Rustic country garden
15 Rustic Garden Design Ideas That Are Truly Charming
Design by Emily Henderson Design / Photo by Sara Ligorria-Tramp
While it's easy to admire a formal garden, there is nothing more homey than a rustic garden. With an undone quality that looks organic and unplanned, rustic gardens have a relaxing and nonchalant quality that makes them perfect for your backyard, front yard, side yard or even city terrace.
Whether it's a DIY herb garden planter made from recycled wood palets, a set of vintage garden furniture, or a painted birdhouse, check out these simple ideas for adding some effortless rustic charm to your outdoor space.
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Incorporate Vintage Furniture
Lobster and Swan
This rustic English cottage garden from Lobster and Swan has a greenhouse at the center outfitted with weathered vintage metal furniture and accessories that lend it a timeless quality.
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Raise the Vegetable Garden
My 100 Year Old Home
Raised planters made from natural wood add a rustic touch to this Southern California backyard vegetable garden from My 100 Year Old Home. For DIY garden projects, consider using affordable and eco-friendly repurposed wood palets.
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Follow the Garden Path
Design by Emily Henderson Design / Photo by Sara Ligorria-Tramp
One way to add rustic notes to the backyard is to embrace asymmetry and imperfection rather than formal landscaping. This backyard from Emily Henderson Design has a winding stone path that leads to the play area, lined with a random assortment of grasses, plants, and flowering bushes of varying heights and volumes that add texture and enhance the natural feel.
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Use Natural Landscaping Around the Pool
Design by Leanne Ford Interiors / Photo by Amy Neunsinger
This rustic California canyon home from Leanne Ford Interiors is made from rough wood and stone, with an organic stone-lined pool in the garden that is surrounded by a variety of lush green plants of varying shapes and sizes that perfectly complement the rustic architecture of the home.
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Use Mismatched Pots
Lobster and Swan
Nothing says rustic garden like a bunch of weathered, mismatched plant pots lined up on an old stone wall, like this English cottage garden from Lobster and Swan.
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Transform a City Terrace
Fantastic Frank
You don't have to live in the countryside to create a rustic garden effect. This city terrace on the Spanish island of Mallorca from Fantastic Frank is transformed into a rustic garden with a stone floor and generous plantings of potted greenery at varying heights around the periphery that create the illusion of a slightly overgrown backyard oasis. Comfortable modern indoor outdoor furniture adds contrast without detracting from the natural feel.
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Add Hanging Planter Baskets
My 100 Year Old Home
Rustic wire hanging baskets planted with begonias and petunias add height to this backyard green space from My 100 Year Old Home that is inspired by the undone charm of an English garden.
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Install a Bench
Design by Emily Henderson Design / Photo by Sara Ligorria-Tramp
To help you and others admire your handiwork, be sure to install seating in the garden, like this rustic painted bench in the front yard of this home from Emily Henderson Design that complements the architecture of the house.
The 12 Best Places to Buy Outdoor Patio Furniture of 2023
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Repurpose Galvanized Stock Tanks
Most Lovely Things
Repurposing industrial pieces, whether new or vintage, is an easy way to add rustic notes to your garden. This home garden from Most Lovely Things was built using repurposed galvanized stock tanks filled with tomato plants, herbs, and flower seeds that keep plantings safe from wild rabbits and require minimal weeding.
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Add a Fountain
Fantastic Frank
A rustic patterned tile fountain and a pair of ornate vintage metal garden chairs creates a dreamy backyard escape in this historic Spanish home from Fantastic Frank. Vintage fountains of all sizes and styles make a perfect addition to a rustic garden, whether functional or simply decorative. To find one, try a local architectural salvage company.
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Dine in the Herb Garden
Most Lovely Things
Blogger Annie Diamond of Most Lovely Things likes to host dinners by setting a garden-inspired table and serving dishes that showcase the bounty of her galvanized stock tank herb garden in the background.
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Add a DIY Weathered Finish
My 100 Year Old Home
Using weathered terracotta pots is a sure way to add a rustic feel to your garden. But if you can't get your hands on some, you can also add a weathered patina to new terracotta pots to lend them some vintage cachet using garden lime, like these DIY aged garden pots from My 100 Year Old Home.
