Now is the best time for a walk in the woods. Woodland
plants are making the most of their brief opportunity before the canopy closes
and the soft summer blanket of cool shade settles over them. And there is so
much more to enjoy than just the bluebells, as if they weren’t reason enough to
venture into the shadows. The atmosphere
in a wood in spring is pure magic. It is incredibly peaceful and soothing, and
has the feel of a private and secret place. The bustle and noise of the world
beyond melt away as your body tunes into the soft sounds, cool air and dappled
light within.......
‘What has all this got to do with gardens’, you might be
asking yourself. Well, plenty as it happens, as many elements of this arboreal
world, as with much of mother nature’s design, can be translated to parts of
the garden, albeit on a smaller scale.
Planting in the garden is all about layers and while
woodlands do this naturally on a grand scale, the principles are the same. The
woodland has an upper storey of oak and ash, with a mid storey of tall elders,
hawthorns and hazels, followed by lower brambles, guelder rose and flowering
currants. Finally a ground cover layer of ferns, wild garlic, wood anenomes and
others form a patchwork of texture across the forest floor. Back in your garden
the space available may make it difficult to manage four or five layers but
three should be possible even in quite small spaces. A large multi-stemmed
shrub, such as an Amelanchier lamarckii, underplanted with hydrangeas and
viburnums and ‘bottomed’ off with some geraniums, Japanese anenomes, hellebores
& ferns will work to great effect.
Woodland groundcover also often grows en masse in huge
clumps of single species demonstrating beautifully the impact of bold swathes
of planting. Again back in your garden just a few species planted in big groups
will, with the right plants and in the right place, create a lovely
naturalistic planting scheme.
Finally, woodland planting is all about texture and shades
of green, for example the broad leaves of the wild garlic combining with the
feathery foliage of wood anenomes and grassy snowy wood rush. Considering these
aspects of your garden plants will provide even as much value to your borders
as the flowers.
Regardless of the plans you have for your garden, I would
recommend a walk in the woods anyway, just for pleasure. If you have read Bill
Bryson’s book about walking the woods of the Appalachian Way and are worried
about the prospect of bears and weirdos, I can at least guarantee that you
won’t meet any of the former.
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