August 18, 2022
I keep hearing about a new way of planting in gravel to make easy-care, low-weed, low-water gardens. The idea is, you scrape away 4-to-5 inches of soil, add a 6-inch-high barrier around the planting bed to contain the gravel at a consistent depth, spread 4-to-5 inches of clean, washed gravel, and plant directly into the gravel, teasing off much of the soil from the root ball to encourage roots to grow down into the soil, and to prevent weed seeds from finding bare soil that gives them a foothold.
Jeff Epping, director of horticulture at Olbrich Botanical Gardens in Madison, Wisconsin, has been leading the gravel-garden movement in the Midwest (along with Roy Diblik of Northwind Perennial Farm). His personal garden is gravel-planted, and he’s created multiple gravel-planted gardens at Olbrich. According to Margaret Roach, who interviewed Epping for a recent New York Times article, gravel-planted gardens “may require 80 percent less work.”
I’m curious to know if anyone is planting this way in Central Texas, and how it’s working out in our much hotter, drier climate. Here in Austin I see a lot of desert-style gardens mulched with a layer of decomposed granite (DG), and they quickly fail unless somebody’s out there diligently weeding Bermudagrass, spurge, nutgrass, purslane, and other weed seedlings. What we’re talking about here is different. The gravel is 3/16″ to 1/2″ and angular — and, crucially, not DG, a medium that weed seeds love.
I will just add that I use DG for a low-cost path material in my own garden, and it’s useful. Just be sure to tamp it tightly several inches deep to discourage weeds and remove weed seedlings as soon as they appear.
I had the opportunity to see one of Olbrich’s gravel gardens firsthand during the Madison Fling in June. I found it lovely even out of peak bloom season, when the predominant color was green. (See the NYT article for a photo of it in peak bloom.) Gravel paths meander through dense tufts of prairie dropseed, coneflowers, and alliums in this sunny space.
A flowering, golden-leaved yucca accents a pair of Adirondacks nestled against a hedge.
The long view — an inviting path through tightly knitted plants, with a vertical hedge of trees screening the way ahead.
I can’t remember now if this is the same garden or a similar one. A mound of chartreuse plants attracts your eye…
…to a hidden seating area for two — so inviting!
A few coneflowers were blooming.
A young red-winged blackbird hopped along the path and perched on path-edging hoops, waiting, I expect, for mom or dad to show up with a meal.
Could this be Papa red-winged blackbird?
The Perennial Garden with a boulder-strewn pond was alive with birdsong. I spotted a Baltimore oriole here too.
And another young red-winged blackbird
There’s nothing like water to draw the birds.
A toothy silver sculpture — or maybe the backbone of a subterranean creature? — appears in a green meadow.
Another meadowy seating area
Prairie dropseed grass makes a billowy but peaceful setting for a couple of chairs.
Wouldn’t this make a lovely small patio for a residential backyard — or front yard — too?
Up next: The golden Thai sala and tropical garden at Olbrich. For a look back at Olbrich’s planted plaza, fountains, and rose garden, click here.
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It’s succulent time at Austin Cactus & Succulent Society’s Fall Show & Sale on September 3rd and 4th at Austin Area Garden Center in Zilker Botanical Garden. Includes a plant show, plant and pottery sales, silent auction, and plant raffles. Open 10 am to 5 pm. Admission is free with paid admission to the garden.
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