This perennial border is brimming with a colorful, naturalistic planting. It is the perfect tranquil setting in which to relax and enjoy a summer day with friends and family. Easy to grow and fairly low care, most plants are attractive to butterflies or hummingbirds!
Garden Design magazine's new issue celebrates wild landscapes, never-before-seen coastal gardens, rugged terra cotta pots, and standout ferns for shade or
These tough, fuss-free perennials and grasses have adapted to North American climates and can lend a rustic prairie charm.
This prairie style planting is composed of vigorous perennials which will add drama in your garden from early summer to fall.
Prairie borders replicate the American plains. Providing soft drifts of grasses & plants. Prairie gardens are great even in a small garden design.
The early 20th-century prairie-style gardens Jens Jensen designed for Chicago parks and private clients celebrated the Great Plains. 10 ideas to steal:
A Nebraska gardener advocates for more prairie—and less lawn—to support wildlife across the Midwest.
Few tourists think to visit Groningen, the northernmost capital of the Netherlands. My tattered copy of Lonely Planet lists the main local activity in the sparsely populated region as wadlopen or mud-walking out in the open flats of the North Sea. They also mention something about pig farms. From what I saw, they're missing out. Because Groningen also happens to be an ideal base from which to explore an alternate universe of garden design. And that's exactly what we set out to do last July on the 'Gardens Illustrated Tour of the Dutch Northern provinces ' led by English garden writer, Noel Kingsbury and his wife, Jo Elliott.
This pretty perennial border, in the prairie style planting, is composed of vigorous perennials which will set your garden afire from early summer until fall. Designed to bring structure and focus, it includes Helenium (Sneezweed), Monarda (Bee Balm) and Veronicastrum (Culver's Root).
Atlas de poche des plantes des champs, des prairies et des boisParis:P. Klincksieck,[1894]||"Fragaria vesca" "wild strawberry" strawberry "woodland strawberry" "Alpine strawberry" "European strawberry" "fraise des bois" "Perennial plant" plant "Herbaceous plant" "North America Plant" "South America Plant" "Europe Plant" "Africa Plant" "Asia Plant" Fragaria Rosaceae Rosales Rosids Eudicots "Flowering plant" "taxonomy:binomial=Fragaria vesca" berry
The charm and appeal of this prairie planting comes from the glowing beauty of its flowers and from the grace of its ornamental grasses. Planted in masses and drifts of color, rudbeckia, crocosmia, helenium, echinacea, eryngium create drama and impact. Blooming in succession over a long season, they are interplanted with stipa and calamagrostis for a naturalistic meadow effect. These grasses will provide a great show in fall after the flowers are long gone.
These tough, fuss-free perennials and grasses have adapted to North American climates and can lend a rustic prairie charm.
Order Details: 1 to 3 healthy plants Description: A native, durable perennial ground cover. With sun, and room the plant spreads through non-climbing vines that produce 3' vertical green stalks with bright yellow flowers 4" in diameter. Cultivated: - Widely cultivated in parks and gardens for summer bedding schemes, boarders, containers, wildflower gardens, prairie-style plantings -Native food source for birds and butterflies -Container Gardening -Boarders along walkways, yards, garden beds -Living mulch for flowerbeds, and hard to mow spaces around trees and bushes. -Flowering stalks for bouquets Care: -Zones 4-9 - Full sun to Partial Shade. -Keep plants watered well until established then fairly drought resistant. -Can be grown in almost any well drained soil type except sand. Concerns: With a perfect environment un-managed plants can be aggressive. Please reach out with any questions on any plants, or our process. no need for purchase.
There are no shortcuts to creating a meadow—but if you follow James Hitchmough's guidelines you can create your own naturalistic landscape. Here's how.
