Your Guide to Growing an English Cottage Garden in the West (2024)

Your Guide to Growing an English Cottage Garden in the West (1)

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How to design a cottage garden

Cottage gardening is an attitude, not a location

You can achieve a cottage effect in the heart of the city as well as the suburbs. All you need is a passion for plants and a willingness to mix them all up.

While English-style gardens draw heavily on hardy perennials, you can accomplish the same look of artful chaos with any plants appropriate to your climate. (See the Sunset Plant Finder.)

Indeed, Mediterranean plants and succulents like agaves work quite well in coastal and desert plantings.

Click ahead for a look at how the traditional cottage garden can morph to fit your own personal gardening style.

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Four-season appeal in Portland

How long does it take to create a show-quality cottage garden? About 18 months and most of that is growing time.

Darcy Daniel created year-round interest in her garden by using plants that hold their places in the off-season. Perennials and shrubs form a multilayered tapestry of flowers and foliage in her front front yard.

To the left of the path, the mauve blooms of Erysimum linifolium ‘Variegatum’ and the burgundy leaves of New Zealand flax are backed by white ‘Iceberg’ rose, yellow-flowered Achillea ‘Moonshine’, and the violet blooms of Allium ‘Globemaster’.

Design: BloomTown Garden Design (503) 331-1783

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3 of21 Photo by Steven Gunther

Exotic variety in Southern California

South African plants work in Alan and Angelika Wilkinson’s exotic cottage garden in Los Angeles. The trick: Using multiple varieties and planting them for an unstudied effect.

African daisies with reddish orange flowers skirt the front, and Aloe marlothii with saffron-colored flower spikes and kalanchoe with pink bell-shaped blossoms fill in behind. Surrounding: Evergreen shrubs, New Zealand tea tree (Leptospermum scoparium ‘Ruby Glow’), Leucadendron ‘Safari Sunset’, and a treelike protea.

Design: Robert Cornell (626/398-5581)

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4 of21 Photo by Allan Mandell

Step 1: Pick plants for a cottage effect

Cottage gardens may appear wild and romantic, but it takes the right combination of colors, textures, and accessories to pull off the look.

In this garden: Lavender blue scabiosa and red Astrantia; rosy Pimpinella and Alstroemeria; lacy white Eupatorium rugosom ‘Chocolate’ and creamy Clematis recta; and deep purple delphiniums.

The prettiest gardens blend at least a few of the plants in the following slides.

5 of21 Photo by Terry Donnelly

Billowers

Pillowy shrubs and perennials, like this phlox spilling over a rain barrel, add softness. Others: breath of heaven (Coleonema), ceanothus, lavatera, lilac.

Tip: Plant closely for a generous look.

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Drapers

Twining plants, like thiswisteria, climb walls or trellises and spill over fences orarbors.

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Lacy accents

Wispy foliage and delicate flowers, like those of love-in-a-mist, create an airy effect.

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Edgers

Ground covers soften the hard edges of paths and patios. Here, chartreuse Scotch Moss fringes a pond and steppingstones. Others: blue star creeper, creeping thyme.

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Spires

Plants with tall flower spikes, like gayfeather (Liatris), make bold contrasts to lower-growing ones. Others: delphinium, foxglove, hollyhock.

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10 of21 Photo by Jennifer Yakey-Ault / Getty Images

Roses

They’re naturals in cottage gardens. Plant shrub roses among perennials, climbing types over arbors and against fences or walls.

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11 of21 Caroline Kopp

Choose a space

Carefree style fits anywhere. You don’t need much space to achieve a cottage look.

You can create the same bursting-with-blooms appearance by arranging potted plants on a deck or rooftop. Or plant a portion of your existing garden, perhaps an island bed, with a cottage-style mix of perennials and roses.

Next, options for where to plant.

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12 of21 Photo by Jerry Harpur

On a rooftop

Pots filled with astilbes, delphiniums, and roses create a cottage effect on a San Francisco rooftop.

Design: Sonny Garcia

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In a patio bed

Layered plants, from the fringe of white bacopa in front to the red ‘Simplicity’ rose in the center to the blue delphiniums at rear, create a colorful centerpiece for Carol Brewer’s Southern California patio.

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In an island bed

Pink ‘Ballerina’ and red-and-white ‘Eye Paint’ roses share an island bed with blue catmint in Sharon Brasher’s garden in Reno.

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15 of21 Photo by Mark Turner

In a backyard

A grapevine-covered pergola frames a grass path in Jasmin Liepa’s garden in Bellingham, Washington. The soft pink blossoms of an herbaceous peony contrast with the towering spikes of foxgloves.

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In a sunny corner

In this springtime scene from Sunset’s test garden in Menlo Park, California, drifts of California poppies (Eschscholzia californica) are backed by ornamental grass, purple Spanish lavender (Lavandula stoechas), and a tree mallow with rosy blooms. The poppies reseed freely.

Design: Bud Stuckey

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17 of21 Photo by Mark Turner

Add finishing touches

Placing sculptural elements among plants or using them imaginatively as backdrops adds magic and romance to cottage gardens. Use them sparingly, to accentuate the plants rather than overwhelm them.

A curved path like this one will allow visitors to meander among plantings. Put an interesting focal point, like a bench, at the path’s end. These steps lead to a trellised rose.

See more ways to add to your garden next.

