EXPLORE
Movato
  • Interior Design
    • Bathroom
    • Bedroom
    • Decor
    • Design Finds
    • Kitchen
    • Living Room
    • Paint
    • Renovations
  • Architecture
  • Landscape
  • Lifestyle
    • People
    • Places
    • Things
  • About Us
Movato
EXPLORE
Home in Canada
No Result
View All Result

In An English Garden

This Deering Island, Vancouver landscape on the banks of the Fraser River is lush with classic cottage-garden plants

by Cheryl Cornacchia
June 11, 2020
Share on FacebookPin itTweet itSend it

PHOTOGRAPHY: GLENNA PARTRIDGE

The Small Yard was a natural fit for an English cottage garden. It backed directly onto a protected channel of the Fraser River in Vancouver’s quaint Deering Island neighbourhood and was surrounded by country-like properties. The yard was bathed in full sun and boasted a charming clapboard garden shed and wood-plank walkway that wended to the water’s edge. An English cottage garden and its dense plantings guaranteed a non-stop succession of flowers from March through October – just what the property owners wanted.

Plantings include Astelia chathamica, trailing coleus, Bacopa, and golden oxalis.

“The cottage style really suited the space and the clients,” says Glenna Partridge, the Vancouver garden designer who created the garden in 2012 and has been adding new and interesting flowering plants to it every year since. “It’s quite a tiny garden but it has layers upon layers,” she adds, enthusiastically. “There’s always lots blooming.”

While her clients gave her carte-blanche on the design, she explains, they did ask for one thing: Flowers, flowers and more flowers.

Clumps of English lavender ‘Hidcote’ and shasta daisies dominate the perennial border in mid-summer. The garden beds are fortified with forest compost and sea soil.

To that end, Partridge says, she chose and planted hundreds of flowering plants of various heights, shapes, growing styles and bloom times so that the homeowners, who spend their winters in California, would, upon their return home in March, enjoy a succession of blooms – waves of pinks, blues, purples, whites and yellows – into the fall.

A standard tree form of yellow lantana, a tropical perennial, cozies up with lime-green Ipomea batatas, white pelargoniums, Dichondra ‘Silver Falls,’ coleus, and calibrachoa in an earthenware pot. Weekly fertilizing with 15-30-15 keeps the flowers blooming.

As is the case with most cottage gardens, the overall look is a casual tumble of flowering plants, haphazard almost; but the informal appearance belies the planning that went into the landscape. For structure, the designer says, the borders were widened around the yard’s tiny patch of lawn to create space for an array of shrubs and flowers, the heights of which are staggered. A Japanese maple was planted close to the house to create a leafy canopy that gently shades the patio. Broadleaf shrubs, which remain green year-round, were another important addition to the borders. Their foliage fills the space once the flowers finish. Camellia japonica, a broad-leaf evergreen with rose-like pink blooms, fills that bill along with boxwoods.

New borders on both sides of the wood-plank walkway that wends to the water’s edge soften the landscape and give the property its cottage-garden feel.

Tall earthenware pots were placed throughout the garden, including one on each side of the garden shed’s French doors, drawing the eye up and providing further interest. Alongside the shed, Buddleia davidii, a flowering shrub commonly called butterfly bush, is underplanted with sedums, irises, grasses and a few annuals.

“People think you just plant a bunch of plants and it’s a cottage garden,” says Partridge, the owner of the eponymously named Glenna Partridge Garden Design, a firm she started more than two decades ago. Cottage gardens are wonderful, she says, because the dense plantings limit the exposed soil, reducing the need to weed. And the close proximity of the plants cuts down on the need for staking. “But with any cottage garden,” Partridge says, “it’s about coordinating your blooms.”

A lean-to greenhouse on the side of the house is filled with an array of plants, including herbs and fruit trees, passion flowers, and Senecio rowleyanus, a succulent vine commonly called string-of-pearls.

In this garden, spring begins with tulips, narcissus and crocuses, all of which are planted in the earthenware pots. They are soon followed by hellebores – in pinks and whites – which pop up in the borders in late February or early March and stay in bloom until the end of April. It isn’t long before the arrival of euphorbia, which bears chartreuse-coloured flowers. After that, there’s soon fresh foliage in the form of dozens of hostas in various varieties, and hebes, an interesting but often-overlooked evergreen shrub.

Then it’s summer: Standard roses, three varieties of hydrangeas, including hydrangea paniculata ‘Limelight’, lady’s mantle (Alchemilla mollis), lavender, salvias, sedums, and cimicifuga with burgundy leaves. This year, Partridge says, she is adding night phlox (Zalu- zianskya capensis ‘Midnight Candy’), which has phosphorescent flowers and is wildly fragrant in the evenings.

Lavender ‘Goodwin Creek’, and loosestrife (Lythrum salicaria) bring a burst of mid-summer colour to the garden shed.

In addition to flowering shrubs and perennials, Partridge says, she relies on annuals to add even more colour and interest. Coleus, purple fountain grass, Love-in-a-Mist (voracious self-seeders with white, pink and corn-flower-blue flowers), ceanothus, calibrachoa and agapanthus are among the annuals she uses in this garden. Gardeners with healthy plant budgets can also use tropical plants, she says, noting that lantana, a fragrant flowering plant with umbel-shaped blooms, is often on her list. She says cottage gardens offer homeowners an opportunity to experiment and reap spectacular results. •

Glenna Partridge Garden Design
www.houzz.com/pro/gardengrl/glenna-partridge-garden-design
604-716-4790

Tags: flowersgardenlandscape designplantingVancouver

Related Posts

Birds, Bees, Bats and Butterflies
garden

Birds, Bees, Bats and Butterflies

June 18, 2021

Colourful backyard plants have more advantages than just aesthetic appeal. They also foster a balanced ecosystem by attracting pollinators. According...

garden

Celebrate Spring by Creating Seed Bombs

May 22, 2021

It’s spring, so I’m celebrating by making seed bombs. A fun DIY activity for the whole family, creating seed bombs...

A Growing Business
garden

A Growing Business

October 13, 2020

Photography: Jean BlaisStyling: Jean Monet There is a popular misconception that people who make a living cultivating plants for the...

Community Spirit In A Residential Garden
Landscape

Community Spirit In A Residential Garden

October 8, 2020

Photography: Joshua Lawrence A rich mix of natural materials leads the eye to the home’s front door. Although designed pre-pandemic,...

Black and White and Elegant All Over
Interior Design

Black and White and Elegant All Over

October 5, 2020

Photography: Ema PeterStyling: Jamie Deck The North Vancouver home’s red-brick exterior underwent a black-and-white makeover to match the urban vibe...

The Art of Flower Arranging
garden

The Art of Flower Arranging

September 24, 2020

A dear friend recently cheered me up by leaving tulips at my door. Thank goodness she didn’t see what became...

Next Post

Easy-to-Make Strawberry Preserves

  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • Digital Issues
Made with ❤️ in Montréal

© 2020 Home in Canada

No Result
View All Result
  • Interior Design
    • Bathroom
    • Bedroom
    • Decor
    • Design Finds
    • Kitchen
    • Living Room
    • Paint
    • Renovations
  • Architecture
  • Landscape
  • Lifestyle
    • People
    • Places
    • Things
  • About Us

© 2020 Home in Canada