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From the lawn to the dream garden
Thus, from a small grassy area behind the house a dream garden. Two design ideas with planting plans to download and transplanting.
Context
More than an unkempt lawn, privet hedges and flowering cherry trees in the background, not to offer this garden. A more detailed design would enhance the small site visually significant.
WILDFLOWER GARDEN OR WEED PATCH?
Summer is definitely over and all the gardens are pretty well put to bed, the leaves are raked and even the grass is taking a break. There’s a nice sense of closure you get at the end of another gardening season. Too bad it doesn’t last very long. I’ve yet to met a gardener who isn’t planning next year’s space while raking up this year’s debris.
For several years now I have wanted a wildflower garden. I suppose this is no accident, since it’s been several years now that seed companies have been promoting their instant wildflower gardens in a can, sack or roll. My efforts to date have not met with much success. I’m not naive enough to think I could simply scatter some seeds and I would have a self-sowing meadow of bluebells and lacecaps, but I am dismayed to hear that starting a wildflower garden is often more work than putting in a perennial border and it is not necessarily self-perpetuating. If these plants are truly wild, (weeds, to most highway maintenance crews), why must I coddle and coax them out of the ground?
I’ve been looking into what is technically considered a wildflower garden and how can I get one established that will continue to self-sow, without becoming too invasive. Not too much to ask, I think. According to my local Extension office, wildflowers are species of flowers that have shown themselves to be hardy and self-reproducing with little attention form the gardener.


The Entertaining Garden