DIMENSIONS Length: 73.5" Depth: 23" Height: 34.25" DETAILS Bar Upgrade Option: 1 row of wine glass slides, 2 wine bottle shelves, 2 adjustable shelves Standard Shelving Option: 4 adjustable shelves Drawer Interior: (1) 23 1/4” L x 20” D x 9 3/8” H; (1) 23 1/4” L x 20” D x 9 5/8” H; (1) 23 1/4” L x 20” D x 6” H Door Details: Stainless steel hinges; soft-close; opens 110 degrees Space Behind Doors: (2) 23" L x 28" H Reclaimed and sustainably harvested hardwoods sourced in the midwest FINISH Pictured in Walnut / Clear Clear Matte; Respects the natural 'look & feel' of the wood 100% VOC-Free (Keeping your home free from unwanted toxins) Plant-based, 100% Eco-friendly Durable Protection, resistant to everyday wear; Family-friendly Water and heat resistant SHIPPING & ASSEMBLY Ships assembled standard freight unless white glove is selected
This prairie-style planting combines easy-to-grow annuals and perennials in an exuberant mix of forms and colors. All plants are deer resistant, drought tolerant and low maintenance. Most make lovely fresh bouquets to be enjoyed at home.
Create stunning plant combinations for beds, borders, or containers. Unlock your creativity and transform your garden today!
Lauren Springer Ogden designed prairie garden at Chatfield Farms The Great Plains made their historical entre onto the consciousness of the European world with the publication of the Report of the Long Expedition in 1823 where they are labeled "the Great American Desert"...our plains and prairies have suffered a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde complex ever since. Who hasn't driven across I-80 or I-70 and not quietly grumbled about the endless miles of "nothing"? But if you happen to be in the right spot at the right time (and be led by a particularly knowledgeable Cicerone) you may be singing a different tune... Another view of the Chatfield Farms prairie Piet Oudolf, Roy Diblick and a host of other talents have created sublimated prairies--usually employing plants of the more easterly prairies--many of which are featured in Lauren's Chatfield garden as well. I have seen and admired a number of the European master's works--very dramatic and crowd pleasing. The crowd doesn't always realize the profound knowledge and skill it takes to create those multi-season tableaux. A number of Colorado-based artists have quietly been doing their own take on the art of native prairie plants and gardens. Lauren's many acre extravaganza around the visitor's center at Chatfield is a masterpiece I curse because I drive hundreds of miles every year commuting every few weeks to watch its kaleidoscopic transformations! Lauren Springer Ogden designed prairie garden at Chatfield Farms The first two shots were taken in June, but it's blazing away still in August (a shot of the same garden as the first two, mind you!)...That's Muhlenbergia reverchonii, an absolutely spectacular grass Lauren and her husband Scott introduced to general horticulture through Plant Select a few years ago from the prairies of central Texas. And here it is in its autumnal magnificence. If you've not been to Chatfield yet to see this, put it on your list, please! Unlike the broad brush strokes of Oudolf, Lauren's technique is more naturalistic, with artful repetitions: both work in different ways. Lauren Springer Ogden designed prairie garden at Chatfield Farms You an probably guess I can't get enough of this garden! Lauren Springer Ogden designed prairie garden at Chatfield Farms There are other less grassy bits that feature more dryland plants of the intermountain region--it's an expansive and infinitely complex work that has not had the accolades it deserves. She is about to launch a similarly ambitious and fantastic project (an "Undaunted Garden" at the Gardens at Spring Creek in Fort Collins--a horticultural gem that is about to receive its diadem. If you're not commuting to Colorado to see gardens yet, you will be. Trust me. One last glimpse of Lauren's masterpiece. Of course you know the Echinacea. The white, which is simply supreme there every year, is Erigeron philadelphicus--a biennial common throughout the Eastern United States and Midwest, but also occurring naturally in Colorado--a spectacle all summer that astounds me because I've not seen it used anywhere else that I know of. The Modecai Childrens' garden has been a huge success, the naturalistic meadows throughout are a fantastic display of color and texture through the entire gardening year. Slightly later in the year from a different angle--almost a decade later: more subdued but very showy. Almost the same bed this past early summer.. It's sad that most of our visitors never see this garden since it's across from the main garden and labeled "Childrens"--they assume it's somehow childish. Nothing could be further from the truth. I never cease to be amazed how different this garden looks from every view This is basically the same bed, viewed from the other angle a few months later... Other parts of this garden are every bit as wonderful... The Laura Smith Porter Plains garden is arguably the best garden in the place--it is our native vegetation returned as closely as could have been here originally--all from germplasm collected within a close radius