
Drought-Resistant Planting
Description
The story of how Beth Chatto created her gravel garden on 'possibly the driest, and the most windswept, piece of soil in England' has a message of hope for gardeners everywhere. At the outset she promised herself: 'This garden was not to be irrigated in times of drought. Once established the plants must fend for themselves or die.'
The results, eloquently described by the author and beautifully portrayed in Steven Wooster's specially commissioned photographs taken through the seasons, testify to the triumphant outcome of the adventure.
Showing how her principles can be applied on any scale, this book is an essential read for any gardener facing water shortages and poor soil. Rich with hard-won tips and expressed in Beth Chatto's matchless style, this is a gardening classic.
Reviews / Votes
"If ever there was a book to make one a better, more knowledgeable gardener, this is surely it." * The English Garden * "Beth Chatto combines, as well as anyone at work today and better than most, an eye for good plants, knowledge of their ways and a sensitivity when putting them together." -- Ursula Buchan * Spectator * "Beth Chatto has to be the plantswoman of the century because she knows how to please plants . . . a desire to emulate these beautiful plantings should be enough to drive all serious gardeners to read the book." -- Mary Keen * Garden * "Edited with a true artist's eye [...] the beauty of the structural flowering hummocks, the pools, pockets and ribbons of colour, the textural contrasts with punctuating verticals and Mrs. Chatto's now famous plant "veils", is unsurpassed." -- Helen Yemm * The Daily Telegraph *More details
Persons
Content
Introduction
What is a gravel garden?
Beginning the Gravel Garden
Planting in the First Season
Mulching and Maintenance
The Fresh Colours of Spring
Waking up with a Start
Pruning and Grooming
Fascinating Fritillaries
Wild Tulips and April Showers
Electrifying Euphorbias
Additional Touches
Summer’s Abundance
Threads of Gold
Pinks and Mauves
Self-seeders
Room for Gigantic Plants
Background Trees and Shrubs
Problems with Conifers
Elegant Alliums
High Summer’s Gauzy Veil
Good Neighbours
Handsome Verticals
Spreaders and Dot Plants
Clematis, against the Odds
The Last Weeks of Summer
A Haze of Mauves and Blues
Scene Lifters
Grey and Silver Plants
Adding Impact
Pleasing Partnerships
Pleasures Still to Come
Dependable Sedums
Autumn Tapestry
Stars in the Fading Light
Eye-catching Plants
Autumn Bulbs
Late Autumn Highlightst
A Passion for Bergenias
Tidying up for Winter
Winter Pictures
Dessicated Seed Heads
Shapes and Colours
Shimmering Grasses
Signs of New Life
Nature’s Feeding Programme
Pruning and Shaping
The Scree Garden
Groundwork
Designing the Beds
Hard Landscaping
Waiting to Plant
Putting Plants Together
Small Sedums
A Transformation
Scree Garden Plans
Basic Plants in the Gravel Garden
Basic Plants in the Scree Garden
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
Photographer’s Note