Australian_House_&_Garden_2016_12

(Chris Devlin) #1

142 | AUSTRALIAN HOUSE & GARDEN


HGGARDENS


ABOVELayeringplants of different heights
and shapes enhances the depth of a garden.
OPPOSITEDelicate pale-blueSalvia somaliensis
is a perfect pairing for the clean, shapely white
flowers ofPhiladelphus coronarius.

‘Snapshots of history drift
through the garden like
chimney smoke.’Michael Cooke

<Roses find their way into many of the


gardens I design. I know some people


believe they’re hard to maintain, but if


chosen carefully for disease-resistance


and vigour as well as fragrance and


colour, they soon prove their worth. I’ve


used 15 varieties in this garden and of


these I have three favourites.Rosa


moschata‘Autumnalis’ is a hybrid musk


rose with clusters of smallish, imperfect


flowers. The blooms are deliciously


fragrant with delicate pink, sometimes


blush, pointed buds.Rosa‘Duchesse de


Brabant’ is a tea rose and its perfume is


exquisite. The shapely soft-pink flowers


are thrown in large clusters on a neat


shrub.Rosa rugosa‘Sarah Van Fleet’ is


a large shrub featuring strong open roses


with mid-pink perfumed flowers, shiny


crinkly leaves and thorny mahogany


stems. These three roses are easy to prune


and good enough as shrubs in their own


right to be included in any garden.


Among the shrubs we’ve planted are

the grassy-leafed perennial fairy’s fishing


rod (Dierama pulcherrimum), a tough
survivor that grows wild on the south
coast. There are also different sorts of
may bush, spring-flowering mock orange
(Philadelphus) and salvias, such as the
lovelySalvia somaliensiswith soft grey-
blue flowers and aromatic pale-green
leaves. There are pomegranates, viburnum
and pale pink, sweetly fragrant rondeletia.
These once-common shrubs, now rarely
seen, are perfect for large gardens where
proportionately sized plants are required
to fill space, reducing the opportunity for
weeds to take over.
On the west and south sides of the
cottage are beds of ornamental grasses:
tall and dramaticMiscanthus sinensis
‘Gracillimus’ and the shorter, more subtle
Panicum virgatum‘Rotstrahlbusch’. Both
these grasses are deciduous so the winter
wind won’t harm them. Grasses are one
of those plants that people either love or
hate. I love them in all seasons. #
Michael Cooke Garden Design,Central
Mangrove, NSW; michaelcooke.com.au.
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