Home Gardener's Garden Design & Planning (UK Only). A. & G. Bridgewater

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Home Gardener's Garden Design & Planning (UK Only) - A. & G. Bridgewater

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Red brick, stone and wood might be described as being in harmony. The term ‘contrast’ describes forms, textures and colours that are dissimilar or opposite. The strange thing is that contrasts – say dark against light, or rough against smooth – can be a joy to the eye. For example, polished marble can look all the more exciting when it is set against a contrasting material like rough-hewn oak.

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       You can use a colour wheel like this to help you make informal decisions.

      DRAWING INSPIRATION FROM AN EXISTING DESIGN

      There is a fine line between drawing inspiration from an existing design and copying a design. If you visit a garden and are so excited by it that you go away and create a garden that pays homage to it, you are drawing inspiration from it. If, however, you replicate it stone by stone and flower by flower, you are merely copying it.

      FRESH, ORIGINAL IDEAS

      Using fresh, original ideas is always good. Try to be original with the small things – the little details – and big original ideas should follow. There is no credit in being original just for the sake of it, however. Of course, it is always good to aim for originality, but do not worry too much if you fail.

      GARDENS EVOLVE

      The wonderful thing about gardens is the way they evolve. You start by putting in structures – paths, walls, and hard areas – and gradually as plants grow in size and number, and as your behaviour changes, so you will find that you will, almost by necessity, modify the shape of the structures to fit.

      LANDSCAPING TIPS

      Work with what you have: do your best to keep and use what you have – mature trees, dips and hollows in the ground, natural features like rocks and pools.

      Soil stability: be wary about making big changes with wet or waterlogged soil, or soil on a sloping site. Take advice if you have doubts.

      The house must look comfortable: aim for a landscape that holds and nestles the house, so that the house looks ‘happy’ in its setting.

      Get the best viewpoint: shape the garden so that it looks its best when seen from the house. If you get it right, the house will also look its best from various vantage points around the garden.

      Draw inspiration from nature: the easiest way forward is to draw inspiration from a slice of nature – a forest glade, a valley, the side of a hill.

      Materials in harmony: all new materials look their best when they are drawn from the locality – local bricks, local stone, local wood.

      Scale in harmony: aim for structures that complement the house in size, rather than structures that overwhelm the house.

      PLANTING TIPS

      If you liken planting to painting colours on a canvas, you can take the analogy one step further by saying that you must hold back with the planting until the canvas – the structure of the garden – has been well prepared.

      Climatic conditions: the plants must be suitable for your climate – it is no good going for delicate plants if your site is windy and subject to frosts.

      Soil conditions: the plants must suit the soil – you must not choose chalk-loving plants if your soil is predominantly clay.

      Sun and shade conditions: look at the way the sun moves around the garden, note the areas that are sunny and shady, and position the plants accordingly.

      Scale: take note of the potential size of plants – the width and height when fully grown. Be especially wary of some of the fast-growing conifers.

      Year-round colour: aim for a broad selection of plants, so that you have year-round foliage, bud, stem and flower colour.

      Container-grown plants: these can be purchased and planted all year round.

      MAKING NOTES AND SKETCHES

      It is a good idea to go out into your garden, with a stack of coloured pens and a pad of gridded paper, and to make sketches. Take measurements of the garden, decide on the scale – say one grid square equals 60 cm (2 ft) – and then draw the garden in plan and perspective view, with close-up details showing special areas of interest (see below). Draw what you already have, and then draw in any desired changes. Try to visualize how the changes will affect how you use the space. Place markers around the garden so that you can more easily visualize changes.

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       Use a rope, hosepipe or chain together with some pegs to help you plot out an irregular shape.

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       A perspective view of the garden is more difficult to draw than a plan view, but is nevertheless the best way to visualize your design.

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       A plan view of the garden (viewed from above) can be drawn to scale over gridded paper. Colouring in areas can be helpful.

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       Important features can be drawn separately and in more detail.

      Getting it down on paper

      If you want the project to run smoothly, you need to plan everything out and make drawings. The procedure is as follows: first, make a rough sketch on a scrap of paper, showing the existing garden with measurements. Next, transfer these details onto graph paper to make a ‘site plan’ (drawn to scale). Then, set a sheet of gridded paper over the site plan and make a ‘master plan’ of the new garden, tracing the boundaries and existing items as required.

       How do I make a working drawing?

      MAKING THE SITE PLAN

      About graph paper You will need a pad of graph layout paper – meaning thin paper that has been printed with a grid – the biggest size of pad that you can obtain. Look at the size of your garden; say it is 30 m (100 ft) long and 25 m (80 ft) wide, and decide on the scale of your gridded paper. Count the squares on the long side of the paper and divide them by the length of the garden. Work to the nearest whole square. So, for example, if the paper is 100 squares long, then you could say that one square on the paper equals 30 cm (1 ft) in the garden.

      Measuring your garden Use a long tape measure to measure your garden.

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