One way to spend some time in your garden this winter and prepare for an amazing spring and summertime is to focus on adding some structure. Things like adding plants, boulders, wind art, benches, and firepits.
In the Garden with Keith Ramsey is a podcast aimed at helping you grow and maintain a beautiful and healthy garden and landscape.
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Keith: Good morning, Keith Ramsey
with garden supply company.
It's winter time in North Carolina.
And I always start thinking about
structure in the garden in the winter.
And you look out and you've got all
these vacant spaces or dull spaces,
and there's all kinds of things
you can do to create structure.
A Japanese maple in the wintertime
with no leaves on it creates
a fair amount of structure.
So you can add plants and creating
the bones of a garden with hedges and
screened plants and that kind of thing.
And it, that greens the garden up with
evergreen hedges and creates life.
That's there 12 months out of the year.
And sometimes that plants when you
look at plants that are boring it's
because they don't do a whole lot,
they don't change for the year.
Giving them that the green and
the structure 12 months out of the
year, really probably do more than
something that puts on a big show
for two, three weeks or four weeks.
Something like a chameleon that limbs in
the wintertime for two to three months.
You create a green hedge behind something
and it's there 12 months out of the year.
Walkways and stonework is another way
to create structure in the garden.
It gives you the definition.
It gives you something to look at
that's there and it's there permanently.
When you look at the cost of a
walkway or a patio sometimes it's
not really, something that's gonna
last for 20 years or forever.
So it's, the cost is not as much
as, adding flowers to a garden or
something you're going to, you're
going to repeat and do over and
over just boulders in the garden.
Very low maintenance but
create a huge impact.
People always hate buying boulders.
They always think that you
ought to be able to pick them
up on the side of the road.
Drive out to the mountains and throw
on in your trunk, but it's the way
that the Boulder and the shipping
and the placement of it, but Boulder
just adds a great accent to a garden.
And then, dry Creek beds dry Creek beds,
a lot of times solve a drainage problem
it just creates the definition and a
backdrop or a foreground for planning
and adds a lot of winter interest ponds
and streams are the same thing, pond
and they add a lot of life to a garden.
It's you've got the running water
and you've got you've created that
structure and that backdrop for
for your plants through the year
when they're coming and going.
And then, stone would be a one
that's extremely low maintenance
not a whole lot to do with it.
Year in, year out.
Would is another thing that you can
add to do a garden in the winter time.
And when you've got a vacant space
or you've got something that's really
flat just adding a adding a post or
three posts to a garden it gives you
a place you can grow Vons on gives you
some elevation, creating something.
That's got a nice nice finial
on top or, a nice cut on.
Or a light post so that you're creating
some light in the in the evening so
that you can see the garden and then
put vines on it or something that's
going to climb on it pieces, offenses
or to give you some screen or, just even
three sections of fence, short, sorta
short section, like a two or three foot
section that goes, it's either hung out
there or or that's on a post to give you
a backdrop for like a perennial garden.
And then, gates or entryways are.
Into new spaces do the same thing.
They just create that structure that then
in the spring you can come in or later
when, or you can come in and plan around.
Yeah.
Garden art adds interest.
It adds color all kinds of garden art in
the, probably the most popular garden art
that we sell these days is like a window.
People are adding that to the
garden and that's like a ponder or a
fountain and you're adding movement
in the garden, which is kinda nice.
That's an easy thing to do in the
wintertime, and you're not spending a
ton of time outside, but come out, look
around, pick one out and then you're
literally just stepping into the garden.
Or sometimes people put it in a little
bit of a little bit of concrete, but
it just it's a steak and it can just go
straight into the garden and it adds,
you look out and you see that movement.
I've got one in the middle of
a bunch of ornamental grasses.
So when it's windy, the grasses are
blowing around and then I've got
a, windmill effect of the wind art.
The other thing from a focal
point and a functional.
Is having a fire pit when you look
out there it's an inviting piece.
It's a reason to go out into
the garden on a cool night.
And I've said on other podcast, , I love
a fire pit when I'm working in the yard.
On a fall day and you're picking up sticks
and find guns, you can enjoy the fire
pit, but you're also getting rid of the
sticks and the pine guns at the same time.
So it's it's an interactive way to be
out in the yard and gardening benches,
that, that same kind of scenario.
It's a focal point in the garden.
And when you look out into the garden
and you see a bench it's an inviting
it's an, it's something inviting to the
garden, it's although I find when I have
a bench, I spend more time working in
the garden or walking around the garden.
Yeah.
They're fun to look at for me,
but I don't spend a whole lot
of time sitting on a bench.
But it is a good focal point and,
planning a few plants around the bench
and just creating a nice little quiet
area parts in a garden is another one.
I think most people think about.
As being functional to hold plants,
but structurally they're fun.
You know what I mean?
To do a bigger and in a garden
or do a blue glaze pot and
the garden add the plants to.
And a plant around it and
really create the, using it
almost like you would a Boulder.
As the structure in a garden and
then, a backdrop or a foreground in
front of it gives you the color and
it gives you a, gives you some in
the garden, something to look at.
And then plants are always an easy
way to create structure and a fairly
low maintenance inexpensive way to do.
But now it's just a good time to go
to the window, spend some time looking
at it on a cold day, walk around mark
stuff out, figure out where you need
elevation and where you need Heights.
And and just get out in the garden.
And, even if it's a few minutes
here or there come out to the garden
center and look around and take a
look at stuff inside and outside.
And then pick out a wind
feature or a fire pit create
something to enjoy in the garden.
And as the weather warms
up, we'll see you next time.