Garden Design

Today’s photos are from Joyce Laubach.

I am a Florida Master Gardener, gardening at my own home and as an active community volunteer in Punta Gorda, located on the Gulf Coast in southwestern Florida. My last submission to the GPOD (Planting a Public Garden in Florida) described the creation of a succulent bed in our city’s Nature Park, where the succulents joined over 20 themed garden beds designed to delight visitors and inspire creation of Florida Friendly landscapes.

Encouraged by positive feedback, we decided to create a succulent space in the Punta Gorda History Park, where several historic homes have been relocated within the park setting. The park garden beds had already been significantly updated with an array of colorful plantings that are refreshed every winter thanks to the generosity of benefactor Alan Schulman and with the assistance of dozens of talented volunteer gardeners. The park is visited daily by people young and old who walk, garden in the community garden space, and attend the weekly farmers market.

I thought GPOD readers would appreciate seeing the step-by-step process by which the latest succulent creation took shape. Because of the wonderful drought tolerance of these tough plants, we were able to locate them in a section of the park without irrigation. To give this relatively small space a real presence, we knew we wanted to create tiered height.

sump pump barrelsWe started with these large, sturdy sump pump barrels.

Two men slicing a plastic barrel into ringsVolunteer John Iredale used power tools to cut the barrels into slices of various heights.

Black pastic rings arranged to make a layered garden bedJohn, Alan, and I designed the arrangement.

Two men painting black plastic rings with glue and covering them with sandThe next step was to make sure the barrel surfaces blended in and looked like planters. First, we painted them with glue.

Rings set in the ground covered with sand and painted to resemble stoneThen we literally threw sand against the surfaces to create texture. Our final step was to spray-paint them after the glued sand had set.

Garden bed made out of circles of different heights filled with soilWe then reassembled the circles on the ground and filled them with a custom mix of garden soil, perlite, and pea gravel—the type of well-draining substrate that succulents need.

Round raised beds planted with a variety of succulent plantsThe fun part for me was seeing this bare design come to life with a fairly wide variety of succulents. Plants include desert rose (Adenium obesum), Agave ‘Ivory Curls’, Agave lopanthe ‘Quadricolor’, Agave ‘Blue Glow’, Mangave ‘Indian Princess’, Kalanchoe luciae, Kalanchoe blossfeldiana, Echeveria ‘Afterglow’, Echeveria ‘Autumn Glow’, an unidentified ruffled Echeveria hybrid, Senecio mandraliscae, various Aloe hybrids, Euphorbia trigona ‘Rubra’, Sedum ‘Angelina’, Sedum ‘California Sunset’, and Portulacaria afra ‘Variegata’. Around the outside is vining Carpobrotus.

Raised round garden beds filled with mature succulentsOver the course of about five months, the plants have matured and knitted together. The planter space is accented by a ring of native coral stone and top-dressed with several types of decorative gravel. Even though our rainy season has begun, the good drainage has allowed our plants to continue to thrive, to the point that we have begun a new outer ring of plantings that will eventually grow taller and accent the perimeter of the inner original design.

Have a garden you’d like to share?

Have photos to share? We’d love to see your garden, a particular collection of plants you love, or a wonderful garden you had the chance to visit!

To submit, send 5-10 photos to [email protected] along with some information about the plants in the pictures and where you took the photos. We’d love to hear where you are located, how long you’ve been gardening, successes you are proud of, failures you learned from, hopes for the future, favorite plants, or funny stories from your garden.

If you want to send photos in separate emails to the GPOD email box that is just fine.

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