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English Cottage Gardens, Alaskan Style!

Summer2007


Upper Garden


Red

Upon entering our English Cottage style garden even the most seasoned gardeners can be left speechless as they are bombarded with color and fragrance. There is such an abundance of flowers that one immediately finds it difficult to take it all in. It seems there is no room for just one more plant.  You will not find individual plants occupying large spaces surrounded by mulch in a very formal style.  Each plant seems to be growing on top of the next.  The window mirrors strategically placed on the fence only increase this visual experience making the garden seem even more abundant.

Come on In

English cottage-style gardens include such perennial favorites as delphiniums, foxgloves and hollyhocks all grown somewhat informally. This random style is what gives an English cottage garden its appeal. Add to this the fragrance of roses, especially the David Austin english roses and what more could you want? How about a few water features, curved borders, varying levels of plants and viola!

wow

Upper Garden - You can access the upper garden via the Sloping Border, or through the grey arbor. Growing on the arbor are the red clematis, Ville de Lyon which we also grow by the house. This clematis does well here, especially by the house. To the right of the grey arbor is a small pre-formed pond which is part of our lower deck. To the side of this pond is a custom made Japanese bridge. We have added a collection of primula auricula.

Come on In

Visual Overload - Every square inch is planted. Annuals are planted  in the spring to fill in any empty space between the perennials. As the plants grow, they battle for space and nutrients and in the most spartan tradition it really is survival of the fittest.

Voila

Color - The colors of plants appear almost artificial as if painted by an artist, especially the lilies: Arena, Latvia and Suncrest.

 
You will see specific color schemes in different parts of the garden. There is a white border in the tradition of Vita Sackville West. The Back Border is made up of the complementary colors of blue and yellow with purple and orange. The Sloping Border mixes the rich colors of red, purple, and blue.

Monarda

You will experience every color of the spectrum from the darkest red lily, to the purest white, to vibrant orange, to subtle peach. There are delphiniums that don't just come in blues and purples; there are also creams and dusky pinks. The heavenly blue Himmalayan poppy appears translucent and the magenta geranium psilostemon swarms everywhere.

Himmalyan Poppies

Fragrance - The garden offers a plethora  of perfumes.  There is the spicy scent of stocks, the jasmine fragrance of nicotiana, the mid summer perfumes of the primula florindae and peonies, the intoxicating scents of the oriental and trumpet lilies, and culminating in the scent of phlox and sweet peas in the fall.

Yummy!

Fragrant roses provide the garden with a multitude of perfumes such as citrus, myrrh, even guava and white wine. These scents begin in early summer and carry on through the fall. The scent of many fragrant plants intensifies at night. This is especially true with the stocks, nicotiana and hesperis, as well as the night scented stocks and phlox. Last but not least numerous fragrant lilies fill the autumn air.

Goodbye!

Dynamic - The garden is changing constantly; a visitor to the garden will never encounter the same plant in the same place because everything is moved at least once. Nothing is spared: from a six foot shrub rose to the smallest garden gnome even the Japanese bridgehas been moved once.  Therefore, the garden is dynamic in the sense it always offers something new.

view
 
The Garden Beds - The Back Garden is divided into separate borders each with its own specific theme.  The Back Garden is also fenced which means many plants can be grown and enjoyed by everyone except the local moose population. A three foot high retaining wall divides the Back Garden into two distinct areas, the Upper Garden and the Lower Garden.  You can get to the Upper Garden either through the grey rose-covered arbor or up along the gentle Sloping Border.

Come on in!

The Sloping Border -  runs along the side fence and joins the Upper and Lower Garden. At the beginning of the sloping border to the right is a pond edge with day lilies, alpine primroses, and marsh marigolds. The sloping border provides the back garden with a richness of royal colors and tall plants. It is planted with many hybrid red monarda, purple delphiniums, lychnis chalcedonia, and hardy rugosa roses. Sumptously smelling stocks are added to this border as well as other annuals.

Welcome!

