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Maine Gardener: Garden design topic of New England Grows talk

1:00 AM

‘Making a mess is part of the creative process,’ speaker David Culp advises

By Tom Atwell

When I showed up at David Culp’s lecture on Layered Gardens at New England Grows in Boston earlier this month, I figured he would discuss the depth of his garden beds – with the taller plants at the back, and progressively shorter plants toward the front.

Culp did discuss that principle of design. He even expands on it by sloping his beds so that the backs are foot or two higher than the fronts, and the plants at the back are therefore more visible.

However, there are other layers in a garden, including the layer of time, with a plant and a garden changing as the year progresses, and as the years succeed each other.

“The garden has a changing look over all four seasons,” he said. “I love the spring garden, especially after a hard winter. But I also love the look of the fallen rose at the end of the season. It is all good, just different.”

Culp is director of sales and marketing for Sunny Border Nurseries, based in Connecticut, but gardens at his two-acre home in Downingtown, Pa.

The gardens at Brandywine Cottage, the name Culp gave his home, are designed to look natural, but he did start out with a plan – a plan that he believes goes with a house built in the 1790s.

“The gardens are geometric, which is more formal,” he said. “Being a plant collector, I think the lines bring order to the garden. Circuitous borders are more Victorian.”

He put his vegetable garden in the center of the garden and because he wanted it to be visible and not up against the boundary line with his neighbors, which he screened by giving the neighbor some pine trees.

He follows the practice of many gardeners by having the gardens near the house formal, but letting the design get looser farther away. At one side of the garden is a hillside, which contains a lot of full-size trees and where he puts in understory plants – and that creates layers of height. If a tree dies in that area, he leaves it up unless it uproots itself, in part because it looks natural and in part because it provides habitat for wildlife.

Culp does something I have never considered in a plant design. He groups plants that bloom at the same time. So in spring, there is a profusion of blooms close to the house. In mid-season, the preponderance of blooms are in a different area.

“I have different peaks of bloom time, but the transitions are soft,” he said. “The layered garden is about the relationships of the borders and space. It often has three plants interacting with each other.”

Culp has a lot of tall plants in his garden, partly because he wants to create that feeling of awe he had as a child in his grandmother’s garden of being surrounded by plants that were so much larger than he is.

Plant shapes are important in his garden.

“When it comes to color, it is not color first. It is texture first,” he said. “Color is mood, texture is emotion.”

You check out texture by doing a black-and-white photo, and if you can’t find the focal point in that photo, it is time to put in a statue, he said.

In one section of the garden he has a lot of verticals, beginning with trees. Then he adds a lot of vertical plants, including salvia, German iris, foxgloves and others, with a tall trellis and a bit of picket fence.

He puts the small, beautiful plants close to his house, including the hellebores, which he loves. He has created an entire line of hellebore hybrids called the Brandywine series.

(Continued on page 2)

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Garden seminar covers do’s, don’ts of landscape design

You’ve heard about kale and how it’s supposed to be so good for you, but you don’t know much about it?

Kale and many other garden topics will be explored Saturday, March 8, during “Adventures in Gardening IX,” a daylong spring seminar at Maquoketa (Iowa) Middle School.

The event is sponsored by the Iowa State University Extension Outreach Jackson County Master Gardeners and features three keynote speakers, four mini-sessions (participants may choose two) and nine info stations (to be explored at one’s own pace).

ISU Extension entomologist Laure Jesse will deliver the first keynote speech, talking about how to diagnose plant problems that will help gardeners determine whether the cause is a disease, an insect or an environmental factor.

The “do’s and don’ts of landscape design” will be discussed in early afternoon by Sara Carpenter, landscape designer and manager at Steve’s Ace Home and Garden Center, Dubuque.

A demonstration on the practical care of gardening tools will follow. Roger Rittmer, a Clinton County Master Gardener, will help you evaluate your gardening tools and demonstrate how to care for, and sharpen. them.

The mini-sessions are:

• “Backyard Wildlife Management,” by Rebecca Christoffel, ISU wildlife specialist. The challenges and opportunities presented by wildlife, from rabbits munching on plants to the use of bats as a form of integrated pest management.

