Lessons from a tiny garden
A typical backyard in a new housing development is about the same size and shape as a two-car garage. And it generally receives about as much attention. Most of us look out our patio doors, see the slabs of concrete and the few yards of dirt, and shut the shades again, quickly. These uninspiring little rectangles don’t exactly resonate with possibility for us.
Landscape designer Phil Snow saw things differently. When he looked at the backyard of his El Cajon, California, condo, he saw more than a roofless garage. He pictured an outdoor living room about to happen, a microenvironment with a dynamic water feature, multiple conversation areas, and tons of tropical ambience. Then he fit it all into a 600-square-foot space.
Every small garden should have a water feature, insists Snow. Tiny gardens need focal points even more than larger ones, since they have no sweeping vistas. If your water feature is going to be a pond, chalk out various shapes until you come up with one you like. Then try to find a prefabricated polyvinyl chloride (PVC) pond liner in approximately the same shape–as Snow did in his own yard–or use PVC sheeting to form it.