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Recycled materials

Integrate a flea-market find into your garden. This window-gate frames a moss-lined path leading to Darcy Daniels’s rear garden.

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19 of21 Photo by Steven Gunther

Bird feeders

Use them as accents among drifts of flowering plants like these roses.

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20 of21 Photo by Terry Donnelly

Sculptures

Set a piece of outdoor art or a gazing ball on a pedestal among plantings.

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Birdbaths

Place one among perennials and keep it filled with water to serve thirsty birds and catch reflections of surrounding flowers.

Your Guide to Growing an English Cottage Garden in the West (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between a cottage garden and an English garden? ›

"English would be more formal. English gardens utilize hedges and crisp, vertical evergreen accents to define spaces and punctuate certain areas." The original cottage gardens, which Lenhart says began in the 1800s, incorporated fruit trees and aromatic plants out of necessity.

How do you plant an English cottage garden? ›

Plant Accordingly

Try to plant in abundance while still allowing enough space for the flowers and plants to grow. For example, filling in space around larger plants or trees with low-growing flowers such as phlox or succulents helps fill in visual gaps.

What is the purpose of the cottage garden? ›

Since the main purpose of a Tudor cottage garden was to provide enough food to sustain a family, every square inch of the plot was well utilized. In keeping with that philosophy, today's cottage garden focuses on planting areas rather than expanses of grass.

How long does it take to grow an English garden? ›

Four-season appeal in Portland. How long does it take to create a show-quality cottage garden? About 18 months and most of that is growing time. Darcy Daniel created year-round interest in her garden by using plants that hold their places in the off-season.

Are English gardens high maintenance? ›

Careful and consistent maintenance: Intensively cultivated, regular maintenance of plants, soil and weeding is needed when flowers are grown this way. This nostalgic style is a labor of love—the love of the plants!

How do I make my garden look like an English garden? ›

The basic elements of an English garden include: large drifts of bright perennials, color themes, a wide variety of textures, and herbaceous borders—which are full of flowers through three seasons.

What vegetables are good for cottage gardens? ›

Clematis, Morning glories, Honeysuckle, Sweetpeas, Climbing Roses, Pole Beans, Sugar Snap Peas, Vine Tomatoes, and Cucumbers. Train flowers and veggies up trellises and grow over arbors, or allow plants to spread across a fence or wall for a real Cottage garden feel.

How to prepare soil for a cottage garden? ›

As with any garden, a healthy living soil is the garden's foundation in which a wide variety of plant species will thrive. Prepare the soil with a mix of high-quality compost and Yum Yum Mix fertilizer at recommended rates to ensure that the drainage is adequate and that the soil is fertile.

Are cottage gardens hard to maintain? ›

A cottage garden is typically a lot more relaxed and easier to maintain than a formal garden. While formal gardens may feature structured, symmetrical design and carefully-planned patterns and layouts, cottage gardens are designed to feel relaxed and natural.

Why is it called cottage? ›

The word cottage (Medieval Latin cotagium) derives from Old English cot, cote "hut" and Old French cot "hut, cottage", from Old Norse kot "hut" and related to Middle Low German kotten (cottage, hut). Examples of this may be found in 15th century manor court rolls.

What is a modern cottage garden? ›

In a typical new American cottage garden, walls and fences are lined with trellises groaning under the weight of rambling roses, clematis, and other vines. Porches or patios sport so many containers there's barely room to get through to the door.

What makes a cottage a cottage? ›

Size and Scale: Cottages are generally smaller and more intimate compared to the average house. They typically feature one to two storeys, making them quaint and cosy. Roof and Chimney: A classic cottage often has a steep, gabled roof, sometimes thatched, adding to its rustic appeal.

What is the hardest plant to grow in a garden? ›

What Is the Hardest Plant to Keep Alive? The list of the hardest plants to take care of varies from gardener to gardener. However, the lists often feature Orchid, Gardenia, Fiddle Leaf Figs, and Boston Fern.

Why is it called an English garden? ›

The Emergence of the Englischer Garten

At first it was called Theodor's Park, but soon the name Englischer Garten (English Garden) became established – because it was not laid out as a geometrically designed French Baroque garden, but in the natural style of an English landscape park.

What is the average size of an English garden? ›

Gardens vary in size from 3.6m2 to over 2,200m2 but studies indicate an average of about 190m2. As we might expect, mid-terrace houses are a quarter the size of detached house gardens.

What makes an English garden English? ›

Symmetry and Paths

In many cases, it's a garden design's shapes that give it a classic English look. These shapes are created using features like hardscaping paths, retaining walls, flower beds, and hedges.

What makes an English cottage? ›

In the English cottage, there is a lot of light- to medium-toned wood furnishings, floors, and walls. This helps promote an open, airy feel in an otherwise small space. Distressed wood furniture is also a great option as it lends itself to the lived-in feel that English cottage rooms emulate.

What is considered a cottage in England? ›

In British English the term now denotes a small, cosy dwelling of traditional build, although it can also be applied to modern construction designed to resemble traditional houses ("mock cottages"). Cottages may be detached houses, or terraced, such as those built to house workers in mining villages.

Why is it called the English garden? ›

The Emergence of the Englischer Garten

At first it was called Theodor's Park, but soon the name Englischer Garten (English Garden) became established – because it was not laid out as a geometrically designed French Baroque garden, but in the natural style of an English landscape park.

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