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Add Woodland Whimsy
Design by Emily Henderson Design / Photo by Tessa Neustadt
To add some rusticity to a backyard patio garden like this one from Emily Henderson Design, simple touches like adding a pair of mushroom statuettes adds some woodland whimsy that will delight kids of all ages.
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Plant the Staircase
Thistlewood Farms
If you have a wide enough front staircase, you can treat it like an extension of the garden by lining it with potted plants or flowers in vintage urns, and layering in vintage objects and hurricane lanterns to create a weathered look, like this front staircase from Thistlewood Farms.
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Add a Backyard Birdhouse
Design by Becca Interiors
In the lush green backyard of this Colonial home along New York's Hudson River from Becca Interiors, a two-story birdhouse painted in the same colors as the main house adds charm and helps keep feathered friends and neighbors fed and happy.
Rustic garden ideas: 16 ways to add charm and character to your plot
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(Image credit: Alamy)
Rustic garden ideas are full of charm and never, ever dull. Packed with character and imagination, they are the perfect option if you’re after a laidback, informal style for your outside space. Inspired by practicality, simple design and sturdy, natural materials, the true beauty of this look is that it takes time to evolve, it’s always full of surprises and that it really allows the creator’s personality to shine through.
Potting sheds, greenhouses and outbuildings all play a key part in rustic garden ideas. Not just for performing gardening tasks, they also present the perfect opportunity to get creative. Often simple and practical structures, with a little thought they can be transformed with paint, salvaged treasures, or redundant architectural finds to create stunning garden features. The same goes for other everyday items. Step ladders and tables can be moved outside and used to showcase an eclectic mix of vintage finds or a seasonal display, while tin baths, agricultural feed bins and kitchen enamelware all make attractive planters.
When it comes to planting and landscaping materials, the emphasis is firmly on natural. Logs and rounded timber stakes - complete with bark or stripped to show the grain; weathered stone with patches of lichen and woven willow hurdles as fencing or border edging can all play their part.
Plants are best left to their own devices – so go for paths with creeping ground cover, pots overspilling with trailing foliage and flowers and a joyful mix of tall, waving perennials and fragrant cottage herbs in large sweeping borders.
Tempted to give this easy-going garden style a go as part of your garden decor ideas? Well, we’ve got a whole host of ideas for you to explore, so settle down and happy scrolling.
1. Create your own garden hideaway
Transform a humble garden shed into a rustic-inspired retreat
(Image credit: iBulb)
With just a little attention garden sheds can become attractive features and much-loved retreats where you can escape for some quality ‘me’ time. Treat wooden huts and summerhouses to a fresh lick of color. Cool paint shades work particularly well as they recede into surrounding greenery and look truly magical at dusk.
Don’t be too precise when painting if you're after more authentic rustic garden ideas – rough, weathered patches of peeling paintwork all add to the appeal. Have fun too – picking out cute details such as window and door frames in a different but toning shade.
Aim to create a cosy spot full of character and interest. Paint a wooden chair, stool or side table to match and use them to stage favorite container plants so they frame your retreat. Pop in vintage finds – think wooden washboards, stone jars and glass bottles – for added charm.
There's more inspiration for your outdoor hideaway in our garden shed ideas.
2. Make room for a floral display
Use rustic planters to add a touch of charm to your planting displays
(Image credit: Monika Lengweiler/EyeEm/Getty Images)
Groups of gorgeous potted blooms have a big visual impact and are a great way to celebrate the changing seasons too. Clustered together on tabletops and perched along benches, they create a seemingly impromptu display full of charm and color.
For a considered rather than chaotic look to your container gardening ideas, keep to similar blooms and colors and look for containers that have something in common. Woven baskets have a rustic, homespun feel perfect for informal rustic garden ideas, but galvanized buckets and baths or wooden crates work just as well.
3. Choose garden features with a weathered finish
Wakehurst outdoor woodburning fireplace in a rustic steel finish from Gardenesque
(Image credit: Gardenesque)
Rustic garden ideas are all about the informal and unexpected, so distressed and worn surfaces are a must. Corten steel is hugely popular right now and is perfect for this look. With industrial overtones, the material changes when left out in the elements, with the cool grey metal slowly developing rich rust tones over time.
