
Answers to Your Toughest Bungalow Questions: Spring
2002
Q:
I've finally got my bungalow in shape and am ready to tackle
the yard this spring. I want to make sure my garden is appropriate,
though. What are some of the flowers and plants recommended
for the bungalow period? What were the key design elements for
small urban gardens?
A: We asked two well-qualified gardeners to
offer some suggestions for bungalow gardens.
Susan Davis Price has written two award-winning books about
gardens, Minnesota Gardens, an Illustrated History,
and Growing Home, Stories of Ethnic Gardening. She
writes for Old House Journal, American Gardener, Northern
Gardener and Gardening-How-To. She gives illustrated
lectures on several gardening topics.
Amy Jensen Stonestrom, a Ramsey County Master Gardener, is a
journalist and freelance writer who also owns Heritage Garden
Design, a landscape design business specializing in historic
homes. She is the gardening editor for Home Decor Buyer
magazine where she covers new trends in gardening accents and
writes home decorating articles.
First we'll hear from Susan Davis Price--
The Craftsman garden is a graceful complement to the bungalow,
embodying the movement's principles of utility, economy of effort
and subtle beauty. The best of these gardens are unpretentious
and natural, and include gently curved beds, structures made
from local materials and food plants used as ornamentals. Bungalow
gardens are meant to be lived in and enjoyed as outdoor rooms.
They should require a minimum of effort but give maximum opportunity
for recreation and the appreciation of nature.
Several features can help to join the house and yard and were
popular with the original bungalow dwellers. An open porch or
veranda encourages outdoor living, as does a rear terrace partially
enclosed with a planter or a trellis. When covered with vines,
window boxes or hanging baskets, these elements become "garden"
as well as architecture. The quintessential Craftsman garden
feature was the pergola, lauded as practical and picturesque.
Here the family could sit and chat.
Roses, honeysuckle, clematis, trumpet vine, Dutchman's pipe,
porcelain berry and Engleman's ivy all can be used to make a
beautiful show clambering over pergola or gate. For a quicker
cover, try annual vines like morning glory, the white-blooming
moonflower, balloon vine (Cardiospermum halicacabum), cypress
vine (Ipomoea quamoclit) with its lacy leaves or Black-eyed
Susan vine (Thunbergia alata) with golden orange blooms.
In keeping with small yards, the first bungalow gardeners often
included plants that were useful as well as attractive such
as dwarf fruit trees. They used currants and blueberries as
hedges or border plants and arbors and trellises to support
grapes and scarlet runner beans as well as roses. Today's gardener
might try ornamental vegetables like ‘Rainbow' chard or
a handsome herb like curled parsley.
Craftsman gardens should feature beautiful constructions (gates,
path) to gently guide the family and visitors through the yard,
plus resting spots (benches, seats) for enjoying the borders
and the birds. Old-fashioned shrubs--lilacs, peonies, spirea,
hydrangea and shrub roses--are at home here, as are "grandmother's"
flowers--daisies, lily-of-the-valley, columbine, lilies, bachelor's
buttons, cosmos, foxgloves, hollyhocks, malva, moss rose, zinnia
and pansies. Native plantings fit both the cottager's philosophy
and garden style. Plants to try are coneflower, Joe-Pye weed,
liatris, black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia hirta), and the grasses
Big and Little Bluestem.
In all, remember that the house and garden should be "of
a piece," with colors and construction materials a harmonious
whole.
Other annuals: alyssum, browalia, calendulas, cornflower (Centaurea),
larkspur, nasturtiums, nicotiana, petunias, sweet peas. For
containers and hanging baskets: miniature morning glory, nasturtiums,
Petunia integrifolia.
Other perennials: asters, balloon flower (Platycodon), bellflowers
(Campanula), bleeding heart, bee balm, chrysanthemums, coreopsis,
daffodils, daylilies, delphiniums, iris, lady's mantle, lamb's
ears, lavender, lupine, phlox, primroses, salvia.
Now, here's Amy Jensen Stonestrom's recommendations--
To create an authentic landscape that will complement your bungalow,
take hints for plant choices from interior Craftsman-style accents.
Since the ideology in the early 20th century was to bring the
outdoors inside, much of the pottery, glassware and textiles
of the period featured botanicals that were popular at the time.
To achieve ultimate authenticity, you can buy heirloom seeds
through mail-order catalogs that are direct descendants and
genetically match the plants used in the early 1900s. However,
keep in mind that new plant varieties often have better disease
resistance and can offer you more choices in terms of color,
size and texture. The following is a sampling of plants that
were often admired and used for inspiration by the original
Craftsman artisans.
(Note: spp. is an abbreviation for "species.")
Trees
Cherry (Prunus spp.)
Gingko (Gingko biloba)
Oak (Quercus spp.)
Pine (Pinus spp.)
Shrubs
Dogwood (Cornus spp.)
Hydrangea (Hydrangea spp.)
Honeysuckle (Lonicera spp.)
Shrub Rose (Rosa rugosa)
Perennials
Bleeding Heart (Dicentra spectabilis)
Columbine (Aquilegia canadensis)
Coneflower (Echinachea)
Foxglove (Digitalis spp.)
Hollyhock (Althea rosea)
Peony (Paeonia spp.)
Poppy (Papaver spp.)
Water lily (Nymphaea spp.)
Bulbs
Allium (Allium giganteum)
Crocus (Crocus spp.)
Daffodils (Narcissus spp.)
Dahlia (Dahlia spp.)
Iris (Iris spp.)
Lily of the Valley (Convallaria majalis)
Tulip (Tulipa spp.)
Annuals
Acanthus (Acanthus mollis)
Sweet Pea (Lathyrus odoratus)
Moonflower (Ipomoea alba)
Morning Glory (Ipomoea tricolor)
Nasturtiums (Tropaeolum majus)
Nicotiania (Nicotiania spp.)
Plumed Thistle (Cirsium japonicum)
Sunflower (Helianthus spp.)
Verbena (Verbena spp.)
The main design element that differentiated Craftsman-style
gardens from the Victorian gardens was to keep lines less formal
and less symmetrical. Planting perennials in "drifts" also became
popular, meaning that the same plants were put together to produce
large blocks of color and texture rather than placing them intermittently
with other plants. Front-door cottage gardens came into vogue
and were planted to look completely natural and untamed.
Garden objects and furniture were also used with more frequency.
Pergolas, lanterns, wicker tables and chairs, copper birdbaths
and feeders, large stones, cement statues, and ponds were added
to landscapes to extend the living space into the outdoors.
In the western United States, Japanese gardens are often used
in conjunction with bungalows. Since Japanese gardens imitate
a vast expanse on a miniature scale (i.e., a small pond represents
a lake or the ocean), it gives the gardener a sense of having
a larger yard, and because elements of the traditional bungalow
were taken from Japanese architecture, the home and the garden
mesh beautifully.