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A Traditional
Approach......
Evergreen
dwarf box is the traditional plant to use in knot gardens, and there’s
none better. It’s long-lived, tough and resilient, and will withstand
a very wide range of growing conditions.
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Dwarf
box only needs trimming once a year and is fairly easy to propagate
by cuttings or division. The flowing lines and under-and-over effects
of a well designed knot are easy to achieve with box, making a really
low-maintenance evergreen feature that you’ll enjoy all year round.
And it provides the ideal showcase for interplanting with dwarf
spring bulbs.
As
box is so obliging, where you choose to place your knot garden is
really up to you, but if it can be seen from a window it will delight
all year round, and when the snow falls onto it in winter, it takes
on an added dimension.
Other
plants to consider for the knot are cotton lavender, which can be
grown in association with box to give a two-tone effect, wall germander
with its glossy dark green leaves, or you might like one of the
dwarf varieties of lavender,
although
they can’t be tightly clipped and will give a shaggier effect.
..... or
a Contemporary Interpretation
Only your imagination will
limit the style of your knot garden, and there’s no need to follow
tradition.
You’ll find
our planting plans are versatile and can be used as layouts for
exciting contemporary interpretations in plants or hard landscaping.
You could use concrete or brick pavers, instead of plants, and inset
them into your lawn, gravel or a pebble mosaic. Or you could use
turf for the design and inset that into a hard surrounding area.
You
might like to try something really wacky like burying wine bottles
so only the dimpled bottoms show through a bed of multi-coloured
glass beads or coloured gravel - very cool! Or how about a knot
made from a really ‘now’ organic material like woven willow? Spiky
grasses growing out of sand would certainly be different, or a temporary
knot that appears for only a short time each year - snowdrops or
crocuses in a lawn, for example, would mark the passing seasons.
There really are no
limits to the number of imaginative interpretations and yours might
be the start of a new tradition!
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