Each piece develops its own unique markings, adding to the long-lost and recently discovered appeal. Unlike with vehicles and farm machinery, the weathering process doesn’t weaken the steel so you can sit back and enjoy your outdoor heating ideas, best fire pits and water bowls without worrying.
4. Reimagine architectural features
Distressed Arch Indoor/Outdoor Mirror from Rockett St George
(Image credit: Rockett St George)
Stumbling across a forgotten architectural gem in the garden has a magical appeal. Hinting at a time gone by it becomes a source of curiosity, giving the space its own individual charm. Of course, these items don’t often arrive by chance, so a little artistic license is required.
Take time to hunt out salvaged details such as rusted metal gates, worn timber shutters and stone lintels. There are also plenty of contemporary products out there carefully designed to ooze timeworn charm. This outdoor mirror has all the appeal of an industrial Crittall window thanks to its slim glazing bars, and it looks stunning propped up against a wall or fence, reflecting its green surroundings.
Head over to our garden mirror ideas for more ways to make the most of your best garden views.
5. Include salvage-style planters in your rustic garden ideas
Aged stoneware planters are the perfect choice for your rustic garden ideas
(Image credit: Redwood Stone)
Aged stoneware – carved or reconstituted – has a real tactile appeal and gets even better with age when covered with moss and lichens. Ramp up the charm of your garden planter ideas by arranging urns, pots, plinths and benches in one area. It could be a shady corner that needs a lift or an empty spot outside window or back door.
Plant up with plenty of trailing foliage and delicate clump-forming blooms. Viola, calibrachoa, bacopa and verbena all provide plenty of color and will gently spill over container edges, but for a chic, timeless look, keep to white blooms and some variegated foliage.
A rustic timber pergola is ideal for creating a central focal point in your plot
(Image credit: Susan A Roth/Alamy)
Whiling away hours with friends and family nestled deep within the garden is a simple, yet memory making experience. Surrounded by glorious flowers, lush foliage and natural materials the effect is instantly calming and relaxed.
Create your own alfresco lounge area as part of your rustic garden ideas with a brick paved clearing set amongst plant filled garden borders. A fuss-free timber pergola made from chunky wooden poles adds height and helps to cosy up the space, while also providing the perfect opportunity to hang lanterns, planted baskets and lengths of festoon bulbs.
Handcrafted hardwood timber furniture – high backed bench seats with wide, flat arms are the comfiest – pulled around a central coffee table, makes for versatile seating that can be left outside all year.
Fancy trying your hand at a spot of DIY and creating your own rustic pergola? Our guide on how to build a pergola has a useful step-by-step you can follow.
7. Make the most of your outdoor structures
Greenhouses can be transformed into a magical garden room with simple garden lighting
(Image credit: Sparkle Lighting)
In the rustic spirit of upcycling, why not take a fresh look at your garden structures and turn them into an extension of your home. It may only be for occasional use, a special event or just during the warmer months, but many outdoor spaces can take on a magical feel with the simplest of touches.
Throw open the doors and cover the walls and floor of a summerhouse or potting shed with rugs, blankets and cushions for some easy lounge living, or take your greenhouse ideas up a level by adding simple wooden furniture and pretty garden lighting ideas.
'Any outdoor covered space that you may have can be transformed into an outside room by adding seating and then hanging festoon lights or fairy lights,' says the team Sparkle Lighting. 'If there is no plug available, battery-operated fairy lights and cordless battery-operated table lamps can bring light and atmosphere to the space.'
8. Go for a nature-inspired color palette
Door painted in Goblin 311 and water pump painted in Acorn 87 , both Intelligent Exterior Eggshell by Little Greene
(Image credit: Little Greene)
Neutral shades from pale stone through to spicy terracotta give rustic garden ideas plenty of character, but when it comes to choosing paint shades things can get a little tricky.