• “How to Grow and Cook with Herbs,” by Deb Monroe, Clinton County Master Gardener and manager of the Crossroads Garden Café, DeWitt, Iowa. Informative tips, recipes, samples.

• “Small Space Gardening,” by Sara Carpenter, landscape designer and manager at Steve’s Ace Home and Garden Center, Dubuque. Clever and unique ideas to maximize small spaces.

• “Bugs That Bug You — Good, Bad and Ugly,” by Margo Hansen, director of programs for Bickelhaupt Arboretum, Clinton. Information about the most prominent pests, including emerald ash borer, Japanese beetles and Asian lady beetles.

Info-station topics and presenters include:

Aronia berries, Mitch Gravert, Jackson County Master Gardener

Asparagus and spinach, Judy Tonderum, Jackson County Master Gardener

Blueberries, Mary Ann McLaughlin, Maquoketa Garden Club

Edible flowers, Lee Karabin, Jackson County Master Gardener

Flowers of the Bible, Doris Currier, Jackson County Master Gardener

Kale and rhubarb, Sharon Bullock, Jackson County Master Gardener

Questions and answers, Margo Hansen, director of programs, Bickelhaupt Arboretum, Clinton

Weed identification, Mary Lou Johnson, Jackson County Master Gardener

Gladiolas, Alice Mans, Jackson County Master Gardener

Van Ryzin: A community garden designed as public art

Saturday, Feb. 22, 2014 | 3:51 p.m.

Out & About: meet the UK’s best specialist growers at the RHS London Plant and …

Among the spring flowers on sale will be many different snowdrops, hellebores and early spring bulbs, including new plants and unusual cultivars.

And those interested in garden design can talk to experts from the Society of Garden Designers to get up-to-date advice for gardening projects.

Top garden designers will be leading a talks programme and many new contemporary garden products will be on sale.

Anybody interested in a career in garden design can also talk to representatives from the UK’s leading design colleges to discuss course options.

Tickets cost £5 and are available at the RHS website www.rhs.org.uk/Shows-Events where members can also get an early bird discount on tickets for RHS Hampton Court Palace Flower Show and RHS Flower Show Tatton Park if they book by February 28.

Marshalls to join sponsors at 3D printed garden design show

By Sarah Cosgrove
Thursday, 20 February 2014

The first garden show to incorporate 3D printing, miNiATURE has attracted sponsorship from paving company Marshalls.

The show will feature 3D printed garden design models at The Strand Gallery, central London from 6 to 8 March. Designers from the UK, Australia and the Republic of Korea are all booked to show their creations.

Co-Curator Andrew Fisher Tomlin said:  “Marshalls’ commitment to design and development through new technology and sustainability supports the shows aims to introduce new ways of presenting landscape design.”

Marshalls joins Hobs 3D and the London College of Garden Design as headline sponsors.
The show will feature an international line up.

The UK designers are John Brookes, Jamie Dunstan, Sarah Eberle, Adam Frost, Andy Sturgeon, Jo Thompson and Wilson McWilliams.

From Australia Myles Baldwin and Jim Fogarty will be exhibiting and from the Republic of Korea Jihae Hwang.

miNiATURE was created by British designers Tom Harfleet and Andrew Fisher Tomlin and Kajsa Bjorne, a landscape designer based in Sweden and Australia.

How to design the perfect conservatory

You want to end up with a well-proportioned conservatory that is fit for
purpose. Inevitably, this means sacrificing part of your garden, but hold
tight to your goal of creating a structure that, through good design,
provides an effortless link between inside and out.

“A conservatory will reduce your garden’s footprint,” says Brendan Day, head
of design at Apropos, who has been building glass structures for 50 years.
“But don’t forget that with glass there’s a lot of growing to be had. A
conservatory could meet your planting needs just as well, if not better,
than your garden space.”

Choose furniture, size of planting beds and accessories (eg staging, large
containers) at the design stage. These dimensions will determine the final
proportions and internal floor layout and help to ensure that the best views
are incorporated and that the natural light will be a plus, not a hindrance.

As for architecture, the obvious choice is to echo the style of your home. Yet
contemporary conservatories alongside period homes are increasingly popular,
often making minimal impact. Indeed, for this reason English Heritage often
recommends contemporary glass structures for listed buildings.

