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The Small Town Gardener

The beautiful balance of a small garden

Marianne Willburn

(8/2021) As we get back to some semblance of normal, I am thrilled to be touring other people’s gardens again – and people are thrilled to finally share them with others. Thus I spend a couple hours at someone’s pride and joy only to spend the next 72 hours in mine, rethinking everything from plant choices to maintenance plans.

It’s one of the best ways I know of re-charging the batteries during a season that doesn’t stop for stragglers; however, it does open up new opportunities for self-torture, particularly when the gardens visited are small and painstakingly manicured – and from my perspective, infinitely manageable.

I say, ‘from my perspective’ because the owners of these gardens would no doubt have a few choice words to say upon that topic; but when a gardener makes the transition from a smaller property to a larger one (as we did eight years ago), and the existing garden is more ‘nature’ than ‘garden,’ nothing seems manageable anymore. Once the euphoria has worn off, there’s the issue of intimacy to be considered.

The idea of feeling enclosed by garden rooms or surprised by winding pathways and sheltered corners makes me feel a little giddy at this point. Sure, I’ve been in big gardens where this state of intimacy is seamlessly incorporated into the landscape, but I’ve also been in big gardens where I had to step over interns seamlessly incorporating it – and no one is eager to work around here merely for ‘horticultural experience’ and an excellent tuna-salad sandwich come lunchtime.

In smaller spaces, the challenge is to separate spaces to create depth. When it comes to large properties, one must link separate areas to create an overall sense of place. Either challenge is of course made more complicated by new construction, as the task of ‘connection’ is somewhat remediated by time, but on the whole, smaller properties have the edge here – there is simply less plant material and time necessary to create a sense of place.

In addition, the marketplace is being flooded with products and plants that reflect the lifestyles of the two biggest demographics in history: downsizing Baby Boomers and small-sizing Millennials.

(Generation Xers, as usual, are forgotten in this marketing love-fest. But we’ve got our John Cusack movies to keep us company when we can’t sleep over college tuition and nursing home costs.)

From Bushel & Berry patio fruits to dwarf shrub cultivars such as ‘Fine Wine’ weigela and ‘Baby Lace’ hydrangea, the choices are varied and wonderful. Small-garden gardeners are no longer subject to a few determinate tomato plants and a squash-less summer. The marketplace is indeed, theirs.

All this to say that it really is an excellent time to have a smaller garden – and not only to have one, but to revel in it. So even if your long-term plans include ‘property,’ don’t give up on the space you have right now. And if you’re having a hard time visualizing a garden in that area, may I suggest a clever little book: Big Dreams, Small Garden: A Guide to Creating Something Extraordinary in Your Ordinary Space.

Yes it just happens to be mine and this is a brazen and bald-faced plug; but it may help motivate you to re-think the space around you and create a garden that combines beauty, utility and above all, balance. After all, work/life balance is what we’re searching for – Baby Boomer, Millennial or Cusack-riddled Generation X-er. If you’ve got a small garden, you’re halfway there.

Read past editions of The Small Town Gardener

Marianne is a Master Gardener and the author of Big Dreams, Small Garden.
You can read more at www.smalltowngardener.com