To keep the overall look of the garden harmonious and restful, it’s best to avoid hot, vibrant shades, especially for larger areas. Instead, go for leafy greens, soothing blues and cool moody grays such as pewter, ash and slate. These will quietly zing alongside rich, natural materials such as timber fencing and shingles, leafy hedges, aged brickwork and terracotta pots while still letting flowers take centre stage.
You can find more suggestions in our garden color schemes feature.
9. Create a rustic tiered display
Old wooden ladders are perfect for creating an interesting planting display on a patio
(Image credit: Colin Poole)
A flower-filled space, big or small, is at the heart of rustic garden ideas. Maximize the effect by raising your plants to create an impactful display. Window boxes and hanging basket ideas will do the job nicely, but for added charm use a wooden stepladder. From low knee-high versions with just a couple of steps to more traditional affairs reaching shoulder height, they are ideal for brightening up a dull corner or veranda and ooze rustic charm.
Keep it natural for a more rustic finish, or treat the wooden surface to a fresh lick of the best exterior wood paint if you want to add a splash of color. Pop one or two pots on each step. Stick to blooms of a similar shade for a chic, co-ordinated look and go for sun-loving herbs and alpines, to reduce watering.
10. Showcase natural materials
Incorporate plenty of natural materials into the design of your space
(Image credit: Claudia De Yong Designs )
Any rustic garden ideas should celebrate the beauty of natural materials, so look for excuses to use them at every opportunity. Rustic fences, gates and pathways can all become exquisite features, adding to a garden’s unique charm and personality. Coppiced hazel and chestnut have long been used in the UK to create traditional garden structures while cypress and cedar are favored in the US.
Hand stripped and cleaved timbers as shown here, are seeing something of a revival. 'Using coppiced wood like chestnut to create garden features is not only aesthetically pleasing and tactile but ages beautifully, has a resilience to decay and helps support and maintain traditional craft skills,' says garden designer Claudia De Jong. Strong and durable, they are perfect for tasks varying from picket garden fence ideas, garden gate ideas, arches and even bug houses.
Clay pavers and handmade bricks also exude plenty of character. Lay them as paths, stand them on their ends to form edging and borders, or stack them to make casual plinths for displaying prized pots or salvaged finds.
11. Put up a rustic log arch
Create different zones in your garden with a rustic wooden arch
(Image credit: Hugh Palmer/Future)
Frame a garden view or make an entrance, with a timber pole arch. The more basic the structure and chunkier the timbers the better, providing they are securely fixed of course.
Great for introducing height into a design, these simple designs look inviting nestled in amongst trees and shrubs or overgrown with the best climbing plants such as honeysuckle, clematis and wisteria. They also provide year-round structure and interest, especially important in gardens that have many deciduous plants or spend months covered in snow.
Look for arches, pergolas and arbours in kit form that are quick and easy to erect or design your own using machine rounded poles in pressurized softwood available from most timber yards. Commissioning a skilled craftworker is another option well worth considering for rustic garden ideas, as they can create truly unique pieces that are site specific too.
Always wondered about the difference between arbours, pergolas and gazebos? Our guide has the answers.
12. Paint up wooden crates
Timber crate painted in Slade Green wood paint from Thorndown Paints
(Image credit: Thorndown Paints)
Seemingly impromptu displays give your rustic garden ideas plenty of charm and wooden crates are perfect for the job. Choose sturdy designs in a range of different sizes and paint them in a gorgeous, muted shade inside and out. Once dry they can be used as side tables, stood on end as a box frame or piled high to make a multi-faceted showcase for potted plants, garden tools and other garden items.
If floor space is tight, why note fix them to the wall instead? A neatly spaced row will add impact and drama, while a mix of crate sizes, hung close together, will create a more intriguing arrangement.
'The great thing about crates is they need little or no prep using our paints,' says Ben Thornborough of Thorndown Paints . 'Paint undiluted for a smart even finish. Anthracite Grey is this year’s most popular color for a classic heritage look. Or dilute your wood paint 1-to-1 to see the grain, then rough it up afterwards with some sandpaper for a timeworn look.'
There's more tips on how to use salvage for garden upcycling ideas in our feature.
13. Customize your furniture for a more rustic vibe
(Image credit: Alamy)
Somewhere to sit and soak up your surroundings is a key part of any garden, but rustic garden ideas are not about sleek and contemporary design. For that reason, your garden furniture need to be creative and expressive.
