landscape

Add texture to garden with plants, trees, stones

txaas_masthead

photo of fountain grasses in the landscape

The harsh winter has left many local gardeners with holes to fill in their landscapes. But instead of simply filling those holes with the same plants that didn’t make it through the cold, consider this as an opportunity to rethink your garden design.

On these beautiful, breezy days our local nurseries beckon with rows and rows of perfect plants waiting for a new home. So what should you plant?  After thinking about size, light and water needs, the next consideration, for most gardeners, is color. It is, after all, the most conspicuous element in the garden and it is the focus of most homeowners.

But I often find even colorful gardens in need of depth and dimension. Too many similar plants deprive the garden of relativity. The placement of contrasting plants is what allows each individual plant to stand out against the backdrop of its neighbors.

To achieve harmony and add interest to your garden this summer, consider the role of texture in your landscape. Texture is how coarse or fine the surface of plant or hardscape material feels and looks.

A broad range of plant textures will affect the overall balance in your garden, giving it context.  Mixing textures is important so you can tell where one plant or area begins and another ends. One of my favorite plant pairings is a large, structural agave next to soft, billowy feather grasses that move with the wind.

Texture also makes a garden more inviting. I never pass by lamb’s ear in a garden without reaching out to touch its soft, velvety leaves, and the gentle rustle of grassed and seed heads is music in the garden.

Some examples of plants with varying textures include:

Coarse:  Plants with large irregular leaves, thick veins, and rough bark.  In this category you would find plants like philodendron, agave, leather leaf mahonia, sea holly, acanthus, croton and canna.

Medium: These plants have mid-size leaves, a smooth shape, and generally include simple lines such as agapanthus, viburnum, ruellia, monarda, Turk’s cap and Jerusalem sage.

Fine: Defined by small or thin, strappy leaves, fine-textured plants include plants like grasses or things with a wispy, vining form such as Japanese Maple, society garlic, ferns, artemesia, guara, yarrow or damianita.

Texture isn’t limited to leaves of the plants in your garden. When the cold winter has sapped much of the color from your garden, the trees that form the framework for your landscape can also add wonderful texture to the garden. Exfoliating bark becomes a focal point against dried grasses and bare limbs. The sculptural style of crape myrtles, burr oaks or lace bark elms all adds interest to the garden.

Just as with color, the placement of texture in your landscape can create the illusion of depth and space. Placed in the foreground, large, bold foliage followed by smaller fine plants can elongate and extend the image of space in your garden. With smaller plants and textures up close and a perimeter with large plants can make a larger garden seem smaller and more inviting.

But your design planning doesn’t stop there. Hardscape has texture, too. All of the elements in your garden play into the vision of the garden as a whole.

Hardscape materials can be used to match the texture and style of your plants, or it can serve to provide some contrast and dimension for balance.

Examples of different hardscaping that add to the look and feel of our garden include:

Coarse: To add a strong element to the garden, use rough-cut, irregular or natural stone, rough-hewn cedar, large boulders, or any type of unfinished surface or fencing, allowed to weather.

Medium: Materials that can work either way in the landscape might include flagstone, polished wood or brushed concrete

Fine: To create a finer look, use small, smooth stones like pea gravel or river rock, or small-slatted wooden fencing or furniture or delicate metal trellises or arbors.

So walk through your garden this season with a more critical design eye and identify the textures in your garden. Think about how you can enhance your landscape with the addition of some carefully placed textural plants or hardscape that will add dimension. And on your next visit to your local nursery, don’t be afraid to touch and feel your way through the plants.

Local Landscape Designer and Garden Coach Diana Kirby provides landscaping tips at http:/www.dianasdesignsaustin.com and writes a garden blog at https://www.dianasdesignsaustin.com

By |2017-11-29T23:27:07-06:00May 24th, 2014|Articles|Comments Off on Add texture to garden with plants, trees, stones

Landscapes of Spain an inspiration for Texans

I thought I was back home in Texas when we toured the Botanical Gardens in Madrid a few weeks ago.  We saw so many amazing things on our trip to Spain, and one of my favorite things to do was check out their landscaping, gardens and public parks.  I really enjoyed comparing their landscaping and plants to ours.

We spent time in Madrid and Barcelona, both large, historic metropolitan cities with a surprisingly significant amount of parkland and green space.  The Parque del Buen Retiro, literally, “Park of the Pleasant Retreat” in the heart of Madrid, covers 350 acres.  With a lake in the center, the park includes wide pedestrian walkways lined with crafts and artisans and entertainers and are enjoyed by walkers, bicyclists and roller bladers alike.  We even watched several roller blading classes for children and adults.  Only blocks away lies the botanical garden, the Real Jardin Botanico, home to seemingly limitless garden displays.  Barcelona has similar large parks and gardens including the Parc de la Cituadella, Jardi Botanic and Park Guell, filled with Gaudi artwork and whimsical sculpture.

Spain has a typical Mediterranean landscape.  And like Texas, it has a very diverse topography – from to arid desert-like scrub, rolling hills and mountainous regions to lush tropical and coastal areas awash with balmy Mediterranean breezes. It also includes the Balearic Islands of Mallorca, Minorca, Ibiza and Formentera.

Texas has several different landscapes – the Northern Plains, Trans-Pecos Region, Texas Hill Country, Piney Woods and South Texas.  Spain is no different – summers are extremely hot in Madrid and southern Spain, winters can be extremely cold in the Pyrenees Mountains and the north and the coastal regions are tropical.  Most of the country is characterized by hot, dry summers and mild, rainy winters.  While my garden was parched and dry at home in Austin, we had to work our sightseeing around several days of showers and heavy rains while we were there.  Normally time of year is sunny and warm, we just happened to hit a rainy spell.  (Wish we would do that here.)

In recent years, American gardeners have been turning more often to the Mediterranean style of landscaping, and our travels in Spain showed me why.

Modern landscape design has its roots in the ancient civilizations of the area.  The Mediterranean style of gardening reflects the easygoing Mediterranean culture, and pairs beautiful elements of nature in an elegant style.   While the gardens have an orderly and graceful style, they are far from formal.  Geometric designs, straight lines and stonework are used to frame a broad range of plants, from soft, flowing petals to linear shrubs and trees to anchor the garden.  It’s not uncommon to see flowers, herbs, fruit trees, palms and succulents all in the same garden.

With its varied climate zones, Spain is home to more than 8,000 plant species.  Texas enjoys approximately 5,500. We share many of the same plants as our European neighbors.

Dramatic cordylines and palms of all sizes are incorporated into most landscapes, parks and public areas.  Olive, cypress and retama trees scatter the countryside.  Beautiful bougainvilleas in all colors climb walls and fences along with mandevillas and fragrant jasmine.

Flowering bushy shrubs include hibiscus, lantana, oleander, plumbago and angel’s trumpet.  And to provide the textural contrast that’s so appealing in Mediterranean gardens, there are all the grasses, cacti, agaves and succulents – plants that are our staples here in recent drought-stricken years.

Our experience in Spain was rich in very different culture, history, architecture and food.  But it was also nice to see some familiar plants across the ocean decorating the beautiful Mediterranean landscape.

By |2017-11-29T23:27:23-06:00June 25th, 2011|Articles|0 Comments
Go to Top