Finishing
Touches Make the Garden
By
Norman Winter
MSU Extension Horticulturist
Many of
us have toured someone's yard only to find they have the
same flowers that are growing in our own beds, but something
is dramatically different. Theirs is a special garden that
makes us shoot a picture, either real or mentally. We leave
either energized to do better or feeling a little
depressed.
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MIRROR,
MIRROR -- The mirror hanging on the tree over the
left Adirondack chair blends comfortably into this
lovely home-like setting.
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Our
flowers may be as good, but it is the finishing touch that
makes a real garden. I am fortunate to see such endeavors
several times a year, and I leave energized because I know I
can do those same things at my home with a little
effort.
What
are some of these finishing touches that transforms a yard
into a garden or retreat? One that really hit me this summer
was the use of mirrors. I have preached the idea of
developing rooms outside for sitting and relaxing and one
home I visited indeed had accomplished this feat to the
utmost.
The
furniture stood out, artistically speaking; the flowers were
blooming to the hilt but each room had a mirror hanging from
a tree or attached to a trellis. It gave the illusion of a
window to see through. In reality you were really looking
behind you or to the side.
We use
mirrors everywhere inside the home. Why not outside? The
light reflection almost performs magic on an outdoor living
space. Use them on the shady porch or patio, too.
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FINISHING
TOUCH -- This old tree's branches are convenient
and clever places for a gardening hat, one for an
apron and another for a basket to harvest cut
flowers.
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Another
home mesmerized me from the standpoint of the deck and its
accompaniments. I could actually devote a series of articles
to this one deck. One of the most magnificent aspects was a
large chandelier hanging over the dining table. The
chandelier hung from a giant tree but instead of electric
lights it had a half dozen candles. This wasn't expensive;
it was recycled, and it took vision.
The
next three ideas are very simple and inexpensive, but I did
leave wondering why I didn't think of that. We all find
ourselves with container plants around the porch, patio or
deck. Some are large others are small. The small containers
sometimes go unnoticed when on the ground.
The
solution from one gardener was to invert an old rustic urn
upside down and place a piece of flagstone across the bottom
to create a small table. The diminutive containerized plant
now rests in a prominent position able to be enjoyed to the
utmost.
At my
home, the gloves and hand trowels have nothing to do with
art. I usually have to hunt for them because I forget where
I placed them. Not so at one home I visited. Just to the
left of the door on the covered patio was a reed basket. In
it were the pruners, hand trowel and gloves. No big deal
right? Yet on the other hand they were so placed as if to
warrant a photograph for the cover of a garden
magazine.
On the
other side of the door was an old tree similar to what you
might use for a bottle tree. Instead, the branches were used
for the hat, one for an apron and the other for a basket to
harvest cut flowers.
This is
a good time of the year for reflecting on how things grow,
evaluating our landscape for improvements, planting
cool-season color and also seeing how adding some finishing
touches to our yard can indeed make it a garden.
-30-
Released:
Nov. 25, 2002
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 photographs at 200 d.p.i.: Tree
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