of Denver. I especially love it in late summer. Again, every view seems different from every angle, and it changes subtly from year to year... Dan Johnson took over this garden after it had been left pretty much to its own devices for more than a decade after Rick Brune designed and planted it. Here is the only picture I have of Dan presumably spraying the rare weed: you never see him or any of his helpers in here: it's pretty much perfect with almost no intervention (if we ignore the burning every few springs)... Late summer in a lush year... More typical autumnal golds and browns... Castilleja integra has persisted many years. Even corners of our Japanese garden blaze with naturalistic design of natives The threeleaf sumac (Rhus trilobata) is fantasti every year. Cottonwood Border, Western Panorama gardens The true piece-de-resistance has to be Dan Johnson's breathtaking Cottonwood border just west of our great amphitheatre. One of four magnificent gardens featuring native plants from various ecosystems--here, obviously, the Great Plains. Virtually the same spot a month or two later--this, my friends, is inspired gardening! The steppe portion of Plantasia was rather sparse in the early years. Although the mass planting of scarlet tulips did make a splash...but look at this same spot a decade later! (And later in the year of course)... Plantasia steppe meadow I suggest you look back at the previous shot and tell me that it's not an amazing transformation! Steppe meadow I especially love this garden when the Eremurus stenophyllus are blazing: they've self sown and love this garden. Pulsatilla vulgaris and Agave neomexicana in the Rock Alpine Garden Hey, I know it's not a meadow--but thought you needed a little palate cleanser after all those grassy, mixed up shots...now let's go back to them Upper meadow (steppe) in Rock Alpine Garden This was our first attempt at re-creating a steppish habitat. It's been fantastically rewarding to watch this evolve--especially under Mike Kintgen's baton: he is truly a master. One little glimpse of Mike Bone, Kevin William's and Sonya Anderson's fantastic work in the Steppe Garden--I've featured this in blogs before, but not yet done it justice... Alas, the meadow below the Tyrannosaurus is as extinct as the Dinosaur (this whole area is now our Science Pyramid--which is pretty cool too, actually). But we've been meadowing for some time now. I finish with another garden which is rapidly fading towards extinction. Greg Foreman left his position at Lakewood Parks six or seven years now: the garden is being kept moderatly weeded (perhaps more by guerilla volunteers than Park staff at this point). Lakewood's Parks Department does have a lot of parks to look after--and no one of Greg's amazing skill has yet stepped in to restore it to the magnificence it displayed for almost a decade: I probably have several thousand pictures I took here. This is one of the supreme Colorado gardens. Although it is gradually experiencing a sort of tragic entropy, it has inspired Thornton, Westminster, Aurora, Denver and many other municipalities: parks workers in all of these are now trying to do what Greg did so magnificently. I hope they rise to the challenge! This picture was taken in late summer, by the way. There are lots of ornamental grasses tucked here and there--had he used a half dozen more even more generously, I think it would be the perfect Colorado garden. Zinnia grandiflora glowing yellow beyond, Salvia pachyphylla in front. An especially striking spot: Eremurus hybrid, Penstemon 'Coral Baby' (hate the name) and Penstemon pinifolius 'Mersea Yellow' in front. Not sure of the blue: Scutellaria resinosa? This is pretty wild stuff. And finally Centennial Park on the Platte, which Rob Proctor designed (I suggested many of the plants to him however!)... For many years managed by DBG. The same bed today: the Pennisetum was removed and Perovskia and Muhlenbergia reverchonii added by Denver Parks designers (Julie Lehman?) Pretty good improvement in my opinion. Garden creativity, meadows and bold design are alive and well in Colorado: I'm proud to be a part of it and to know many of the players! I can't wait to see is in store for us yet in the fu
The early 20th-century prairie-style gardens Jens Jensen designed for Chicago parks and private clients celebrated the Great Plains. 10 ideas to steal:
Rattlesnake Master, Eryngium yuccifolium, is a unique wildflower best known for its bristly, spherical flowers. Named for its spiky basal foliage which strongly resembles the yucca plant, the silvery blue-green color of both foliage and flowers is notable …
Awash with colors and shapes, this luminous plant combination brilliantly associates the elegant, soft pink Echinacea pallida (Pale Purple Coneflower) with the vertical white spires of Agastache rugosa f. albiflora (Giant Hyssop) and the graceful rose flower spikes of Pennisetum orientale (Oriental Fountain Grass). You may want to further spice up this prairie style planting with the bold, steel blue globe-shaped flowers of Echinops ritro (Globe Thistle). With a long season of interest, most
When you garden with a matrix-style design, different plants can play different roles in the landscape. Learn more here.
