Better Homes and Gardens (Australia)
Make your home a haven Be inspired by a Japanese-style garden to bring serenity to your place
arural idyll conjures up romantic thoughts of tranquillity, of closeness to nature and an escape from the hassles of urban life. This is true of the gardens at Ooralba Estate, snuggled under the escarpments of the Morton National Park and overlooking the beautiful Kangaroo Valley on the NSW south coast. But the estate is brimful of ideas to create your own idyll in your backyard.
DESIGN INFLUENCES
Being in the country, the Ooralba Estate gardens can adopt the Japanese design tradition of borrowing from the neighbouring landscape. It works in urban areas, too. Borrow a tree from next door or use a neighbour’s bare wall as a blank canvas for your garden display.
COLOUR PALETTE
The dominant tones of these gardens are grey-greens and silver, colours that are ideal for the Japanese emphasis on space and texture. You can use these hues to also highlight pops of colour, such as the golden autumn foliage and the black fissures on the bark of the silver birch, the masses of purple flowers of native violet groundcover or the striking burnt red flowers of NZ flax.
2 LIGHT THE WAY
Instead of a lawn, you can grow native violets (Viola hederacea) as a groundcover as done here in a grove of silver birch (Betula pendula). The violets growing up to the stone steps imitate the effect of moss on stones that are used in Japanese design.
3& 6 LAKE OF TRANQUILLITY
A modern take on a traditional Japanese tearoom sits on the edge of the dam. You can provide native habitat by planting rushes in a shallow pond, as well as creating an aractive ornamental effect.
4 BE NEIGHBOURLY
Reflect your local environment. Here, towering spotted gums (Corymbia maculata) step down a slope as they do in the nearby Morton National Park.
5 CONTRAST FORMS
Accentuate the smooth, rounded balls of cloud-pruned oleaster (Elaeagnus sp) with the spiky leaves of New Zealand flax (Phormium tenax).
7 SO MANY SHADES OF GREEN
Big landscape features can star as small touches. Slender silver birch between cloud pruned oleaster – E. macrophylla for large balls, E. pungens and coastal rosemary (Westringia sp) for small ones – suits small gardens.
8 MAKE A MAZE AMAZING
It’s called the Amoeba Garden and these blobs of spiny oleaster (Elaeagnus sp) reproduce collective cells one at a time to create a walk you can happily get lost in.
9 FOOD FOR THOUGHT
Take the formal theme of the ornamental gardens through into a kitchen garden with rows of raised beds filled with fresh produce. Don’t forget nets to deter wildlife!
10 COUNTRY FAVOURITE
Chooks lay eggs, fertilise your garden, keep your soil aerated, help control unwanted grubs and bugs, tidy up your patch and also make great pets.
11 PICNIC IN THE PARK
Under the green shadows of beautiful Morton National Park, where the bush spills down the escarpment and thrives in its natural environment, introduce an exotic element – a quaint pizza oven with dinner ingredients: herbs and vegetables taken from the garden.