3 Aspect

A south-facing aspect may seem the obvious choice to ensure year-round sun,
but the sun’s rays become magnified and can burn through glass. Also, air
becomes hot and dry, an environment that no plant (or person) enjoys, and
which also encourages pests and disease. Blinds will be an essential
addition.

“Some of the nicest buildings I’ve experienced, in terms of lovely, breathable
atmosphere and comfortable sociable space, are on the north sides of
people’s homes,” advises Lisa Rawley, of conservatory plant specialist Fleur
de Lys.

4 Glazing

A conservatory relies on its glass to operate to capacity. Solar-controlled
glass can help minimise the temperature of the room and control glare. In a
north-facing conservatory, low-emissivity (low‑E) glass will reduce heat
loss.

Architecturally speaking, lanterns and coloured glass can create interest, but
Nick Bashford, a director of glasshouse and conservatory specialist Alitex,
advises against fussy effects or, for example, replicating the details of
your property’s windows.

“Keep things simple,” he says. “A conservatory is essentially a glasshouse in
its own right, not an extension of your house. Aim to ensure complete
transparency whilst inside looking out. Neutral glass won’t reflect
furniture, to allow a clear view, and a wonderful link to the landscape
beyond.”

5 Ventilation

To ensure a comfortable atmosphere, you need a well-designed ventilation
system.

“We have so few truly hot summer days in this country that air-conditioning
isn’t necessary, but to control overheating a good ventilation system is
crucial,” says Nick Bashford. “Roof vents are essential in releasing a
build-up of hot air. Low-level air can be drawn through doors or low vents,
with hot air rising naturally to be released through roof venting to provide
a cool, moist atmosphere enjoyed by people and plants.”

Ventilation can be operated manually, but automatic systems are perfect if you
are a frequent traveller, or like me, become forgetful when basking in the
garden on rare sunny summer days.

6 Heating

The temperature to which you heat your conservatory is perhaps the most
crucial decision in terms of how you will use it. Your choice is not just
about people – temperature dictates the plants that you grow. Heating a
conservatory year-round to the same temperature as your house
(59-70F/15-21C), will limit your plants to the tropical spectrum, eg palms,
ficus and schefflera.

Unheated conservatories are ideal for overwintering citrus and
borderline-hardy plants, such as Jasminum polyanthum, so creating a fragrant
winter garden. Kumquats, pomegranates and aspidistra would be happy, too, if
you keep some fleece to hand.

Maintaining a minimum winter temperature of 50F (10C) allows the greatest
choice of plants. “Mediterranean plants are happy at this temperature and
will probably flower year-round,” says Lisa Rawley. “Succulents too. The
best family of succulents that I’ve come across for conservatories at this
temperature are kalanchoes, with the most magnificent flowers.”

Conservatories can be heated by a host of methods – fan, convection, even
water. Underfloor heating is perhaps the least intrusive, but rules out
wood, rubber or vinyl flooring. Some root systems will not tolerate being
placed on a heated floor. One solution is to heat only the middle section of
the floor leaving the edges free to accommodate plants in pots.

7 Watering

It is a good idea to include an external tap for easy watering. Though
tempting, an irrigation system is difficult to tailor to plants’ individual
needs. Hand-watering gives you more control.

Water also adds much-needed humidity to the atmosphere. The best way to add
humidity is with a canopy of plant foliage, which continually releases H₂O
into the atmosphere, but a pool will help with this – and add atmosphere of
a different kind. In a watering crisis, they can also be used as a plunge
pool for plants.

8 Hort practicalities

Flooring materials must be able to withstand leaks and spillages. Continuing
your exterior paving is not only practical, but unifies the transition from
inside to out.

Tiered plant stands can be designed into the layout to give plants maximum
light so that growth is plentiful and healthy.

Planting beds that meet the soil beneath the conservatory floor will allow
plants to thrive. Lisa Rawley recommends a minimum bed width of 8-10in
(20-25cm). “Plants won’t dry out so quickly and with their roots free to get
down into the ground can mature without too much trouble,” she says.

