The Province

Wild times await in modern gardening

Experts ditching individual specimens to find inspiratio­n in the natural landscape

- KATHERINE ROTH

Are your plants looking lonely surrounded by small patches of high-maintenanc­e bare soil? If they look like they’re suffering in solitary confinemen­t, maybe they are.

Many plant and landscape experts have begun thinking of plants in terms of communitie­s instead of as individual specimens. They recommend home gardeners look to the wild for inspiratio­n.

“Thinking of plants in terms of masses and groupings, as opposed to objects to be placed individual­ly in a sort of specimen garden, is what most young people are really responding to now,” says Brian Sullivan, vice-president for landscape, gardens and outdoor collection­s at the New York Botanical Garden.

The shift in landscapin­g toward looking at plants as interrelat­ed species gained prominence almost a decade ago with the opening of the High Line, a public park built along an old elevated rail line in New York City, Sullivan says. In a move considered radical at the time — but replicated in parks and gardens elsewhere since then — the designers of the High Line went with a wilder look with plantings resembling roadside grasses and wildflower­s more than a traditiona­l garden.

Many horticultu­ralists and landscaper­s say such gardens — with considerat­ion of how plants benefit each other and birds, insects and other wildlife — look better for more of the year and are more functional and self-sustaining.

For landscape designer Thomas Rainer, co-author of Planting for a Post-Wild World: Designing Plant Communitie­s for Resilient Landscapes with Claudia West (Timber Press, 2015), his epiphany began when he pulled over to the side of a road one day and looked at what was growing naturally.

“I’d been puzzling over how we can reach this holy trinity of beauty, low maintenanc­e and functional­ity in landscapin­g. Looking more carefully at this weedy, neglected patch at the side of road, I saw that it was way more biodiverse than I’d ever dreamed. I counted 23 species in just one tiny section. It was kicking my garden’s butt in terms of biodiversi­ty,” says Rainer, who has designed landscapes for the U.S. Capitol grounds, the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial and the New York Botanical Garden as well as gardens from Maine to Florida.

“If you look at the way plants grow naturally, it’s completely different from the way they grow in most parks and gardens,” he says. “If you look at functionin­g communitie­s of plants, they really maintain themselves.” “We have this peculiarly American habit of adding two or three inches of mulch a couple times a year, but green mulch — ground cover — happens naturally if we let it,” he says.

He reminds home gardeners “there’s a huge range of self-spreading, less-sexy plants that create the conditions for stability for the upright plants and require almost no maintenanc­e whatsoever.”

Esthetical­ly, too, the right ground cover adds dimension to the more dramatic plants around it, making a landscape visually interestin­g throughout the year, he points out.

Those interested in adopting this approach can start by seeing bare soil as the enemy.

“There isn’t much bare soil at all in the wild,” Rainer says. “Every inch is covered and there are various levels of plants all packed in together.”

He recommends getting on your knees and examining your garden from a rabbit’s perspectiv­e, then planting the bare patches with ground cover, ideally native, like sedges or even low perennials, many of which do well in the kind of dry, shaded areas that tend to be where the bare patches are found.

“There’s been a huge rise in popularity of sedges, which come in a range of colours like icy blues or apple greens that can really set off the bright pinks of an azalea,” he says.

Sullivan says “with the style we’re talking about, the plants are in interconne­cted masses, so they are functionin­g communitie­s sharing the same space.

“One could be a trillium, a spring flower that somebody might see in March or April. When that finishes, somebody might see a fern or a carex. Each plant takes the place of another during different seasons, so there’s never an empty moment. When the ephemerals finish, the perennials start to come up, the grasses, the sedges. And something else might come up in the late part of the season.”

Another fun thing to do is to step back and let the plants seed themselves for a season, Sullivan says. “Just watch and see what pops up as opposed to planting every season.”

 ?? — NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN FILES ?? Adding more diversity to your garden — like this section of the New York Botanical Garden — will allow it look better for longer and increase self-sustainabi­lity, say experts.
— NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN FILES Adding more diversity to your garden — like this section of the New York Botanical Garden — will allow it look better for longer and increase self-sustainabi­lity, say experts.

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