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Lauren Springer Ogden designed prairie garden at Chatfield Farms The Great Plains made their historical entre onto the consciousness of the European world with the publication of the Report of the Long Expedition in 1823 where they are labeled "the Great American Desert"...our plains and prairies have suffered a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde complex ever since. Who hasn't driven across I-80 or I-70 and not quietly grumbled about the endless miles of "nothing"? But if you happen to be in the right spot at the right time (and be led by a particularly knowledgeable Cicerone) you may be singing a different tune... Another view of the Chatfield Farms prairie Piet Oudolf, Roy Diblick and a host of other talents have created sublimated prairies--usually employing plants of the more easterly prairies--many of which are featured in Lauren's Chatfield garden as well. I have seen and admired a number of the European master's works--very dramatic and crowd pleasing. The crowd doesn't always realize the profound knowledge and skill it takes to create those multi-season tableaux. A number of Colorado-based artists have quietly been doing their own take on the art of native prairie plants and gardens. Lauren's many acre extravaganza around the visitor's center at Chatfield is a masterpiece I curse because I drive hundreds of miles every year commuting every few weeks to watch its kaleidoscopic transformations! Lauren Springer Ogden designed prairie garden at Chatfield Farms The first two shots were taken in June, but it's blazing away still in August (a shot of the same garden as the first two, mind you!)...That's Muhlenbergia reverchonii, an absolutely spectacular grass Lauren and her husband Scott introduced to general horticulture through Plant Select a few years ago from the prairies of central Texas. And here it is in its autumnal magnificence. If you've not been to Chatfield yet to see this, put it on your list, please! Unlike the broad brush strokes of Oudolf, Lauren's technique is more naturalistic, with artful repetitions: both work in different ways. Lauren Springer Ogden designed prairie garden at Chatfield Farms You an probably guess I can't get enough of this garden! Lauren Springer Ogden designed prairie garden at Chatfield Farms There are other less grassy bits that feature more dryland plants of the intermountain region--it's an expansive and infinitely complex work that has not had the accolades it deserves. She is about to launch a similarly ambitious and fantastic project (an "Undaunted Garden" at the Gardens at Spring Creek in Fort Collins--a horticultural gem that is about to receive its diadem. If you're not commuting to Colorado to see gardens yet, you will be. Trust me. One last glimpse of Lauren's masterpiece. Of course you know the Echinacea. The white, which is simply supreme there every year, is Erigeron philadelphicus--a biennial common throughout the Eastern United States and Midwest, but also occurring naturally in Colorado--a spectacle all summer that astounds me because I've not seen it used anywhere else that I know of. The Modecai Childrens' garden has been a huge success, the naturalistic meadows throughout are a fantastic display of color and texture through the entire gardening year. Slightly later in the year from a different angle--almost a decade later: more subdued but very showy. Almost the same bed this past early summer.. It's sad that most of our visitors never see this garden since it's across from the main garden and labeled "Childrens"--they assume it's somehow childish. Nothing could be further from the truth. I never cease to be amazed how different this garden looks from every view This is basically the same bed, viewed from the other angle a few months later... Other parts of this garden are every bit as wonderful... The Laura Smith Porter Plains garden is arguably the best garden in the place--it is our native vegetation returned as closely as could have been here originally--all from germplasm collected within a close radius of Denver. I especially love it in late summer. Again, every view seems different from every angle, and it changes subtly from year to year... Dan Johnson took over this garden after it had been left pretty much to its own devices for more than a decade after Rick Brune designed and planted it. Here is the only picture I have of Dan presumably spraying the rare weed: you