Water
gardens make
backyards more enjoyable
By
Norman Winter
MSU Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension Center
Yosemite
National Park is famous for its majestic waterfalls, but it
was a babbling brook that my family appreciated there last
summer during a hike through a forest. We sat down to watch,
listen and appreciate for 30 minutes or so. That mood and
pleasure created by this active water can be duplicated in
any landscape.
Water
features have become the rage all over the South in home
landscapes. You may be anxious to get a do-it-yourself water
garden going in your landscape. Before you make that
purchase, however, there are some key considerations.
A water
feature is a dramatic addition to the landscape and in many
cases becomes the focal point. It also becomes a place to
gather, sit, watch and relax. Any landscape can be made more
enjoyable with water. Water adds a soothing, calming element
to a hectic world. There are two primary types of water
features to choose from: active and passive.
Passive
water moves only by a breeze like an earthened pond or
perhaps a concrete pond. We have all watched the wind create
tiny ripples on a pond. But with the addition of plants like
irises, lilies ferns, and umbrella plants your passive water
pond then becomes a wonderful and unique garden. If you
think flowers can't be pretty in a water garden you haven't
looked at water lilies lately.
Active
water is different in that it moves, such as a cascading,
rocky waterfall or a babbling brook. Active water features
open up a new sensory perception -- sound.
It is
peaceful and soothing to listen to water move. This is
evident in all of the tapes and compact disks sold that have
water sounds to help listeners relax. Waterfalls are also
extra special in that they create vertical movement. Water
also can flow out of decorative containers or fountains, and
those are usually a smaller hit on the
pocketbook.
So
before you make your purchase decide on whether you want
active or passive, formal or more natural. A water feature
is sure to enhance your landscape and make your outdoors
more enjoyable.
Nurseries
and garden centers now stock everything you need to install
your own water garden including aquatic plants and koi. Koi
are the large goldfish looking fish that seem to get more
valuable with age.
Just
about anyone can install water features. Fountains are
available from those molded out of masonry, wooden barrels
and even those created from metal. It may seem confusing on
where to start, so by all means talk to your nurserymen
about your goals before you buy.
If you
doubt your ability to make the garden fit your landscape,
consider yourself fortunate. Our nurserymen and landscape
architects in Mississippi are some of the most talented
anywhere in the country on both design and installation of
water gardens and fountains.
If you
are looking for that perfect Christmas gift for a gardener
in the family, then a water feature would be an ideal
consideration.
-30-
Released:
Dec. 3, 2001
Contact: Norman Winter (601) 857-2284 Editor's Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns are within one month of their release. Editors should examine older columns carefully for any information that could be time sensitive.
Publications
may download above photos at 200 d.p.i.:
Top
left
Top
right
Bottom
|