don’t quite fit into the style of architecture or landscape design desired, take a look at naturalistic. Throughout the history of Eastern culture, naturalistic gardening has always been regarded as a higher art form. Once only for mighty rulers or the very wealthy, naturalistic gardening was long ago embraced by the masses. This style strives to imitate the ordered harmony of nature by interpreting nature without giving evidence to any intrusive human presence.

Gardening is a process. Choosing a particular style or developing your own border design is fun — a good way to showcase your garden knowledge and an even better place to try to expand it.

— Lis Friemoth is a horticulture diagnostician. Contact her at (262) 745-2904, P.O. Box 58, Springfield, WI 53176, visit online at www.thegardenhoe.com or e-mail her at gardenhoe@tds.net. Listen to Liz from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. every third Saturday on WISN AM1130 radio.

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