Theme Gardens: Make Gardening More Fun
By Cheryl Dorschner
Theme gardens are like planning a great party or getting to decorate your kids' bedrooms
over each year-only gardens grow and blossom. To create a theme, you can borrow from birthday
and Halloween themes or stick to the children's classics, such as Peter Rabbit (don't forget
the carrots and the blue jacket) or the Wizard of Oz (poppies, yellow bricks and, of course, a
scarecrow). Here are a few fresh ideas.
Outer Space
Grow vines up a rocket fashioned of bamboo canes. Hang handmade stars and planets from the
canes and think cosmic when it comes to plants: Cosmos, of course, rocket flowers,
moonflowers, moon and stars watermelons ... the sky's the limit.
Pocahantas' Own.
Forget the Disney version of this classic story. As a child, the real Pocahontas and her
Powhatan playmates sat in scarecrow huts waiting for crows to dare to eat their 'Nothstine'
or 'Golden Bantam' corn. They had face-painted ceremonial poles encircling their gardens.
Passionflowers entwined their 'Mammoth' sunflowers. Of course, they grew crookneck squash
and beans (similar to 'Turkey Craw'), too.
July Fourth
Plan ahead for your local Fourth of July celebration, and you'll be properly decorated. You
may even have a float for the town parade if you plant your garden in a mobile little red
wagon. Let red, white and blue flowers abound. Include a sweet alyssum border, geraniums,
lobelia, cosmos, begonias and impatiens. For the finishing touch, add American flags to the
mix.
Tea Time
I once came upon a small tea garden featuring 10 plants surrounding-what else?-a large old
teakettle. Try planting German chamomile, calendula, lemon verbena, peppermint, alpine
strawberries, bronze fennel, dwarf German sage, lemongrass, anise hyssop and lemon balm.
Install a bench and table, and let your little ones host a garden tea party.
Sweet Chocolates
Scour catalogs for "chocolate" varieties of plants--usually those with a scent slightly
reminiscent of the sweet stuff. Sometimes chocolate is just in the name. Group Chocolate
veil huechera, "Chocolate Soldiers" columbine, chocolate cosmos, chocolate-mint scented
germanium and chocolate mint. Don't forget to mulch with cocoa beans. And remind kids that
not all that smells like chocolate is actually edible.
Fairy Lure
Think small. Choose plenty of low-growing, tiny-leafed plants and those with hanging bells
and cuplike flowers (after all, that's where the fairies hide). Carpet their dance floor
with thymes and mosses. If you're not wary of poisonous plants, foxgloves and Solomon's
seal form a comparatively tall forest. A shallow pool or fountain is a bonus. Best of all,
add a hollow stump with a hole-like doorway at the base. Not everyone will spy the fairies
that will visit this magical place. But it helps if you hum that old camp song "White Coral
Bells."
Alphabet Gardens
This is one fun idea if you have room for 26 plants. Let your youngster choose from asters
to zinnias, and make signs for each plant.
Content provided by Nationalgardening.com, the online publisher of
the National Gardening Association.