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hardscape

Gardening on Slopes: Access Required to Traverse the Hillside

September 12, 2016

If you can’t get to the garden, you can’t garden! Creating access on a steep slope is challenging and can be expensive. Access means steps and paths. Steps help get you up and down the slope. Paths get you across the slope. Both are essential for maintaining and enjoying your garden.

Pressure-treated lumber steps
Steps of pressure-treated lumber on steep slope.

Steps
Steep slopes need steps—unless you like climbing up the slope on all fours, or sitting while sliding down. Options for step materials include flat rock boulders, stepping-stones, pressure-treated timbers, or rot-resistant logs. Flat rock boulder steps will last more than a lifetime but will be the most costly choice. You’ll probably want to hire a professional to bring in equipment and set the boulders. An alternative to large flat boulders is to dig stepping-stones into the slope. Stack the stepping-stones and mortar them together to create risers. You can also build a nice-looking, easy-to-traverse staircase out of pressure-treated timbers. Eventually though, the wood will start to rot and have to be replaced. A very simple, easy-to-install, and relatively inexpensive step system uses rot-resistant logs—such as locust—cut into the slope and backfilled with dirt or gravel. Adding a stepping-stone to the tread behind each locust log riser will provide solid footing as you climb up and down.

Access to steep slope garden with paths, steps, and terraces.
Paths, steps, terraces, and low boulder retaining walls provide access to steep slope garden.

Paths
With steps in place, turn your attention to creating paths across your steep slopes. The best paths to amble through the garden with visitors will be at least three to five feet wide. Terraces will give you maximum walking and gardening space. A professional landscaper can build terraces into the hillside and use retaining walls to hold back the slope. But “goat paths” just wide enough to allow you comfortable access—a foot or two—will also provide safe access into the garden. Cut into the hillside a bit and level out your path with the excess dirt. Use small boulders or vertical timbers to shore up the lower edge of the path and to retain the hillside along the upper edge of the path. Complete your paths with stepping-stones, gravel, wood chips, mulch, or grass.

Planting pockets
While you’re building steps and paths, consider using boulders or timbers to create a few planting pockets on the slope. They don’t have to be large—no more than a foot high and four or five feet long. Backfilled with soil, these mini-terraces make just enough level planting area for a nice, accessible flowerbed or small vegetable garden. 

Think about footholds
Leave large rocks, tree stumps, and tufts of grass in place across the slope. They will provide much-needed footholds and landing spots when you traverse the hillside to maintain your garden. My favorite steep slope gardening tool is a pair of sturdy hiking boots. The treads and strong ankle support have saved me many a slip down the hill!

Article written by Beth Leonard, Extension Master Gardener Volunteer.

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Categories Landscape Design Tags garden planning, hardscape, hillsides, landscape planning, planting on slopes, slopes

Looking for Bones in the Garden

December 27, 2015

Photo by Diane PuckettDid you ever think about your garden having a skeleton? Look at it during the winter when most trees are bare, and frost has killed back tender plants, and you’ll see the “bones” that serve as the framework for your landscape.

One advantage of taking a careful look is to evaluate this underlying structure for landscape planning. Too often, we plant things for immediate gratification, with little attention to their long-term impact. Are the evergreens you hoped would screen a distant view now obscuring everything or getting so scraggly that you can see right through them? Is the lawn you envisioned carpeting the front yard struggling with too little sun? Do the flowerbeds and vegetable garden look like weed patches?

Think about what each planting adds to the landscape. Sometimes overgrown trees or shrubs need to go, or the lawn needs replacing with groundcover. Conversely, maybe you need something more: Adding two more lavender plants to the lone one standing your flowerbed will show you the value of repetition in creating continuity. Planting a cover crop might make your vegetable garden look like something in progress rather abandoned.

How about the “hardscape”? Are the driveway and sidewalks or paths working for you? Do they take traffic where you want it go and provide an inviting way through your property? Are arbors, benches, containers, garden art and window boxes well-integrated with your plantings? Using a tuteur in your flowerbed or garden statuary in a clearing will create focal points that can lead viewers on a visual journey through the landscape.

HelleboreA winter look at our gardens not only shows us what endures from season to season and what is and isn’t working, but reveals where we can provide winter interest. Here in the mountains, our gardens can shine through all four seasons. Shrubs and trees with winter berries, cones or fruits can brighten dull corners, as can those with interesting or colorful bark or stems. Early-flowering bulbs and perennials can even add a few flowers throughout the winter months.

by Debbie Green, Extension Master Gardener Volunteer

Resources:
http://content.ces.ncsu.edu/extension-gardener-handbook/19-landscape-design

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Categories Landscape Design Tags garden structure, hardscape, landscape planning, winter garden

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