A Pattern Language
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172. Garden Growing Wild image
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high Confidence

Garden Growing Wild

. . . with terracing in place and trees taken care of—Terraced Slope,Fruit Trees, Tree Places, We come to the garden itself—to the ground and plants. In short, we must decide what kind of garden to have, what kind of plants to grow, what style of gardening is compatible with both artifice and nature.

Problem:

A garden which grows true to its own laws is not a wilderness, yet not entirely artificial either.

Background & Research: Not Included on the site—Go read the book!

Solution:

Grow grasses, mosses, bushes, flowers, and trees in a way which comes close to the way that they occur in nature: intermingled, without barriers between them, without bare earth, without formal flower beds, and with all the boundaries and edges made in rough stone and brick and wood which become a part of the natural growth.

172. Garden Growing Wild diagram

Usage:

Include no formal elements, except where something is specifically called for by function—like a greenhouse—Greenhouse, a quiet seat—Garden Seat, some water—Still Water, or flowers placed just where people can touch them and smell them—Raised Flowers . . .

pg. 801

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