Landscape Gardening Books : Designing with Plants

Designing with Plants

£9.23


When your new gardening bible comes with chapters entitled Birth, Life, and Death, you know you re in trouble. But be brave, turn to those chapters, and in some very practical little essays on planting, you ll uncover the very down-to- earth principle from which Piet Oudolf s radical reinvention of gardening is based: plants die. In the traditional mixed border, shrubs, climbers, perennials, bulbs and annuals defy mortality, when one plant passes its best, there s always another in the wings, waiting to grab the eye. But such borders have very little impact: there is too little at any one time to hold one s attention. Oudolf wonders why we fight the unavoidable. Why not create borders that bring out the beauty of plants throughout their natural cycles? Our obsession with colour is another deadening influence on current gardening practice. Plants have form: leaves, flower heads and stems have beauty and variety too and last far longer than any bloom. Why not create gardens that use the whole plant, not just its genitals? This, as you ve probably already guessed, is a recipe for perennials, and without any of that anxious autumn rush to cut down those perfectly lovely bare stems and seed heads. With these versatile plants, Oudolf would have us all create gardens that change month by month, week by week, even day by day. It s a radical, beautiful vision that s absurdly easy to achieve. In Designing with Plants Noel Kingsbury has done a terrific job of bringing Oudolf s work within reach of the rest of us.--Simon Ings

Simply Stunning - This is the book that I have waited years for! I fell in love with Piet Oudolf s planting schemes when I read an articel in the BBC magazine Gardens Illustrated . The design was for a part of a large north-european park. The colours were incredible, the flowering season long, eco and wildlife-friendly, and the perennial planting meant that it was also low maintenance and required relatively little expense beyond the initial planting. His planting refects nature so seamlessly blends into the surrounding the landscape.I have has the pleasure of visiting many of Piet s garden designs and I am always amazed at the diverse range of insects and birds that use the flower beds for nectar, habitat and seeds. I don t think I have ever seen so many butterflies!This book provides all of the theories associated with Piet s designs and reasons why certain plant structures are repeated time and a gain in his designs. The photos are of a good enough quality to perfectly back up the text. It is a fabulous book that I will return to for years to come.I want two new books from Piet: 1) A book showing some of his plantings for public gardens and parks, his recent work in America looks incredible 2) A comprehensive book about perennials, or maybe a series of 4 book of the as he seems to know more than anyone else about perennials. Possibly a joint collaboration with John Cushnie who wrote How to Propagate ?

A book to drool over - Piet Oudolf has rightly become a household name to many gardeners. His use of plants for year round interest has inspired many to try things they may not otherwise have done.This book will help you to do likewise - it takes you through planting palettes (including form, leaves and colour), designing schemes (using combinations, plants to use for structure or fillers, assembling a planting, use of grasses), how to create moods in a garden, Year round planting, using the natural cycle of plants, through birth, life and glory even in death.What a feast for the senses just looking through this book. Inspiration indeed.

If you love plants and gardening, this is it! - Glad I followed the advise: indeed this is the one gardening book! What a thrilling experience! What an inexhaustible source of new ideas! Besides, it is a pleasure being able to share Piet and Anja s love for planting. It will certainly make a difference to my garden.

If you buy only one garden book this year, this should be it - Oudolf has an approach to plant form and function that make other design books look strictly two dimensional. He creates moods, mysticism, and makes us re-think why we appreciate natural beauty. With no disrespect intended, this book makes most of the classic British garden designers look, well, like they lived in the 19th century.I recently bought this for a friend and signed it: the only garden book you really need




Designing with Plants