Outside In
By Rob Brinkley
Fountains finished? Hasta la vista, hostas? Lose the vintage lawn furniture? When it comes to all things alfresco, we've got the dirt on what's in—and out—this spring and summer.
OUT: Finicky grasses.
IN: Synthetic lawns! And forget the scratchy ballpark
stuff: Florida-based SYNLawn offers
six fool-the-eye varieties, including SYNRye, SYNFescue,
and SYNBlue styled after bluegrass.
No watering, no cutting, ever! Ideal for balconies
and rooftop gardens, too. (Insider tip: Next time
you're at the Wynn Las Vegas, step outside: That's
SYNLawn's SYNBlue Premium you're walking on.) (866)
796-5296; www.synlawn.com
OUT: High-maintenance perennial beds.
IN: Low-maintenance hedges, potted ivy.
OUT: Masses of color.
IN: Green on green. Green trees, green grasses, green shrubs.
OUT: Prissy plants that need too much attention.
IN: Hardy horticulture. Two buzzed-about sources for what's beautiful and tough: White Flower Farm (800-503-9624, www.whiteflowerfarm.com). Buy a kit that contains a five-gallon strawberry jar and 15 white verbenas—they bloom early and last through that first hard frost (depending on when they are planted). Ball Horticultural Company (630-231-3600, www.simplybeautifulgardens.com).Their Simply Beautiful line of plants has been genetically bred for strength.
OUT: Foxgloves, old roses.
IN: Berry trees, and reveling in their seasonal shows. Oak trees, too.
OUT: Dropping the Latin names of your plants.
IN: Not saying a word.
OUT: Square- or rectangle-shaped patios.
IN: Jagged edges. Think natural materials, such as stone or slate, purposely laid in irregular shapes. Further blur things with cascading plants that border between hard and soft.
HOT: Tough-stuff natural grasses, such as those developed by the experts at Texas A&M. Prairie buffalo grass and hybrid zoysia grasses can tolerate the shade and thrive in the sun, and the high-density Cavalier is thick enough for golf courses and sports fields.
OUT: Do-it-yourself planting and deadheading.
IN: Hiring a landscape service.
OUT: Peonies.
IN: Hydrangeas, buddleias (they're tough and need
little care), caryopteris, day lilies, Knock Out
roses (they flower June to October), geraniums.
HOT: Low-maintenance Spanish lavender and Italian
cypress.
OUT: Property-spanning landscapes.
IN: Gardening in smaller spaces. A corner, a manageable
flower bed, one simple gesture out front. For high-rise
and city dwellers, easy-care container gardens.
OUT: Fountains that feature umbrella-wielding children.
Always.
OUT: Showy decks and lawns.
IN: Intimate seating groupings. On smaller patios
or tiny decks, they're perfect for board games or
good conversation. Think of them as outdoor rooms.
OUT: Grass and perennials around the pool.
IN: Tiles, bricks, or pavers all the way to the
water's edge. No fuss, no cutting, and no clipping,
which means this handsome hardscape will help keep
your pool cleaner, too.
OUT: Gardening as sport.
IN: Year-round entertaining outside. High-design
heaters make it possible almost 365.
HOT: Outdoor fireplaces or fire pits. Earth, sky,
and water need that fiery element to complete the
picture.
OUT: Xeriscapes of just cacti and rocks.
IN: Xeriscapes that boast wild rye grasses, wildflowers,
Siberian irises, camas lily, Quaking aspen, and cottonwoods.
HOT: Small succulents in pots. Euphorbias, aloes,
crassulas, and hawthorias. Low in maintenance. Two
great sources: The Tucson-based Living Stones Nursery & Plants
for the Southwest (www.lithops.com)
and California's Mountain Crest Gardens (www.mountaincrestgardens.com).
Dallas-based Rob Brinkley is the
national home-design editor for PaperCity. He has
written on design, style, and architecture for Modernism
Magazine and Esquire.com.
Lawns Online
Three sites where the grass really is greener.
- www.usna.usda.gov:
The site of The United States National Arboretum.
Go to Gardens & Horticulture, then Gardening Q&As,
then Turfgrass. Behold, a bevy of links all about
lawns.
- www.yardcare.com:
Everything green, from choosing the right grass
to advice on weed control, diseases, even lawn-care
equipment.
- www.ntep.org:
The official home of the National Turfgrass Evaluation
Program, where extensive testing is done on grasses
from Bermuda to blue.
Hot Clicks
Two good places to surf for all things lawn and garden.
- www.hgtv.com: Home and Garden Television's extensive site. The Gardening page leads to links on books, garden structures, herbs, even wildlife.
- www.gardendesigndirectory.com:
The online home of Garden Design magazine. This
comprehensive resource directory has everything
from kitchen and water gardens to patios and decks.
The Sage Advice page leads to Q&As with expert
gardeners.
SEVEN things You Need Right Now
- A piece of Richard Schultz's outdoor
furniture. Penned in 1966 for the forward-thinking
head of architect-furniture company Knoll, this
elegant, eponymous collection celebrates its 40th
anniversary this year. (It long ago earned icon
status among museums and design cognoscenti.) The
aluminum construction and woven polyester-mesh
fabric means it'll be beautifying your backyard
for many more decades. (215) 679-2222; www.richardschultz.com
- Hot book: Garden/Garten
Design. The Museum of Modern Art offers up this page turner
from design publisher teNeues. It is rich with
high-style terraces, patios, green spaces, and
gardens and includes photographs, floor plans,
and perspectives from top landscape gardeners and
architects. $24.95. (800) 447-6662; www.momastore.org
- Smith & Hawken's new Hammered
Steel Birdfeeder. Hang this cool, copper-finished
swinger from a tree or post and watch who shows
up. (Some feathered friends with very good taste
no doubt.) $19.99 at Target. (800) 440-0680; www.target.com
- Let go of the loose cushions: Sutherland's
revolutionary French-inspired Louis Soleil outdoor
seating collection blurs the boundary between indoors
and out. Beautiful enough for your living room,
the frames are actually hand-carved teak and upholstered
in flow-through foam padding and covered in outdoor
fabrics (manufacturer recommends Perennials Outdoor
Fabrics), tough enough to withstand Mother Nature.
Even the upholstery tacks are stainless steel,
so no rusting. Think of them as ooh la la for the
outdoors. (800) 717-8325; www.sutherlandteak.com
- Modern planters from Design Within Reach.
The minimalist lines of these oversized pots clean
up the container act—less
fuss down below means your prized plants really
stand out. Roto-molded thermoplastic is UV- and
weather-resistant. The three sizes and two colors
(silver or white) mean you get to play a very cool
game of modernist mix-and-match. $200 to $250.
(800) 944-2233; www.dwr.com
- Intermatic's LZ11771H light. It's a
solar-powered landscape light even Frank Lloyd
Wright would've loved. The bronze-finished, prairie-style
fixture dangles from an angular hook, in a nod
to the lighting found around FLW's famous houses.
What's more, it's powered by the sun; no wiring
or electricity needed. (815) 675-7000; www.intermatic.com
- Amazing antler furniture from Lazy CF Ranch.
Tables, chairs, and lounges that will bring some
unbridled animal spirit to even the most modern
of backyards. Better yet, it's all made of hand-cast
aluminum—even the leather straps are cast
into the aluminum. Weather-resistant—and
witty, too. (214) 244-4062; www.lazycfranch.com