Sunday, August 16, 2015

Looking Good All Year by Benjamin Vogt

People often have the illusion that gardens are static places, manicured and perfect, stable and constant. Some botanical and public gardens contribute to this idea, but they are highly stylized examples, with legions of workers and volunteers — which most of us don’t have access to. What can we do to maintain an aesthetically pleasing landscape year-round that’s also sustainable and a wildlife haven?
5. Celebrate the hard realities of life. Plants are a lot like us: They get sick, they get stressed and tired, they get lonely or overcrowded, and sometimes they just give up. I want to see us celebrate the realities of plants and gardens — the occasional broken stem, the monarda covered in mildew and the plants gone dormant too early in an unusually dry summer. When we embrace the realities of the natural world and stop fighting them with added watering or chemical inputs, we might find the garden an intrinsically more beautiful and inspiring place.

These are just a few ideas for how to maintain a healthy and vibrant-looking native plant garden over the seasons. What binds all of these strategies together is the principle of planting thickly and in communities of plants that are also found together in the wild. The benefits they give one another — often intangible and unseen to us — help them thrive and also provide an aesthetic that never falters or calls into question the skill or vision of the gardener.

No comments:

Post a Comment