It has been just over a year since we landscaped the backyard. The trees and a few shrubs were planted several years before that time, but everything else was newly planted or transplanted in spring 2013. For a comparison of how things looked last August, click here. In the photo above, you can see that this part is not maturing very quickly. This area has been the hardest part of the backyard to get working, but I have made a few adjustments and just need to be patient.
This is a view of the area right inside the gate. The contorted filbert on the bottom left hasn't made much obvious growth. I'm hoping that its roots have been growing vigorously and the top growth will follow in a year or two. With the trees and shrubs in place, now I need to work on filling in the edges of the path with masses of small perennials.
Here is another view of the northwest corner garden. Obviously my trio of 'William Shakespeare 2000' English roses have not yet grown into one dramatically large shrub. Four Russian sages (Peroskvia) are planted along the top of the mound and should be large and pretty by this time next year. I plan to move some perennials and add four more 'Soft Touch' Compact Holly shrubs to the two already planted on this mound. Their leaves have a similar appearance to the various boxwoods that form the skeleton of my landscape, but the hollies have a low dome shape that should work well on the mound.
This is the view from the path looking west. You can see my vigorous willow shrub on the right behind an Itoh peony and a false spirea (Sorbaria 'Sem'). I have had a few moments this year when I felt panicked that I had made a big, expensive mess of the backyard. Not everything is working well together, so I'm making adjustments here and there. Removing some plants, dividing and replanting others. By this point I can see that the basic structure is going to work, so I just need to keep fine tuning.
The honeysuckle is making its way up the sides of the swing set, and the 'Shademaster' honey locust trees have put on nearly two feet of growth this year. To see the growth that has occurred since spring, check out this post. I like to come out and sit on this bench in the morning to consider what looks good in the yard and what needs to be reworked.
This is the same northeast corner when viewed from the path. When taking these photos, I didn't have to squat so low to avoid filling each shot with bare ground and stark white fence, because plants are spreading and growing taller
Here is a third view of that corner looking north from around the corner on the path. When the Korean spice viburnum at bottom center reaches its full size of six feet, you won't be able to see the back corner from this angle. Often visitors step through the gate, look around with one sweeping glance, and don't feel the need to go any father since they've already seen it all. A landscape is more interesting when you can't see everything at first and need to explore a bit.
This is the white garden near the southeast corner of the yard. Last year this area looked very washed out with a bunch of pale leaves. This year many of the perennials are better established and are a healthier, darker green. It also helped to add a black bird bath and a 'Scallywag' holly shrub (bottom left), which has dark green leaves all year.
This is a view from southeast corner looking north. Even though gardens mature more slowly in Spokane than in areas with longer growing seasons, the amount of growth the plants have made in just one year is exciting to me.
This is a final photo of the southeast part of the yard. Even though I get most excited about flowers, I am trying to pay attention to the big picture. Flowers in a garden don't look so good without a green backdrop of shrubs. If you want a garden that feels great and looks pretty, then large shrubs and trees are an important part of the plan.
What a sight for sore eyes! The amount of growth in 1 year is amazing. Thanks for putting in the link for comparison.
ReplyDeleteI can't believe you were having some doubts but then again, it's easy for an observer to say and to actually live with it. What an incredible garden you have achieved in such a short time. Well done!
It looks great! Waiting for everything to mature and weave together into one cohesive design is the hardest part. Adding shrubs was quite smart. It adds some bones and heft to the design. It's already very pretty. You did a wonderful job. :o)
ReplyDelete