Integrate
Your Plants

Play
Up Texture
Pay
attention to foliage texture, as well as colour. For example, purple
heuchera makes a lovely contrast against 'Burgundy Glow' ajuga and gray-blue
stones.
Put Trees and Shrubs
in Pots
Don't
think container gardens are
limited to annuals -- you can use trees and shrubs to make a bold impact. For
example, ferny Sorbaria 'Sem' is a stunning partner for burgundy-leaf Red
Majestic hazelnut.
Plan for a Grand Entrance
Defining an entrance makes a
big statement - Place two spruces ready to usher visitors into a hillside garden
of slow-growing conifers and alpine plants. The evergreens are just big enough
-- about 8 feet tall and 6 feet wide -- to play hide-and-seek with the
meandering path that leads to a vine-covered garden folly.
Leave a Spot to Enjoy Your Garden
"Gardens are magical
places, and there should be reminders along the way: pretty vignettes and
little escapes." Whether they're used or not, a decorative table and chair
invite contemplation. The invitation stands: Come, sit awhile, and smell the
flowers, listen to the bird song, and watch the grass grow
Grow Fragrant Herbs
Plant herbs in window boxes and containers so you can place them by your kitchen
door or next to the grill so you can snip and tuck them into salads, soups, and
sauces. They're a feast for the eyes as well as the taste buds

Let Nature Be Your Guide
A
carved alpine pond in a hillside where frogs and toads join the chorus of birds
splashing in the shallow water. "The trick is to work with the setting so
the pond and plantings look natural. Lady's mantle and cotoneaster in the
foreground and alpine firs and weeping Nootka false cypress in the background.
In early spring, long before
the garden bursts into colour, pot up containers
that bridge the seasons with bright foliage and subtle textures. Start with a
weeping hemlock, then add a euphorbia or two. Next comes a sampling of Heuchera
'Marmalade' followed by a streak of Sedum 'Angelina'. "With foliage like
this, who needs flowers.
The
secret to cultivating intrigue in the garden,
always have a curve. You want to keep them guessing -- What's up ahead? What
will I discover? You don't need a lot of space to achieve that.

Your garden will profit from the addition of
plants with dark purple foliage that appears blackish. "Black foliage
creates magical combinations in the garden. Look at these dark-leaved begonias
and 'Bishop of Llandaff' dahlias."












