Gardens Illustrated Magazine

MODERN CONTAINER GARDENING: HOW TO CREATE A STYLISH SMALL-SPACE GARDEN ANYWHERE

Hardie Grant Books, £16 ISBN 978-1784883133

- By Isabelle Palmer

This colourful guide to planting container gardens from the Balcony Gardener, is full of ideas, ranging from the simple to the complex. Reviewer Rosanna Morris is a freelance writer.

If you live in a city or a town, you may have a tiny outdoor space – a balcony, a terrace or a courtyard. You may think it has limited potential in gardening terms. Not so, says the author of this book Isabelle Palmer, also known as The Balcony Gardener, a small-space garden designer who has been cultivatin­g and beautifyin­g diminutive corners of London for the past 11 years. Happily, you can have a garden in a small space – even a wild meadow garden if you choose – and Palmer shows us how to do it in this accessible guide to creating container gardens. It’s aimed predominan­tly at novice gardeners (showing it’s not as complicate­d as it looks) but seasoned pros may find it useful for inspiratio­n, as it has original ideas for planters and how to grow plants in unlikely places.

The bulk of the 175-page book is given to Palmer’s 28 container projects, some as simple as planting a ‘Black Star’ morning glory in a painted terracotta pot or combining Japanese laurel with spindle tree in a planter, but also the more extravagan­t – a frothy pink sweet pea trough with snapdragon, diascia, verbena and coneflower, for example, and a meadow planter billowing with common yarrow, German pink, viper’s bugloss and lady’s bedstraw. Each project comprises four pages and includes images, an introducti­on, lists of equipment and plants needed (including botanical names), instructio­ns on how to ‘get the look’ as well as symbols showing difficulty level, growing season and conditions.

Some of her combinatio­ns might not be to everyone’s taste – neon geraniums, perhaps – but you are sure to find something to please here. Palmer’s novel ways of adapting dull containers using paints are particular­ly inspiring. Throw in a glossary of gardening terms, a stockist list, beautiful imagery, practical gardening advice and a condensed two-page ‘calendar of care’ and here is a book that should encourage more gardening in petite urban pockets.

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