Repurposed kitchen and conservatory chairs, tractor seats and ornate metal designs are perfect for rustic garden furniture ideas. They will all stand out amongst lush planting and vibrant blooms, but we particularly love this artistically painted wooden bench. The lively sunflower design looks stunning against the blue and tucked in amongst tall perennials and grasses it's truly inviting. The perfect spot for a quiet read or alfresco coffee, it’s a real mood booster whatever the weather or time of year.
Find your perfect outdoor seating in our edit of the best garden benches.
Rusty Peace and Plenty sign from RE
(Image credit: RE)
Rustic garden ideas should be full of surprises that lift the mood and say plenty about their creator, and nothing does this more than a well-chosen sign or two. Pick out a favorite phrase and use it creatively around your garden. Paint it on a wall by a scented climber or inscribe it on a paving slab in front of a pond or by a favorite view.
Many garden products can be personalized with a special quote, including stone bird baths, wooden swings and benches, but a simple hanging sign is fun and can be easily moved around and swapped over too.
'If we are lucky enough to have outdoor areas, they’ve lately become sanctuaries, safe areas to cherish and nurture,' explain Jenny Vaughan and Simon Young, founders of RE . 'Signs and messages can help create the perfect personalized outdoor environment and the varied tones of rusty metal from flame orange to chocolate brown look great set against lush green foliage or floral planting – and of course they last for years in every climate.'
15. Pimp up a birdhouse
Create a home for your feathered friends with a rustic birdhouse design
(Image credit: Gary Host/Unsplash)
A des res in miniature – homes for our feathered friends have long been dotted around our gardens, but why not have fun making your bird house design ideas truly unique? The perfect excuse to try out some rustic garden decorating ideas, all you need is a simple wooden bird house, some paint, wood glue and a dash of imagination.
Have a root around for unwanted items ripe for upcycling. Picture frame offcuts can make dramatic, oversized bargeboards, while wooden doorknobs and carved mouldings add shape and decoration. The perfect project to keep children amused too, position your new tiny home on a timber post in the centre of a border or mount on a wall in pride of place.
16. Repurpose old furniture
(Image credit: Alamy)
Give old furniture a new lease of life by using it outdoors for your rustic garden ideas. If you've got an old coffee table or bedside table that no longer works for the interior of your home, why not repurpose it for your outdoor set-up instead of throwing it away?
We love how this vintage table complements the garden bench, offering a place to enjoy your morning cup of coffee, or it could even work as a small potting table for planting up your window boxes or hanging baskets.
Protect wooden furniture by lightly sanding down the item, then add a couple of coats of exterior wood paint to ensure it can withstand the elements. There's top tips on painting garden furniture in our dedicated guide.
What is a rustic garden?
Rustic garden ideas lend themselves to relaxed, informal seating areas
(Image credit: Future)
Rustic garden ideas are a beautiful mix of the creative and practical. Born from a love of repurposing, this style of outside space features decorative garden finds and everyday objects that have been used to make comfy seating areas, plant supports, arches and arbours.
Imaginatively put together and often costing very little, their charm is in their laidback approach and individual and unique look, which often expresses the personality of their creator. Bursting with color, character and a wealth of different artistic projects, rustic garden ideas will create fun and lively plots that everyone can get involved in.
Want more inspiration for your plot? Check out our eclectic bohemian garden ideas too.
How do you make a rustic garden?
Salome Cane Armchair from Rowen & Wren
(Image credit: Rowan & Wren)
Tempted to introduce some rustic touches to your outside space? We asked the team at Rowen & Wren to share their favorite rustic garden ideas.
- Create height and structure as your garden will fall flat if it's all on the same level. Look to traditional willow obelisks and trellises to encourage plants to climb skywards, and to give your garden structure.
- Little makes a garden feel more rustic than calling upon Mother Nature to 'furnish' it. Vary your materials from a classic wooden garden bench and terracotta pots to natural cane furniture. You'll create variation in color and texture so your entire garden will feel more lived-in.
