Page 59 - David Burr Rooftops Magazine Winter 2017/2018
P. 59

                    can be a very rewarding experience. If you look out at your garden from
the house, ideally an upstairs window, you’ll get an idea of what the framework and structure of your garden looks like. By this I mean the year round immovable features which change little throughout the year. These form the body on which will hang the clothing,
the accessories, and the jewellery which will decorate during the bursting of spring, the burning of summer and the warm glows of autumn. Winter and spring are good times of the year for assessing the ‘skeleton’ of a garden and for making improvements where necessary. A garden which looks structured at the start of the year will be
“The Italians and French (think of Tivoli and Versailles) knew how to create garden structure on a grand scale, but size doesn’t matter too much; proportion does.”
so much easier to ‘dress’ later on.
So what’s likely to stand out in the
garden when viewed from a distance? Necessary structures such as sheds, outbuildings and greenhouses aside, decorative man-made items can give bones to the body of your garden; arches of wood or metal, obelisks of ironwork and rustic or planed pergolas are semi- permanent frameworks all capable of attracting the eye in different directions and will be able to support the growth of plants upwards and outwards.
Plants too can provide architectural structure; shaped to make formal focal points, and trained to form partitions and hedges (topiary is the art of creating shapes from plants).
The Italians and French (think of Tivoli and Versailles) knew how to create garden structure on a grand scale, but size doesn’t matter too much; proportion does. Box (Buxus) and Bay (Laurus) are probably the best examples of species adaptable to gardens of all sizes. A smart front door to a town house can be given a stately touch with the addition of ‘lollipop’ Bays, and a cottage garden path is given emphasis when lined by a low hedge of Box. On the other hand, Bay is quite capable of becoming a pyramidal focal point of some two metres or more, and Box can be shaped into a peacock if you really want it to be!
One thing to decide when creating ‘ 59

























































































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