Kent Messenger Maidstone

Make the most of your space

How can you make your small garden feel larger? TV gardener and city dweller Joe Swift has some big ideas.

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TV gardener Joe Swift knows more than most about designing small gardens, given that his own back yard in Hackney, north east London, is about 50ft x 22ft by his own reckoning.

The designer, author, broadcaste­r and RHS Chelsea Flower Show regular has included a lot of tips on how to make the most of a small urban space in Create Your Own Small Garden , one of his new series of five expert gardening guides.

“Elements like paving, boundaries, containers, furniture, water and sculpture help define its structure but the plants will always play the starring role,” he observes.

Many gardeners simply want to know how to make their small outdoor space feel bigger – so here are his tips.

Boost your boundary

Boundaries are very important in a small garden because as you walk out, you have to think what’s at eye level. If you see a brick wall or a fence in one go, you can see exactly where your garden finishes. Try to disguise some of it by growing climbers, tricking the eye into not quite knowing where the boundary starts and finishes. If you’ve got a nice boundary like a nice brick wall or fancy fence, leave some of it exposed, breaking it up with planting.

Go big with pots and plants

Most people who have small gardens think they have to put small things in them – small pots, small plants. That makes it fussy and you are much better off replacing them with one or two really big pots or a large exotic plant or small tree, depending on the size of the garden. Don’t miniaturis­e everything.

Consider the size of your furniture

I always go shopping with a tape measure. There are sometimes ways of combining places to sit in the garden itself. If you are building raised beds or retaining walls, try to build them around 45cm high, and generous so you can put a cushion on them. Then, if you have friends round, that can double up as seating.

Then you might only need to buy a table and a couple of chairs. Fold-up chairs and tables can be stacked away in winter, or stacked on a fence or wall. And don’t automatica­lly assume your seating has to be right next to the house.

It’s OK to use large paving

Big slabs in small gardens work really well. I would also just stick to two surfaces. It might be stone and gravel or gravel and a deck. If you start to put too many surfaces in, it begins to look fussy and you’ll create patches which are fighting against each other.

Add mirrors

Just be careful with birds, which may fly into them because they think they are a window through to next door’s garden. But I’ve put mirrors in gardens and put plants in front of them and they work really well. You need to angle them a little bit so that if you are looking at a mirror from the back door, you see greenery or a reflection of a pond or whatever.”

Use light tones

If you use tonally light materials such as pale sandstones or light gravels rather than dark slate, and paint a fence or a wall a light colour such as off white or taupe, they can transform a shady space, making it feel less gloomy and dingy and more airy. If you allow the light to bounce around, plants really respond to it.

Plant strategica­lly

Try to get some planting in the foreground of your garden, rather than having a hard surface that you go straight out onto, when the plants might feel like they are in the distance. I’ve got planting pockets coming right up to my window and a simple paved area, with lots of climbers and other plants, a

pond and stepping stones which lead you to a secluded deck at the back of the garden. No-one would know you’re there.”

Light up your plot

Silhouetti­ng, where you put a light behind, say, a pot or an architectu­ral plant to show off the

shape of it, can be effective. The key in a small garden is not to overdo it. Have light grazing across the paving and hide the source of the light because you don’t want it shining in your face. “Think about lighting a boundary, plant, surface or tree and balance it out when you are inside. In the winter, when it’s dark, you

can flick a switch to subtly light different elements of the garden and suddenly you get that depth of field, which brings the garden back to life.

Contain your balcony

On balconies, everything has to be grown in containers, so think about practicali­ties. Can you carry them up in a lift? What about compost? Are you going to sit out there? Where’s the best place to sit surrounded by your plants? Or are you just viewing it from the inside? On a lot of balconies, you’ll need tough plants that can cope with wind, such as lavenders, olive trees and gleditsia or small pines. Ornamental grasses will grow upright, can cope with dry and will give you a bit of screening.

 ?? ?? If you are building raised beds or retaining walls, try to build them around 45cm high, and generous so you can put a cushion on them.
If you are building raised beds or retaining walls, try to build them around 45cm high, and generous so you can put a cushion on them.
 ?? ?? Give yourself plenty of room around seating spots for planting, so you can envelope these areas
Give yourself plenty of room around seating spots for planting, so you can envelope these areas
 ?? ?? Joe’s Expert Gardening Guides by Joe Swift are published by Collins, price £9.99
Joe’s Expert Gardening Guides by Joe Swift are published by Collins, price £9.99
 ?? ?? Subtle lighting and folding chairs are perfect for a small urban garden
Subtle lighting and folding chairs are perfect for a small urban garden
 ?? ?? It’s vital that you plant strategica­lly in a small garden
It’s vital that you plant strategica­lly in a small garden

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