How To

How to Design an Evening Garden

Contributor
By eHow Contributing Writer
(3 Ratings)

To those who work all day, a garden is a peaceful refuge from the whirl of meetings, deadlines and hard-edged high technology. Why not design your garden to shine its brightest when you have the time to appreciate it: at dusk and beyond?

From Quick Guide: Garden Lighting
Difficulty: Easy
Instructions

Things You'll Need:

  • Garden Design Books
  • Birdbaths
  • Flower Seeds
  • Flowers
  • Fountains
  • Planting Containers
  • Trellises
  • Gardening Magazines
  • Tickets To Garden Tours
  1. Step 1

    Take stock of your site: how much light you get, how much space you have and what surrounds it. Is there an unpleasant view you want to screen - say, an ugly shopping mall or a busy highway? Or does your site overlook a vista you'd like to frame - a tranquil lake, sparkling city lights, an ancient grove of trees?

  2. Step 2

    Think about how you'll use your garden. Will it be primarily a solo retreat from the hubbub of modern life, an outdoor room for entertaining guests or a combination of the two?

  3. Step 3

    Learn what plants will thrive in your growing conditions and look for design inspiration in garden books and magazines, at botanical gardens and, most of all, in other people's gardens.

  4. Step 4

    Sign up for local garden club tours that extend into the evening. Take notes and photographs, and ask questions - gardeners are known to be friendly, chatty and generous with their knowledge.

  5. Step 5

    When it's time to plant, keep the palette light - white flowers and those in very pale tints of pink or yellow will glow at dusk and into the darkness. Many white flowers pack a double wallop in the evening garden: they're often more fragrant than brightly colored (or even pastel) blooms. Some, such as nicotiana (flowering tobacco), release their intoxicating aromas only at dusk.

  6. Step 6

    Enclose your garden, at least partially, with a wall, fence or vine-covered trellis if you want to capture and intensify the fragrance of your flowers. (In the process you'll also gain privacy and vertical planting space.)

  7. Step 7

    Add water in some form - a small pool, a fountain, even a birdbath. It will provide a reflective surface for moonlight and starlight, its gentle sounds will lend a sense of tranquility to the scene and the extra moisture in the air will further intensify the scent of flowers.

Tips & Warnings
  • Variegated foliage - striped, spotted or mottled with white - stands out at night in much the same way white flowers do.
  • Any white flower looks good at night and you have hundreds to choose from in annuals and perennials of all sizes and shapes. Annuals with star quality include nicotiana (both N. sylvestris and N. alata), night-blooming stock (Matthiola incana), alyssum (Lobularia maritima), angel's trumpet (Datura metel) and evening primrose (Oenothera pallida). Among perennials, Japanese anemones (Anemone hupehensis japonica), asters, columbine (Aquilegia), phlox and bleeding heart (Dicentra) all come in stunning white varieties. Moonflowers (Ipomoea alba), climbing hydrangea (Hydrangea anomala petiolaris) and sweet autumn clematis (Clematis maximowicziana, also sold as C. paniculata) all make beautiful cloaks for walls, fences and trellises.
  • Angel's trumpet (Datura metal) is gorgeous, but its flowers are poisonous. Plant it well out of reach of small children and pets.

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