- A garden that embraces the elements will undoubtedly feel more rustic. Leave some elements exposed to wind, rain and shine so they develop a comforting patina over time.
- Scour reclamation yards and antique shops to unearth pieces for your rustic garden ideas that are already wise and worn. Vintage pots, tools, trugs and cast-iron bistro sets are all there to be found and will instantly lend your garden a heritage feel.
- Sometimes you have to let nature simply take its course. By rewilding your garden (or just part of it), you'll learn just how 'rustic' you're happy for things to be and in turn, reshape it as you see fit. Let paving slabs gain age spots, encourage grasses to grow tall and mighty, and teak to silver.
Jill puts her love of plants and all things garden related down to the hours spent pottering around with her Nan and Grandad when she was little. Today she is lucky enough to have a garden of her own in Surrey, England, and spends much of her time writing about them too.
How to make a rustic-style garden with your own hands in the country
Now more and more people are striving to equip their garden in a rustic style, or as it is also called, in country style. To understand what such a garden is like, let's plunge into its history a little.
The village garden was a place where peasants not only lived, but also earned their living and fed their families. There was a garden with vegetables and spices, an orchard, a shed for animals and apiaries. Also an integral part of such a country garden were huge flower beds with colorful flowers.
Flowers are not only decorative, but also serve to attract pollinating insects. In Russian village gardens, there are always sunflowers and tall mallows planted near the hedge.
Benefits of a rustic garden
Its popularity is due to some of its features
- Easy care.
- Absolute freedom in the choice of plants.
- Large space for fantasy.
Also, creating a rustic garden allows you not only to show all your imagination, but also a sense of humor. For example, when decorating a garden, make a classic scarecrow in the style of the Scarecrow from the fairy tale "The Wizard of the Emerald City", put cute wooden figures in secluded places.
Design secrets
Of course, the easiest way for us to design a garden in the Russian style. In the garden we plant apple trees, pears, plums and cherries. In the garden we plant tomatoes, cucumbers, pumpkins, parsley, dill, various varieties of onions, turnips and radishes.
We plant a flower bed with asters, peonies, marigolds, dahlias. Along the path, it is recommended to plant something simple, not pretentious, such as a small hydrangea.
The main and key points in the design of the village garden are:
- slight negligence (no need to perfectly "lick" your garden),
- the presence of cultural savages - red-leaved plantain,
- a huge number of flowers.
A lawn or lawn is planted with dense grass mixed with wildflowers. It is important to take into account such a moment - in a country-style garden, although there is slight negligence and not well-groomed, there is also zoning here.
In other words, the garden, front garden, garden and utility and recreation area are separated from each other. Moreover, which is very important, the separation must be done with natural materials (natural).
But don't make a neatly trimmed hedge - do you think the farmer or your grandmother had an iPod in the past? That's it, therefore, without fanaticism and modernity - make a wattle fence from dry willow branches.
Practical Tips
1. Scatter rustic objects around the garden - a wooden wheelbarrow or a wooden wheel, rusty tools. The main thing is not to overdo it - one wheel, one or two tools.
2. If the house is located in the garden, it must also be decorated in a rustic style - wooden shutters, white plaster, natural bricks, and best of all - a wooden house.
3. An integral part of the village garden is the well. Even if you have running water in your country house, you can put a decorative well that will immediately add nostalgic notes to your site.
4. Decorate your garden with barrels, buckets and watering cans filled with flowers.
5. Make a pond. If there is already a reservoir, then decorate it around the edges with reeds, leaving only a place for entry (for example, a small wooden pier if you intend to swim in it). If there is no natural reservoir, then an artificial one can be made.
6. Place wooden benches or wicker furniture in the garden, lay woven rugs on them - how pleasant it is to sit on such a bench in the evening and click seeds!
Let your village garden be your outlet and favorite place to relax and remind you of the summer spent in the country with your grandmother.
Village garden | Landscaping. Seminars on landscape design.
