Landscape
Structures Provide Function and Beauty
By Melinda Myers
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[May 13, 2019]
Incorporate
arbors, trellises and other structures into your designs when
planning new or updating existing gardens and landscapes. These
structures help form the framework of any garden, add year-round
interest and provide years of beauty and function.
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Utilize arbors to define and connect distinct
areas of the landscape. Invite visitors into your landscape with a
vine-covered arbor. Guests won’t be able to resist the invitation to
enter and experience the beauty that lies beyond. Cover these
structures with vines for seasonal interest, additional texture and
blossoms. Combine two different vines to extend or double your
floral display. Plant an annual vine for quick cover with a
perennial that takes a year or more to establish and cover the
structure.
Beat summer’s heat by creating your own shade with vine-covered
arbors. Plant annual or deciduous vines that let the sun and its
warmth shine through during the cooler months. When the leaves
return, they provide shade and cooler temperatures during warmer
times.
Arbors are as much at home in the food garden as the flowerbed.
Connect two garden beds with an over-the-top arbor. Grow pole beans,
melons or squash up and over the Titan Squash Tunnel (gardeners.com).
You’ll expand your gardening space by going vertical and help reduce
disease problems by increasing the sunlight and airflow reaching the
plants. Secure large fruit to its obelisk with a net, cotton or
macramé sling to prevent them from breaking off the vines.
Dress up any home, garage or shed with trellises covered with
flowering vines, climbing roses or an espaliered fruit tree. Provide
space between the wall and trellis when mounting them to a building.
The space reduces the risk of damage to the wall and the plants
benefit from the added airflow and light.
Many trellises are works of art in their own right, so when the
plants go dormant the structure continues to dress up an otherwise
blank wall. Whether you prefer simple squares and diamonds, circles,
leaves or ceramic songbirds perched among the branchlike supports of
the Enchanted Woods Trellis; select a design that reflects your
personality and complements your garden design.
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Combine several trellis sections to create a
decorative screen or bit of fencing. This is a perfect solution for
creating privacy or a bit of vertical interest in any size or shape
of garden space. Add colorful glass bottles and contemporary design
to a vertical planting with a trellis like Gardener’s Achla Designs
Vinifera Bottle Trellis.
Use obelisks as focal points and plant supports in the garden or
containers. They’re perfect for creating scale in the garden,
especially when new plantings are small and immature. Select a
support tall and sturdy enough for the plants you are growing.
Add a bit of beauty and elegance when growing watermelons,
cucumbers, pole beans or tomatoes. Train them onto decorative
obelisks and they’ll be pretty enough to include in flowerbeds and
mixed borders. Add more beauty and a bit of hummingbird appeal with
scarlet runner beans. The bright red flowers are followed by green
beans that can be eaten fresh or its large seeds harvested and used
fresh or dried.
Always consider the function, strength and beauty when selecting
structures for your landscape. Team them up with plants suited to
your growing conditions and you will benefit from years of
enjoyment.
Melinda Myers has written more than 20 gardening books, including
Small Space Gardening. She hosts The Great Courses “How to Grow
Anything” DVD series and the Melinda’s Garden Moment TV & radio
segments. Myers is a columnist and contributing editor for Birds &
Blooms magazine and was commissioned by Gardeners Supply for her
expertise to write this article. Her web site is
www.MelindaMyers.com.
[Photo courtesy of Gardener’s Supply
Company] |