9 Plants

Plan plants at the design stage. Invest only when you’ve matched the plant
with the conditions they’ll be expected to live in. Then consider bloom:
“Most flowers naturally want to face east or south,” says Lisa Rawley. “This
means that very often in a south-facing building all your blooms look out of
the windows, away from you. If planted on the back wall of your structure,
they’ll still be facing out – but you’ll be living in front of the bloom and
have the best view,” Call in an interior plant specialist, such as Fleur de
Lys or Interior Garden Design, for advice.

10 Planning regs

Generally, most conservatories are within permitted development rights, so
long as certain size and height conditions are met. If you live in a
conservation area, Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, national park or a
World Heritage Site there are further conditions. Visit the planning portal (planningportal.gov.uk)
for the full list of conditions or check with your local authority.

Many specialist conservatory designers and manufacturers will deal not only
with design, manufacture and installation, but also any planning permissions.

USEFUL CONTACTS

Alitex (01730 826900; alitex.co.uk)

Apropos (0800 328 0033; apropos-conservatories.com)

Fleur de Lys (01798 839048; conservatory
plants.co.uk
)

Indoor Garden Design (020 8444 1414; indoorgarden
design.com
)

Glass and Glazing Federation (020 7939; ggf.org.uk)

*Ann-Marie Powell is a garden designer (ann-mariepowell.com)

Read more: Britain’s best conservatories to visit

Read more: Before and after: conservatories
transformed by Lisa Rawley

TSC Community Garden Planning

A group of students at Texas Southmost College has put together a number of designs for the Brownsville Wellness Coalition to consider for the next phase for the city’s community gardens. 


The collaboration began when BWC Executive Director Melissa Delgado met Murad Abusalim, an architecture instructor at TSC who teaches the college’s Design II class.

From there, the students in his course were tasked with researching and incorporating best practices

from community gardens across the country into what will be three new gardens in Brownsville.

Delgado and a group of experts will evaluate each design individually to determine which one will be chosen for the three parks.

The project was a great opportunity for students to get involved in the community, Abusalim said.

Designing for a budget of $10,000 for each garden, students got to work, taking pains to make sure each design was cost- and space-efficient while also being creative, Abusalim said.

“I can’t think of a better teaching methodology in which we can foster responsibility and social awareness while also promoting creativity,” he said.

It’s a hands-on approach that works, Abusalim said.

Students were a bit under pressure because work for the community gardens is moving very quickly, Abusalim said. But they rose to the occasion, he added.

Jose Muñoz, a 22-year-old architecture student, said he learned a lot while working on the project.

Muñoz said the students had to take into consideration wind patterns and the sun’s footprint, but the task of making the garden wheelchair accessible was the greatest lesson.

The project is close to the type of work Muñoz would like to continue in the future. Being involved in the community was one of the reasons he chose this career path, he said.

“I love this kind of assignment because you are really involved with the community,” Muñoz said. “The reason why I chose to become an architect is to have that positive impact in my community. It doesn’t matter what city or what state I’ll be at, I’m just looking at how I’m able to impact my community.”

Architecture student Aleida Gonzalez said she worked hard on the project and learned by trial and error about the requirements needed to have a successful community garden.

“It was all pure research, and the two of us learned it little by little,” Gonzalez, 22, said of working with a partner on the project. “But between each other and the other groups in class, we all supported each other.”

For Delgado, the BWC executive director, the student project allowed the designs to be out of the box.

“I was having to design them, and I was doing it block by block,” Delgado said.

Abusalim said he expects to incorporate these kinds of projects into each class he teaches.

“That’s the beauty of whenever we have service-learning projects,” Abusalim said. “(Students) want to contribute. They like to be part of positive, life-changing projects.”

mmontoya@brownsvilleherald.com

Marshalls to join sponsors at MiNiATURE 3D printed garden design show

By Sarah Cosgrove
Thursday, 20 February 2014

The first garden show to incorporate 3D printing, miNiATURE has attracted sponsorship from paving company Marshalls.

The show will feature 3D printed garden design models at The Strand Gallery, central London from 6 to 8 March. Designers from the UK, Australia and the Republic of Korea are all booked to show their creations.