Sometimes each of us wants to create something with our own hands, to feel like a creator. No exception - and the owners of the site, which will be discussed. Having acquired a plot of 30 acres with a ready-made house, outbuildings, a garden and a kitchen garden in the picturesque countryside of the Dnepropetrovsk region, they set about transforming it. In a conversation with a landscape designer, the owners of the suburban area emphasized that they would like to see something simple and cozy, but at the same time unique and original. In the language of a specialist, they expressed a desire to create a country-style garden (“rustic” garden). Taking into account the wishes of the customers, coniferous plants, beloved by the owners, were also used in the design of the site. It should be noted that a pine-birch forest adjoined the site on one side.
Country style is the most democratic and free option from a very wide and varied range of landscape solutions. The main thing for him is closeness to nature and simplicity, the use of exclusively simple, natural materials and forms. This is what attracts many of our compatriots in it, who prefer modest, unpretentious and at the same time spectacular means of decorating a garden. Country style is determined by comfort and expediency. The ratio and arrangement of zones in it are dictated, first of all, by considerations of functionality.
During the transformation, part of the orchard had to be cut down - only the old apricot and pear remained. A young garden was planted in place of the vegetable garden. After all, what could be more beautiful than apple and cherry trees blooming in spring? Not without berry bushes (currant, gooseberry, raspberry, barberry, viburnum, chokeberry). They settled down in groups, interspersed with decorative compositions.
Neat garden beds with greenery have greatly decorated the garden. On such a "flower bed" various types of lettuce, carrots, leaf beets, parsley, dill look picturesque. Of the onions, slime onions with flat edible leaves and chives with narrow “tube” leaves and beautiful purple inflorescences look attractive. In other words, the combination of the useful with the beautiful is a distinctive feature of the country style, which, you see, is very convenient and profitable.
The “highlight” of the garden was placed in an open sunny place - a raised flower bed, where carnation, verbena, alyssum, marigold, nasturtium and garden chamomile feel comfortable. A distinctive feature of such a flower bed is that it is surrounded by log cuts. Here there was also a place for a milk jug, commonly referred to as a “smooth”, this is also an element of a country-style garden.
The second flower garden was set up in the garden between the trees, decorating it with a decorative snail and a flower stand made of birch logs, which perfectly emphasizes the rustic style and brings the so-called “natural” exoticism to the exterior.
In spring, the flowering of various bulbous plants pleases the eye: primrose, tulips, daffodils. Then comes the turn of evening primrose, peonies, astilba, lupine, garden bell, delphiniums, poppies. In the second half of summer, annuals are already picking up the baton. All plant groups are composed in such a way that the site is decorative all year round, but at the same time it is constantly changing. In a word, there should always be a lot of flowering plants and their combination can be bright, contrasting, although, of course, you need to know the measure in everything.
There was also a place for a small pond where frogs settled. For the floral frame of the water, characteristic coastal vegetation was selected - moisture-loving irises, daylilies, daffodils, bergenia.
You can watch all this beauty sitting comfortably on a swing under the birch trees that grow in the corner of the plot from the side of the forest. A mix of shade-tolerant plants is also planted here: spindle trees, decorative forms of hazel, white turf. Mountain pine, lavender, sweet peas were placed in a sunny place - plants that fill the air with a fragrant aroma, which, by the way, greatly contributes to creating a romantic atmosphere in the garden.
The layout of a rural style garden is not complicated, but logical. All its elements are combined with each other with the help of simply arranged, but very picturesque, winding gravel paths. A country garden does not require complex care. Moreover, it should be slightly "launched" and look romantic.
How to do in a "rural" garden without a bench at the entrance, covered with homespun cloth? This is a great place for family gatherings! And the well, a symbol of depth and clarity, should not be forgotten either. That is why on the site a place of honor near the house was given to the village well.
The location of the buildings on the site, on the one hand, made it easier to create a country garden, and on the other hand, it did not make it possible to expand certain areas. Sometimes there was not enough space to realize all the design ideas. The inner courtyard, for example, turned out to be small, but very cozy. Traditional petunias on the window sills of the guest house and a cute wall fountain perfectly decorated it - it came out simple, but elegant. Brick-like paving, a lantern located inside the courtyard surrounded by simple unpretentious flowers (Armeria, ground cover bell, awl-shaped phlox), randomly scattered stones only added naturalness to the courtyard, emphasized its originality.