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An English Cottage Garden
By Jill Black

An English cottage garden can serve many purposes - as a vegetable
patch, a cutting garden, a place to sit, and a place to dine while
enjoying the sights and sounds of your own backyard.

English cottage gardens is often favoured by people with plenty of
time to garden, who are romantic at heart, artists or photographers
as a ready source of subject matter, or by anyone who enjoys a
densely planted informal mixed garden that looks natural,
unstructured, filled with interesting shapes, textures, fragrances
and colours from a wide variety of flowers, shrubs and herbs.

If this is the style of garden you imagine, then you have a wide
variety of flowering and fragrant plants from which to choose. Some
of the more commonly grown ones are:

* Roses – a favourite amongst cottage gardeners with a mix of bush,
climbing, tea roses and carpet roses to choose from.
* Lavender – Along walkways, in containers or set amongst other
plants.
* Old-Fashioned Flowers – Stock, Delphiniums, Violets, Asters.
Verbena, Daisies, Cosmos, Pansies, Love-in-the-mist, Poppies,
Foxgloves...
* Shrubs and small trees - Geraniums, Hydrangeas, Lilacs...
* Bulbs – Daffodils, Tulips, Jonquils, Gladioli...
* Ornamental Grasses


Culinary and medicinal herbs can often be found growing intermingled
with the shrubs and flowers, or grown in containers ready for use by
the home gardener in a number of ways:

For adding colour, texture and flavour to culinary dishes
For making herbal teas
Homemade skin care products and lotions
Homemade medicines and ointments


Along with mass plantings the English cottage garden will often
include several structural features and elements within the garden
setting. This could include:

A birdbath
A Sundial as a striking focal point in an informal planting
Fountain, pond or stream for the soothing and restful sound of water.
Gazebo
Wishing well
Gazing Ball
Trellis or archways
Picket fences
Plants in terracotta pots or hanging baskets
Garden seating
Brick or cobblestone walkways
Sculptures and garden ornaments














Caring for Your English Cottage Garden

To keep your cottage garden looking good regular dead-heading of the
spent flowers will prolong the blooming period.

Cut back the foliage of perennials to the basil foliage when it is
past it's best and destroy any diseased plant material to keep your
garden healthy.

Leave some flower heads for the purpose of re-seeding your garden for
next years growing period. Allow plants to self-sow and intermingle
removing any tree seedlings while they are small or plants that
spring up in unwanted corners of the garden.


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