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Climbing Gardens: Adding Height and Structure to Your Garden
by Joan Clifton, Steven Wooster
Note: I love clipping the thickened, heavy branches at the end of season from my Butterfly shrubs. I save them over winter, and tie them together with string in the Spring to make sturdy climbing forms for my plants. It's free, and fun to make shapes each year. This book has several good designs and ideas to "raise" the view of your flowers.
Passion flower. Chocolate vine. Golden trumpet. With names like these, who wouldn't want a garden bursting with climbing plants? Used for scent or screening, romance or relaxation, climbing plants also add a dimensional element otherwise missing from gardens that exist solely at ground level. In the language of garden design, this is known as "verticality," and Clifton shows how to achieve it through the felicitous combination of breathtaking plants and eye-catching support structures. These can be as commonplace as arbors and trellises or as unconventional as teepees and obelisks; woven together from exotic bamboo or forged from industrial steel.
Enhanced by Steven Wooster's stunning photographs, Clifton's elegantly produced guide explores various thematic interpretations for climbing gardens, from romantic to urban, casual to formal. Along with detailed lists of suitable perennials, annuals, evergreens, and even vegetables,
Clifton offers step-by-step instructions in a comprehensive resource for those wishing to take their gardens to new heights. Carol Haggas
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
(Paperback) by Joan Clifton (Author), Steven Wooster (Photographer)
ISBN: 1552-97610-6
ISBN 13: 978-1552-97610-4
Publisher: Firefly Books Ltd
Publish Date: 01 March, 2003
ONE NEW copy in stock
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