This will all end in tiers
DESPITE the fact we are about to get another onslaught of cold and wet weather, gardens have a remarkable capacity for recovery. So let’s keep planning for our spring plots.
An increasingly popular way of gardening is with pots and containers – they brighten up entrances to homes or allow for instant colour in important places such as patios or around garden features.
Rather than just arriving at the garden centre and making instant choices, why not plan for a wonderful combination of planting?
If you decide on a theme your reward may be a beautifully co-ordinated display from spring into early summer. I take inspiration from Danish gardener Claus Dalby who produces the most magnificent, if labour intensive, displays of tiered pots outside his property.
He uses specially crafted benches and tables – replicating in effect the way a school photograph is taken, so you have layer upon layer increasing in height. It’s a bit like the way street florists display their cut flowers in tiered arrangements. You can achieve this informally with good judgment about different pot sizes ascending in height. Claus creates beautiful schemes, often just using one or two colours in different hues – for example, rows of pale cream tulips, white tulips and white daffodils, all to great effect.
Containers are an excellent way to capture the fleeting nature of some spring plants, especially tulips. Pots crammed with them can take centre stage outside your front door for the month they are at their best and then be discreetly removed while you allow their foliage to die back.
They can then be planted out in the garden or stored out of sight until next year. And waiting in the wings is your next batch of pots of colour.
Here are some ideas to get you thinking about your spring containers.