Garden Design

Yesterday we visited Chad and Seyra’s garden in Woodbury, Connecticut, and today we’re back to see more of their beautiful plants.

small concrete path winding through gardens of pink flowersLike a lot of other gardeners, we love the birds who come to our garden. Over the years, we have increasingly considered their needs when selecting new plants. But choosing coneflowers was a happy accident. We love Echinacea purpurea (Zones 3–8) because it is easy to grow, seeds itself around, blooms for months, comes in one of my favorite colors (pink), and just so happens to be popular with the birds and insects. It’s a total win-win! I like to mix them with other pink plants that have different shapes, like Pennisetum orientale ‘Karley Rose’ (Zones 5–8), and Sanguisorba hakusanensis ‘Lilac Squirrel’ (Zones 4–8).

close up of pink flowers as they fade in fallHere’s one of those birds now. The goldfinches are just one of the many species who adore this plant!

pond with water lilies and small frog sitting on the edgeThe ponds and containers allow us to grow various water plants like lotus and water lilies. This miniature water lily, Nymphaea ‘Helvola’ (Zones 4–10) is perfectly proportional to the little froglet emerging from the small container that served as his nursery. Venture forth into the wide world, brave little one!

close up of giant green and white leavesWe also collect Brugmansia (Zones 8–10) because who could resist a Brug! We pack our basement to the ceiling with these behemoths every fall, knowing it’ll be totally worth it in the summer to have this!

a large Brugmansia with trumpet-shaped flowers growing in a small blue potThis is Brugmansia ‘Charles Grimaldi.’ There’s something about lying on the grass underneath and gazing up into the fragrant trumpets that can erase your worries. These Brugs need lots of water and fertilizer and sturdy supports to stay happy and upright in their pots. Our yard is very windy, and these top-heavy pots often get knocked over unless we brace them with pieces of rebar. In this photo we are using a repurposed rebar plant support. Monty Don taught us that you can buy your own rebar and bend it to make your own sturdy supports. We bend it around the trunks of trees to shape them.

wide view of the garden at sunsetEvery year we worry about the wildfires out west where our loved ones live. The smoke even drifts all the way out to Connecticut, sometimes making it hard to see the hills in the distance. But the smoke has a way of intensifying our sunsets like nothing else I’ve seen. These beautiful sunsets are so bittersweet.

bright yellow and blue flowers in the garden at sunsetIn this photo, Rudbeckia fulgida (Zones 3–9) and Echinops bannaticus ‘Blue Glow’ (Zones 4–9) are backed by an intense sunset.

dark brown seed heads and light pink flowers in fall gardenI could never say which season is my favorite, but fall has a special place in my heart. It’s as if fall is the garden’s grand finale thanking us for our hard work and bidding farewell until spring. We purposefully plant for fall colors. The native New England flora give us a head start with that. And we try to echo those colors in the garden.

red and yellow flowers in the gardenWe dug up our entire previous garden and brought it with us when we relocated. That first summer, we frantically planted things anywhere we could shoehorn them in to help the plants make it through their first winter. This photo shows that even in those early chaotic plantings, the plants found a way to find the right partners and shine anyway. I’m going to take that as proof of my theory that the more cool plants you collect, the higher probability that the plants will magically assemble themselves into a beautiful composition requiring no effort on the part of the gardener.

large plantings of bright yellow flowersI am a huge fan of Patrinia scabiosifolia (Zones 5–8). It grows easily from seed, produces tall acid-yellow umbels beloved by pollinators, and has foliage that turns shades of red in the fall. What a workhorse of a plant! I’ll never be without it again. Behind it is Rudbeckia triloba (Zones 4–8). We rely heavily on self-seeding plants like these to fill in our empty spaces. We love the generosity of these plants. They give so much and ask nothing in return.

Check out more of this garden on Instagram: @s2szahme

Have a garden you’d like to share?

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