Tuscan garden style can range from the most rustic of
farm courtyard with a few chickens running around to elegant,
Renaissance villas with formal gardens and elaborate water features.
For most of us the rustic Tuscan garden style is the style that we aim to create in own properties.
Both
of these styles can be addressed within one large garden but careful
attention must be paid to detail, as it is detail that suggests any
chosen theme in a garden. Often details such as flooring are
overlooked, resulting in a confusing style that creates imbalance
within the garden.
In order to suggest a rustic, Tuscan feel we
can choose several flooring styles that pick up on Tuscan nuances. The
first being re-clamed terracotta bricks that can be used for patios and
pathways providing a soft bridge between the house and the land and a
low maintenance solution for vegetable and flower gardens. With just a
quick sweep terracotta paths can be maintained in pristine condition
and the very name terracotta (cooked earth) suggests a harmonious
natural and rustic solution for our Tuscan style garden. Be sure to
choose a brick that has been fired to withstand being placed on the
dirt, as otherwise they will simply crack in the cold and damp of
winter.
Gravel is another wonderful flooring solution for Italian
gardens but choose a colour with natural tones and do not be tempted to
use white or grey coloured gravel. Grey gravels can become rather
depressing and dull on rainy, winter days and tend to rob light from
our Tuscan garden, whereas white gravels can reflect too much bright
sunlight and become garish and rather sterile. Italian cemeteries often
use white, crushed marble gravel and the use of white gravel will pick
up on too many nuances of the cemetery, which is from positive.
Be
sure to use a river-washed gravel as opposed to a mechanically crushed
form of gravel because firstly it is more aesthetically harmonious and
will not stick to your shoes and be carried into the house as a crushed
gravel will.
The use of gravel as an alternative to the lawn
around the house will firstly eliminate the hours of your year-
dedicated to mowing and maintaining a lawn and you will be able to use
the area immediately after a rainstorm, without trudging wet mud and
grass into the house!
Place a layer of at least 10cm over a builders felt to prevent weed growth.
Aromatic herbs, Iris, Sedums and many other Mediterranean plants
grow in gravel in their natural state, so therefore are all perfectly
adapted to a gravel garden scenario.
HAPPY GARDENING...!
Jonathan
Radford is an English landscape designer, dedicated to creating
ecological, Italian-style gardens from his base in Siena, Tuscany.
Contact him at
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