What even is ‘a garden for all seasons’?

Today is the arbitrary date that is set to tell us that we are in the first day of winter. In colder climates and far-off places like the north of the northern hemisphere, the ground can be covered for snow for months or simply freeze solid. Gardens are put to bed for winter. People retreat indoors and the view from the windows becomes extremely important. Structure and form come into their own because that is all there is to look at.

Not here. We only get periodic warnings of winter until it strikes around the solstice at the end of June and even then, it only lasts about six weeks. I retreat indoors when it is either raining or bitterly cold but otherwise, I can continue in the garden.

So what do our summer gardens look like as winter arrives? These were designed to bring us summer colour and are largely planted in perennials.

The Wave Garden, named for its undulating hedges (when trimmed) comes into its own in spring and summer. Ralph is doing his daily morning check for rabbits.

The Wave Garden is at its least interesting stage. Even the form is not strong until we clip the hedging when the little species camellia – C. microphylla –  has finished flowering. The only other flowers out are the white alstromeria which seems to bloom effortlessly for about 10 months of the year.

Zach weeding is the most interesting aspect of the lily border this week. This stretch is all about the auratum lilies in high summer with a second outing in mid to late winter when the michelias and camellias bloom.

There is nothing to see in the adjacent lily border. In a few weeks, the Camellia yuhsienensis which punctuate that border will be in flower and they are eyecatching. I can see the first flowers opening now. The backing hedge of Fairy Magnolia White will start to bloom soon after but at this time, the only reason to look at it is to monitor the damage by the pesky rabbits digging holes.

The twin borders star from spring to autumn, but not winter

The twin borders are also largely put to bed. They are never totally flat and bare because many of the perennials are evergreen but the only point of interest at the moment is the startling delight of the yellow kniphofia.

Just recent hard work to be seen in the Iolanthe garden which is largely about flowering in spring through to early autumn

The Iolanthe Garden is currently receiving a great deal of attention but the fruits of Zach’s and my labours will not be seen until spring. The only colour is from the citrus fruit ripening.

Tawny carex carry this area all year round

The grasslands, as we call the area linking the borders and Iolanthe Garden, uses two evergreen, native grasses (everbrown, in practice). At this time of the year, it lacks the zing from the scattering of bulbs and flowers planted between, but it remains well furnished, as it does all year round.

The back border with the OTT Doryanthes palmeri on the right

The back border of the summer gardens is like the back row of the chorus. It rarely gets to sing any solo lines but it adds depth to the whole area. The dominant plants here are another native grass – Anemanthele lessoniana, also known as gossamer grassand cardoons which get too large and fall over in summer but look great in winter and spring. The Queensland spear lily (Doryanthes palmeri) adds a very dominant presence at one end.

The Court Garden in winter – need I say more?

But it is the Court Garden that stars all year round. The only flowers at the moment are the late salvias, particularly the yellow Salvia madrensis (which tells you how mild our autumns and winters are) but whole area is lush and furnished with contrasting textures and tones of green, bronze, burgundy and silver. We have never gardened in this style before so it still comes as a surprise to me to see how this moderately large area (think tennis court size) performs well all year round.  

I have seen gardens that claim to be ‘a garden for all seasons’ – particularly Pukeiti Rhododendron Gardens. I came to the conclusion that, at best, that means that there is something of interest all year round but you may have to search for it. Somewhat like our patch of yellow kniphofia in the borders. It rarely means that a larger area of the garden stars in the off season. It seems a little personal triumph that the Court Garden can change with the seasons but continue to star through all.

It is not just individual plants starring in their time to shine; the Court Garden doesn’t look the same all year but it looks good in every season.

While we are doing a lot of work on preparing the summer gardens for next season, the woodland areas are coming into their own. The orchids, evergreen azaleas, bromeliads, schlumbergera (zygocactus) and early clivias are coming into flower. The quiet time for the woodland areas is summer but that is another story.  

7 thoughts on “What even is ‘a garden for all seasons’?

  1. ronatverodesign's avatarronatverodesign

    Thanks for your always entertaining offerings – whatever the season. Here in Central Otago we hit winter pretty much from today (though its a relatively ‘mild’ 3 deg start this morning). Later on next week looks to be a different story. Oh well, the deep freeze is good for pest control I tell myself!

    1. Abbie Jury's avatarAbbie Jury Post author

      Such a very different climate. We don’t get the the pest control benefits of a cold winter. I had a Dunedin childhood and I remember iceskating in Naseby and – in a ‘good’ winter- on the Manorburn. My best friend’s family had a house in Wanaka and often took me as well. It was a ritual that we would dip in that lake every trip and I tell you, that took bravery in July! Not that it was ever warm, even in late summer but I have been in that lake every month of the year, even if it was measured in seconds. Central had a beautiful wildness and grandeur to it, whatever the time of the year, back then. It has been ‘tamed’ and greened too much since then for my taste. Even Wanaka has been suburbanised. I prefer my nostalgic memories.

      1. Robyn Kilty's avatarRobyn Kilty

        Even then we were encouraged not to swim in the lake – because of duck disease?? Whatever that was? All these years later I have never found out.

        ME too from my Invercargill childhood – when there was only a General Store and a Pub – quite a classy Pub as I remember.

        However that glorious view up the lake has never changed, in spite of tourist invasion !

      2. Abbie Jury's avatarAbbie Jury Post author

        It was the ‘tidying up’ (mown lawns and white fences) over the kskd foreshore that made me sad.And the sprawling suburbs of G J Garner-style houses.

  2. blizzardalwaysad0d4666b5's avatarblizzardalwaysad0d4666b5

    Talking of extending interest and colour through the seasons…I’ve been disappointed lately to find that I can no longer buy Camellia sasanqua Bonanza or the later flowering hybrid Fairy Wand. Wairere Nursery tell me they’re not being commercially propagated now. I do appreciate an early flowering camellia flower that approaches red in colour (rather than pink) as the days become gloomier. Does this mean that the work of a breeder like Os Blumhardt fades into oblivion? You often feature C. Crimson King in your posts. I suppose how “”red” its flowers appear depends on local soil and weather conditions.

    1. Abbie Jury's avatarAbbie Jury Post author

      A sign of the times. .I was talking to a propagator this week and the demand remains for white sasanquas, preferably ‘Setaugekka’. There is little demand for coloured varieties. So yes, those earlier varieties are pretty much consigned to oblivion, commercially a t least.

  3. Tim Dutton's avatarTim Dutton

    I’ve been pondering this for a while now. Our garden predominantly contains evergreen trees, shrubs, ferns, grasses and quite a few evergreen perennials too, plus all our hedges are evergreen. As such the overall look doesn’t change a lot throughout the year and the only time it looks radically different in the winter is on one of the increasingly rare occasions when we get a brief carpet of snow. In spring and summer we get numerous focal points of colours amongst all that green from the flowering plants and in autumn those non-green focal points are provided mainly by the deciduous plants changing the colour of their leaves. Then in winter the focal points of colour come from a smaller selection of plants that choose to flower then plus those evergreens that retain a different coloured foliage in winter, such as the Nandinas. Given the way the climate is drifting we have roses, Azaleas and Camellias plus a couple of Hydrangeas that flower at this time of year too, and soon the Hellebores will be out. It certainly feels like a garden for all seasons and like you we garden every day of the year when the weather allows.

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