THE MODERN MINT BLOG
“No-one had ever seen anything like it. We were using perennials in a kind of meadow-like way, that was very different from anything anybody else was doing.
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James Van Sweden
This is the style James Van Sweden, working with Wolfgang Oehme, created – known as the New American Garden. (For more about them, you can read part one here.) Starting by removing lawns from clients gardens, they then began planting masses (and masses and masses and masses) of perennials.
“Wolfgang would take off his glasses, or not consider the scale of the drawing, and I’d say… Wolfgang that’s 5000 Rudbeckia ‘Goldsturm’…
GOOD! He’d say…
He’d taken off his glasses and totally forgot the scale, and so when it was put in we’d put in 5000 Rudbeckia ‘Goldsturm’ and it was very dramatic, it was amazing, and nobody could believe their eyes…”
The effects created by using a huge number of grasses alongside indigenous plants like aster, eupatorium, inula and helenium (all from the daisy family) meant gardens, though expensive to plant, looked good and were easy to maintain.
“We never really worried about colour. We worried more about texture, height, and achieving drama in the garden with plants.”
At Modern Mint we are enormously inspired by this idea – plants are our favourite building blocks too. It is far lovelier to use a hedge to demarcate a boundary than have the fuss of putting in a fabricated fence. Engaging a client with this philosophy, informing them these are reasonable choices to make, is good fun – and creates a completely different atmosphere in the garden.
(It is noticeable in Scandinavia that the gardens rarely mark out their territory. The ‘untamed’ is kept from the house by a rough mowing (you certainly won’t see a pristine green lawn) and perhaps a row of fruit bushes will be the only hint as to where the garden ends and nature ‘proper’ begins… the gardens of James Van Sweden take a similarly liminal stance…)
Monty Don wrote about this effect in his book ‘Around the World in 80 Gardens’…
“It all merges out into the landscape. Other than the decking there is no obvious demarcation except through the planting – a tapestry fading out to its edges. It has great confidence in that it appears natural and effortless… and despite the apparent naturalness, I realised that he has used a wide and extensive range of plants to create the artless effect.”
How do you manage a garden like this? In fact – though there are more plants than areas of hard landscaping – it is in fact lower maintenance. The exact opposite of what most people think a garden needs to have to make it easy to look after!
“I designed a garden that I thought was tough, was sustainable… and I don’t water anything here… not having chemicals and just a minimum of weeding… I’m very flexible about weeds, so that’s why the whole garden looks quite a bit like a meadow.”
It then gets one annual cut and that is it, all the work is done – the ultimate low maintenance garden! (Of course, by using a garden style that mimics the prairie, then for ease of maintenance the very best way to manage it would be to let a herd of wild buffalo loose and set fire to it… but if that is not an option a strimmer will do the job too…)
If you haven’t been sold on how beautiful and easy to manage this sort of garden is yet, perhaps his book will change your mind…
The video below, from 30 minutes to about 35 minutes, gives an insight into how this style of garden design came about… from the North American Prairie…
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t08zPAm38QI
“Only the rainforest has a greater diversity than the prairie…”
If you want your garden to be a beacon of sustainability, don’t think too hard about biodiversity – think eco-system. It is eco-systems that encourage and sustain a broader range of wildlife – if the eco-system works, you will have a range of bugs and plants.
Look at your site, look so carefully at what it tells you to do – then evolve it with a light hand. That is what James Van Sweden did in his garden – created an eco-system that mimicked the prairie.
That is what we think the future of garden design is – not just throwing a few grasses into a border, or allowing a hollyhock to seed into a gravel pathway, or buying your fence panels from a sustainable source – the future of garden design is taking a holistic approach to how you manage the garden as a whole entity, an eco-system in its own right.
By doing this, design becomes no more than a starting point – and the garden becomes easier to maintain.
Do try these books by James Van Sweden, they do not disappoint!
Buxus the Norfolk Terrier In Modern Topiary Book
This is Buxus, our Norfolk Terrier, who I acknowledge in the acknowledgments of the book of Modern Topiary. The book of Modern Topiary can be read, for free, here. There you go. Buxus the dog on ‘doorstep duty’ at a friend’s house in Edinburgh. For those asking what he looked like!
What People Think Of Modern Topiary, The Book
Yesterday I put out the book – Modern Topiary – that I have spent the last six years writing. Download for free a pdf of Modern Topiary here. And what seems amazing to me, is that not only have people actually been reading it, but then responding to it. So below are a number of comments I have been sent from those who read it last night, and this morning…. “Brilliant read, exactly the right amount of info to take in and digest.” Rachel, a gardener “Just finished reading – absolutely brilliant!” Camilla (she shared with me lots she highlighted) …
Modern Topiary Book
Over the last six years I have been writing a book. It is called Modern Topiary and I have finally finished it, and now made it available for people to read. This is the blurb on the back…. This is the topiary book I wish I had when I began trying to clip plants into a shape others would consider beautiful. Split into two parts – the craft and then the art of topiary – I have tried to share everything I know. It’s not a long book. I hope this gives you the foundation for good technique, alongside ideas …
