Grimsby Telegraph

Make a micro-meadow using just five plants

HANNAH STEPHENSON talks to an expert who serves up planting recipes for small spaces

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Creating your own tiny patch of meadow in an urban area doesn’t have to be complicate­d – in fact you only need five types of plants.

So says Lucy Bellamy, author and former editor of Gardens Illustrate­d magazine, who has a small city garden 5m wide by 8m long in Bristol. She has now written Grow 5 – a collection of 52 simple planting ‘recipes’ featuring seasonal ideas for small outdoor spaces using just five plants.

She says that using five types of plants draws on repetition, a key design principle. A combinatio­n of five allows the plants to provide the excitement and perform the lion’s share of design work.

“I chose five because it’s close to nature, where it’s really rare to see a monocultur­e or just one or two plants in a sea of soil.

“Nature is all about knitting a small group of plants together – and that’s what this does. There’s been a move in the gardening world into what is called perennial meadows. Whereas a traditiona­l meadow uses annual plants, perennials which look meadowesqu­e will keep coming up year after year but are not necessaril­y

grown from seed every year. They are really easy maintenanc­e but look amazing.”

If you have no borders and only a trough or other container to plant in, you can still grow a micromeado­w, she insists.

Consider your aspect – are you in sun or shade? Think about choosing plants with different shapes – look at the clusters and shape of flowers, consider grasses with fine filigree foliage.

“Think about contrast in shape and the element of

repetition, so everything’s not the same but everything’s not completely different,” Lucy advises.

Here, she offers her contempora­ry take on a micro-meadow.

“The plants I’ve chosen will all benefit from a

sunny position, but they won’t need a rich soil,” she says. “New contempora­ry meadows thrive on quite a scratchy, urban soil. To give them extra compost makes them less resilient, so grow them quite hard.”

INGREDIENT­S:

The five plants you’ll need are: Allium ‘Miami’; Cirsium rivulare ‘Atropurpur­eum; Foeniculum vulgare (fennel); Iris ‘Sable’; Stipa gigantea.

METHOD

1. Dig over the soil to a crumbly consistenc­y.

2. Starting with the Stipa gigantea, space the plants out on the soil, still in their pots, and consider how they will look in different spots, including when you view the scene through your window.

3. Add the Cirsium and fennel, in ones and twos, so that the flowers and foliage mingle at the tips.

4. Dot Iris ‘Sable’ at random among the other plants, making sure you don’t place them too close together, as they will be hefty plants.

5. When each plant has a spot, dig a hole for the stipa, Cirsium and foeniculum, tapping each plant from its pot and easing out a few roots with your fingers. Dig a hole the depth of each pot before planning them. 6. Plant the irises, not too deeply, as the top of the rhizome must remain above the soil. Water thoroughly.

7. Alliums are best planted the previous autumn as dormant bulbs, buried 10-15cm deep, tucking them between other flowers, or buy them as budding bulbs in early summer.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Grow 5 by Lucy Bellamy (photograph­y by Jason Ingram) is published by Mitchell Beazley, priced £22
Grow 5 by Lucy Bellamy (photograph­y by Jason Ingram) is published by Mitchell Beazley, priced £22
 ?? ?? Give me five: Above from left are Stipa gigantea;
cirsium rivulare ‘Atropurpur­eum’; fennel.
Give me five: Above from left are Stipa gigantea; cirsium rivulare ‘Atropurpur­eum’; fennel.
 ?? ?? Left: Allium ‘Miami’.
Right: Iris ‘Sable’
Left: Allium ‘Miami’. Right: Iris ‘Sable’
 ?? ?? A contempora­ry micro-meadow
A contempora­ry micro-meadow
 ?? ?? Lucy Bellamy
Lucy Bellamy

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