Co-Curator Andrew Fisher Tomlin said:  “Marshalls’ commitment to design and development through new technology and sustainability supports the shows aims to introduce new ways of presenting landscape design.”

Marshalls joins Hobs 3D and the London College of Garden Design as headline sponsors.
The show will feature an international line up.

The UK designers are John Brookes, Jamie Dunstan, Sarah Eberle, Adam Frost, Andy Sturgeon, Jo Thompson and Wilson McWilliams.

From Australia Myles Baldwin and Jim Fogarty will be exhibiting and from the Republic of Korea Jihae Hwang.

miNiATURE was created by British designers Tom Harfleet and Andrew Fisher Tomlin and Kajsa Bjorne, a landscape designer based in Sweden and Australia.

RHS show installation to tackle the question; what is garden design?

By Sarah Cosgrove
Wednesday, 19 February 2014

An interactive installation at the RHS London Plant and Design Show hopes to answer the question – what is garden design?

According to Cityscapes, which has created the Design Debate Station, design is something people encounter in every realm of life but are still confused about. Not only are they not sure what it is or what it is for but they do not realise the positive impact it can have on the world.

Cityscapes will build a greenhouse with different questions for visitors to consider on each of the walls as well as plants from Trewidden nursery to admire.

While they have their thinking caps on, garden designers and students will be available to discuss the issues with them. Visitors will then be encouraged to write their responses on the glass walls of the greenhouse with marker pen.

The greenhouse will gradually evolve over the course of the show, as the graffiti gradually covers it up.  
The installation will also encourage responses from the public via Twitter and these will also be posted on the glass panes of the greenhouse.

At the end of the show all the responses will be analysed, documented and utilised for future display.

Cityscapes is running the project at the show on February 21 and 22 in association with Society of Garden Designers, London College of Garden Design. Capel Manor College and Writtle College.

TSC students provide garden planning

BROWNSVILLE — A group of students at Texas Southmost College has put together a number of designs for the Brownsville Wellness Coalition to consider as the next phase for the city’s community gardens begins.


The collaboration began when BWC Executive Director Melissa Delgado met Murad Abusalim, an architecture instructor at TSC who teaches the college’s Design II class.

From there, the students in his course were tasked with researching and incorporating best practices from community gardens across the country into what will be three new gardens in Brownsville.

Delgado and a group of experts will evaluate each design individually to determine which one will be chosen for the three parks.

The project was a great opportunity for students to get involved in the community, Abusalim said.

Designing for a budget of $10,000 for each garden, students got to work, taking pains to make sure each design was cost- and space-efficient while also being creative, Abusalim said.

“I can’t think of a better teaching methodology in which we can foster responsibility and social awareness while also promoting creativity,” he said.

It’s a hands-on approach that works, Abusalim said.

Students were a bit under pressure because work for the community gardens is moving very quickly, Abusalim said. But they rose to the occasion, he added.

Jose Muñoz, a 22-year-old architecture student, said he learned a lot while working on the project.

Muñoz said the students had to take into consideration wind patterns and the sun’s footprint, but the task of making the garden wheelchair accessible was the greatest lesson.

The project is close to the type of work Muñoz would like to continue in the future. Being involved in the community was one of the reasons he chose this career path, he said.

“I love this kind of assignment because you are really involved with the community,” Muñoz said. “The reason why I chose to become an architect is to have that positive impact in my community. It doesn’t matter what city or what state I’ll be at, I’m just looking at how I’m able to impact my community.”

Architecture student Aleida Gonzalez said she worked hard on the project and learned by trial and error about the requirements needed to have a successful community garden.

“It was all pure research, and the two of us learned it little by little,” Gonzalez, 22, said of working with a partner on the project. “But between each other and the other groups in class, we all supported each other.”

For Delgado, the BWC executive director, the student project allowed the designs to be out of the box.

“I was having to design them, and I was doing it block by block,” Delgado said.

Abusalim said he expects to incorporate these kinds of projects into each class he teaches.

“That’s the beauty of whenever we have service-learning projects,” Abusalim said. “(Students) want to contribute. They like to be part of positive, life-changing projects.”

mmontoya@brownsvilleherald.com