Bulbs Flower Basics Flower Beds & Specialty Gardens Flower Garden Garden Furniture Garden Gnomes Garden Seeds Garden Sheds Garden Statues Garden Tools & Supplies Gardening Basics Green & Organic Groundcovers & Vines Growing Annuals Growing Basil Growing Beans Growing Berries Growing Blueberries Growing Cactus Growing Corn Growing Cotton Growing Edibles Growing Flowers Growing Garlic Growing Grapes Growing Grass Growing Herbs Growing Jasmine Growing Mint Growing Mushrooms Orchids Growing Peanuts Growing Perennials Growing Plants Growing Rosemary Growing Roses Growing Strawberries Growing Sunflowers Growing Thyme Growing Tomatoes Growing Tulips Growing Vegetables Herb Basics Herb Garden Indoor Growing Landscaping Basics Landscaping Patios Landscaping Plants Landscaping Shrubs Landscaping Trees Landscaping Walks & Pathways Lawn Basics Lawn Maintenance Lawn Mowers Lawn Ornaments Lawn Planting Lawn Tools Outdoor Growing Overall Landscape Planning Pests, Weeds & Problems Plant Basics Rock Garden Rose Garden Shrubs Soil Specialty Gardens Trees Vegetable Garden Yard Maintenance

How to Design a Pocket Garden

How to Start Lemon Seeds Indoors - watch on youtube
How to Design a Pocket Garden

How to Design a Pocket Garden. Explore the world of the small with a garden that fits between the stepping-stones, spills from between the cracks in your garden wall or nestles into exposed tree roots. Turn a narrow path that goes nowhere into a garden destination: Design a pocket garden.

Explore the world of the small with a garden that fits between the stepping-stones, spills from between the cracks in your garden wall or nestles into exposed tree roots. Turn a narrow path that goes nowhere into a garden destination: Design a pocket garden.
Things You'll Need
Compost Makers
Flower Bulbs
Measuring Tapes
Plants
Seeds
Pencils
Graph Papers
Survey your property - large or small - to find the perfect pocket. Look for gaps and nooks that will hold at least 1 c. soil in sun or shade.
Fill any dead space with a pocket garden. Use cracks in walls, pavement gaps, and the spaces between tree roots, terrace timbers and stepping-stones.
Look down that skinny space between the houses and visualize a garden. Stack up rocks and concrete rubble to build a grotto, then plant in it.
See a pocket garden as a focal point, or make it a hidden surprise along a garden path or behind a shrub.
Decide where to put the pocket, and assess its growing conditions. Add compost to the crevices and make a simple drawing of the planting space.
Make your garden drawing a working tool - measure the spaces and plot them on graph paper. Then note where the sun and shade are and mark that as well.
Imagine the pocket with plants. Sketch a combination of upright, trailing and flowering plants. Just one of each can make a great start.
Check out the smallest plants at the nursery - alpines, dwarf varieties, succulents and small bulbs. If it can grow to maturity in a 4-inch pot, consider it.
Use what's there to personalize your design. Plan for color and texture contrasts between your plants and the surfaces that surround the pocket.
Tips & Warnings
Use creeping thyme where light foot traffic can crush it and release its scent.
Collect sedums along a sunny wall - some trail, others clump and most bloom.

Check out these related posts