We are slowly including red lilies to this mix. On the right of the sloping border we have a few choice delphiniums. We are slowly lengthening the right-hand side to give the whole upper garden a more circular feel. Last fall we removed the Canadian Cherry tree because we felt it obscured one's view of the upper garden as as whole. This year, we will see if this decision was correct.

Yum!

The Circle - is about ten feet in diameter and is centered in the Upper Garden. It is edged with pieces of used brick from a nearby construction site. Surrounding the circle is a 1 foot nepeta hedge that from a distance could be mistaken for boxwood. In the middle of the circle are clematis. We are experimenting with different delphiniums here, as well as lupins, and fragrant stocks. Also we add different fragrant roses each year such as one of my favorite David Austin roses, Gertrude Jekyll. These roses are dug up in the fall and stored for the winter.

Rose Circle reflected in arbor mirror

The White Border - The White Border is approximately 120 feet long and 30 feet wide and runs along the eastern edge of the Upper Garden.  The White Border had its beginnings on the west side of the back garden but limited space and the color scheme, white, conflicted with the surrounding beds.  Three years ago, we moved the White Border to its current location.

White

It is bordered on one side by the hardy rose, Haidee.  This rose suckers freely and in time will turn into quite a large hedge defining the White Border boarder even more.  At the other end of the White Border is a spruce tree that provides shelter and acidic soil for two hardy PJM azealas. Originally the idea behind the white garden was to have a moonlight garden. However, with Alaska's long sunny days of nearly 19 hours this will never happen.


Cool Birdhouse

The plants in the White Border features white flowers or silver foliage.  An espaliered apple tree sits regally in the center of the White Border surrounded by the roses: Marie Bugnet, Lac Majeu, Kakwa, and Polar Star.  The perennials include campanulas, delphiniums, lilies, lupines, verbascums and late blooming phlox.  Inter-planted among the perennials are lavatera, hesperis, foxgloves, nicotiana, and stocks.  This selection of plants provides color and fragrance from June through September.

Lovely Colors

The Back Border - As the name implies the Back Border runs the length of the back of the Upper Garden.  It is approximately 180 feet long and 25 feet wide.  To balance the contour of the Rose Circle the Back Border is curved making it appealing to the eye.  At one end of this border is a bear cache built by a local Indian chief.  At the other end sits Harrison's Yellow Rose also know as the Yellow Rose of Texas.

The Long Border

The outstanding features of the Back Border are its varying heights and color scheme.  The dramatic visual effect begins with the tallest plants at the back primarily delphiniums, thalictium, and verbascum.  Centaurea Macrocephala gives the Back Border some intrigue with its pineapple shaped flowers.  The middle part of the Back Border features every trollius imaginable from early to late bloomers from vivid yellow to glowing orange.  Complimenting the trollius are the vibrant blue Himalayian poppies.  A peach colored LA hybrid lily grows vigorously along side apricot foxgloves. The front is dominated by the fragrant primula florindae, and calendulas. The color scheme uses the complimentary colors of yellow and blue with orange and purple.

View From Above.

The Inner Border - On one side of the gray rose covered arbor, is a bed that in winter tends to get icy or waterlogged. Therefore, many perennials planted here do not survive. Instead we plant fragrant annuals and some biennials that might make it through the winter.  Planted here are stocks, hesperis, nicotiana, and wallflowers. The scents of these fragrant plants waft across the deck, especially after dusk when their sultry perfumes fill the air. The perennials that do survive here are the fragrant primula florindae, crimson monarda, the odd lupin, and the heavenly blue Himalayan poppy. The rugosa rose, Mrs. Doreen Pike, has yet to prove herself here. A water wheel acts as a focal point at the corner of the Inner Border while providing a soothing sound as well as a welcome refreshment for visiting birds. We have added the golden mock orange, philadelphus coronarius, more asiatic lilies, and this year we will move the small lilac, Miss Kim there too.

© David Goodgame. Any part of this document may be reproduced or utilized in any given form or by means provided proper citation and credit are given for the work and no cost dissemination is intended. Page layout updated 1/27/08