The Cottage Garden
The cottage garden is a nostalgic story.
In the old days the plants that comprised it were received as gifts from family and friends, brought back from travels or otherwise held significance beyond their botanical interest.
Today the names of these plants bring an immediate smile of recognition, because they grace the pages of heirloom nursery catalogs and the grounds of historical gardens.
Lavender, foxgloves, daisies, bachelor’s buttons, pinks, delphiniums, hollyhocks, speedwell, lupines, yarrow, columbines and lilies, they all go into the making of a cottage garden, which must also include a fragrant vine, and above all, roses.
There is an exuberance to this garden design unmatched by any others. Its is the flowering abandon you see in landscape photography, and, as expected, this natural care free abandon means a lot of work.
The plants need constant weeding, dead-heading, and pruning to look their best, and lots of fertilizer to keep blooming. The cottage garden used to rely on freely reseeding plants for annual color, and most of its annual staples become invasive if not kept in check.
All these concerns, however, fade into the splendor of a cottage garden at the height of summer.




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