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Landscape Design
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Let Nature Inspire Your Landscape: Grasslands to Garden
Don't struggle with trying to artfully match flowers and grasses for a garden design — just look to the source
Houzz Contributor Dave Demers is a horticulturist and landscape designer trained and traveled on 4 continents. Now established in beautiful Vancouver, British Columbia, Demers also writes for various national and international publications. His company, CYAN Horticulture, offers design, construction and maintenance services.
Houzz Contributor Dave Demers is a horticulturist and landscape designer... More »
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When it comes to choosing a style for a garden project, many people turn to cultural references: Japanese restraint, rigorously laid-out French parterres, abundantly flowering English borders and so on. But what if we look not at cultures but at nature itself for stylistic inspiration?
Grasslands, obviously, are natural areas strongly dominated by grasses. In these expanses of fine foliage, other herbaceous plants, or forbs, and some rare shrubs and small trees may be dotted about. This type of plant habitat is found on all continents except Antarctica.
Grasslands, obviously, are natural areas strongly dominated by grasses. In these expanses of fine foliage, other herbaceous plants, or forbs, and some rare shrubs and small trees may be dotted about. This type of plant habitat is found on all continents except Antarctica.
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By studying naturally occurring plant combinations around the globe as well as in the field across the street, we may find the humblest yet most efficient plant combinations.
Here we have a hillside in northern Mongolia covered in a matrix of fine grasses and stunning globe thistles (Echinops sp, zones 3 to 9). This simple juxtaposition — airy champagne-colored grasses and bright blue floral balls — is one that can easily be reproduced in garden settings, boulder optional.
Here we have a hillside in northern Mongolia covered in a matrix of fine grasses and stunning globe thistles (Echinops sp, zones 3 to 9). This simple juxtaposition — airy champagne-colored grasses and bright blue floral balls — is one that can easily be reproduced in garden settings, boulder optional.
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When we think of grasslands, visions of the rolling vastness of the American Great Plains or the African savannah might come to mind. Yet we do not need endless acreage and a pack of giraffes to establish a hint of a grassland in the yard.
Grasses are found in almost every possible niche, like in this small clearing in a larch forest close to Siberia. Because of their delicate, often plume-y inflorescences, grasses shine when backlit.
Grasses are found in almost every possible niche, like in this small clearing in a larch forest close to Siberia. Because of their delicate, often plume-y inflorescences, grasses shine when backlit.
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To re-create some of the magic of grasslands at home, we first need a studied selection of ... grasses. Most retail nurseries maintain an array of ornamental, regionally appropriate and noninvasive selections. Online sources abound as well.
Considering that most true grasses are partial to full sunshine and well-drained soil, we must ensure that our area of design fits this preference — unhappy grasses become drab and floppy. Grouping together several units of the same grass, hence creating dynamic drifts, is both natural and design savvy. In this case masses of tall, easygoing miscanthus (Miscanthus sinensis cvs, zones 4 to 9) dress substantial bed areas in this residential Vancouver development.
Considering that most true grasses are partial to full sunshine and well-drained soil, we must ensure that our area of design fits this preference — unhappy grasses become drab and floppy. Grouping together several units of the same grass, hence creating dynamic drifts, is both natural and design savvy. In this case masses of tall, easygoing miscanthus (Miscanthus sinensis cvs, zones 4 to 9) dress substantial bed areas in this residential Vancouver development.
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Several types of grasses make fantastic ground covers, from ankle low (think fescue and sesleria) to shoulder high (switchgrass, miscanthus). Here we have a smart selection of grasses and a few companion plants that create a tasteful, restful and most likely low-maintenance and drought-tolerant composition.
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| Restricted to one or multiple types of similar heights, favorite grasses may be evenly applied to any sizable area. It is precisely as a bountiful lawn substitute, or as a tasteful transition between manicured and wild zones, that this design approach shines brightest. At the Chanticleer garden in Pennsylvania, a large expanse of such grasses is wisely bisected by a neatly mowed lawn path, creating an exemplar minimalist landscape intervention. |
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| Later in the season, another example of abundantly massed grasses shows terrific results. In the foreground lie switchgrass (Panicum sp) and fountain grass (Pennisetum sp). |
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| Associating individual units of different types of grasses may at first sound counterintuitive, if not plain risqué. To reassure ourselves, let’s think of a painter juxtaposing various shades of the same color: The result is all about finesse and subtleties. A marvelous example of this approach can be found in the courtyard of the Petit Palais in Paris, shown here, with Pampas grasses (Cortaderia sp, zones 6 to 9) dominating this jewel of an all-grass composition. |
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| A close-up of this exceptional Parisian display reveals the similar colors and textures of these nonetheless different grasses. |
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| The oh-so-trendy meadow planting style, championed in grand urban schemes like New York's High Line and London’s Olympic Park, is based upon similar naturally occurring plant combinations. Here, the lawn of an abandoned building in Vancouver charmingly flourishes without anybody's consent. |
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| Simplicity is thus often key. It sometimes takes no more than a broken lawn mower (or prolonged vacations for the gardener) for wild grasses and their flowery companions to reclaim their due. In Lotbinière, Quebec, a summer house goes all natural with a display of oxeye daisies (Leucanthemum vulgare, zones 2 to 8) and wild grasses. More in this series: Shape a Sea-Inspired Garden | Ideas for a Woodland Garden Devise a Desert Garden | Mighty Mountain Gardens |
Ideabook updated on March 3, 2013.
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The feeling I get is one of exploration and discovery when I walk through this area. The door frame still needs to cure and be stained, but I'm attaching the photos anyway, before and after.
Pampas grass has escaped on some of the West Coast: in colder climates, it barely reaches it full height, least set seeds. Gardeners, designers and nurserymen should be responsible and inquire diligently prior to using any of these 'good-doers'.