never see him or any of his helpers in here: it's pretty much perfect with almost no intervention (if we ignore the burning every few springs)... Late summer in a lush year... More typical autumnal golds and browns... Castilleja integra has persisted many years. Even corners of our Japanese garden blaze with naturalistic design of natives The threeleaf sumac (Rhus trilobata) is fantasti every year. Cottonwood Border, Western Panorama gardens The true piece-de-resistance has to be Dan Johnson's breathtaking Cottonwood border just west of our great amphitheatre. One of four magnificent gardens featuring native plants from various ecosystems--here, obviously, the Great Plains. Virtually the same spot a month or two later--this, my friends, is inspired gardening! The steppe portion of Plantasia was rather sparse in the early years. Although the mass planting of scarlet tulips did make a splash...but look at this same spot a decade later! (And later in the year of course)... Plantasia steppe meadow I suggest you look back at the previous shot and tell me that it's not an amazing transformation! Steppe meadow I especially love this garden when the Eremurus stenophyllus are blazing: they've self sown and love this garden. Pulsatilla vulgaris and Agave neomexicana in the Rock Alpine Garden Hey, I know it's not a meadow--but thought you needed a little palate cleanser after all those grassy, mixed up shots...now let's go back to them Upper meadow (steppe) in Rock Alpine Garden This was our first attempt at re-creating a steppish habitat. It's been fantastically rewarding to watch this evolve--especially under Mike Kintgen's baton: he is truly a master. One little glimpse of Mike Bone, Kevin William's and Sonya Anderson's fantastic work in the Steppe Garden--I've featured this in blogs before, but not yet done it justice... Alas, the meadow below the Tyrannosaurus is as extinct as the Dinosaur (this whole area is now our Science Pyramid--which is pretty cool too, actually). But we've been meadowing for some time now. I finish with another garden which is rapidly fading towards extinction. Greg Foreman left his position at Lakewood Parks six or seven years now: the garden is being kept moderatly weeded (perhaps more by guerilla volunteers than Park staff at this point). Lakewood's Parks Department does have a lot of parks to look after--and no one of Greg's amazing skill has yet stepped in to restore it to the magnificence it displayed for almost a decade: I probably have several thousand pictures I took here. This is one of the supreme Colorado gardens. Although it is gradually experiencing a sort of tragic entropy, it has inspired Thornton, Westminster, Aurora, Denver and many other municipalities: parks workers in all of these are now trying to do what Greg did so magnificently. I hope they rise to the challenge! This picture was taken in late summer, by the way. There are lots of ornamental grasses tucked here and there--had he used a half dozen more even more generously, I think it would be the perfect Colorado garden. Zinnia grandiflora glowing yellow beyond, Salvia pachyphylla in front. An especially striking spot: Eremurus hybrid, Penstemon 'Coral Baby' (hate the name) and Penstemon pinifolius 'Mersea Yellow' in front. Not sure of the blue: Scutellaria resinosa? This is pretty wild stuff. And finally Centennial Park on the Platte, which Rob Proctor designed (I suggested many of the plants to him however!)... For many years managed by DBG. The same bed today: the Pennisetum was removed and Perovskia and Muhlenbergia reverchonii added by Denver Parks designers (Julie Lehman?) Pretty good improvement in my opinion. Garden creativity, meadows and bold design are alive and well in Colorado: I'm proud to be a part of it and to know many of the players! I can't wait to see is in store for us yet in the fu
Learn how to use colorful flowers to liven up any outdoor grass space with these gardening and groundcover tips from HGTV.
Atlas de poche des plantes des champs, des prairies et des boisParis:P. Klincksieck,[1894]||"Bank Haircap Moss" Moss "taxonomy:binomial=Polytrichum formosum" Polytrichum Polytrichaceae "North America Plant" "Europe Plant" Hair-Moss "Three-Cornered Hypnum" "taxonomy:binomial=Hypnum triquetrum"
Blue Artificial Cornflower Spray with 3 heads and 1 bud Perfect for Meadow style arrangement or bouquet Diameter: 8cm, 6cm Overall Length: 65cm
Hill Garden, Queenstown, New Zealand. Architect - Suzanne Turley