![Where the wild things are Where the wild things are](https://cdn.magzter.com/1422872219/1686840163/articles/0w65_jI1S1686901072386/WHERE-THE-WILD-THINGS-ARE.jpg)
When you live in a chocolate-box country cottage, there is something of an imperative to create a suitably picturesque garden to complement it. But if you are a well-established garden designer and avid plant collector who is creating their own private garden, there are other priorities at play, too, such as having a place to experiment, creating a tranquil bolt hole and avoiding cliché.
Landscape designer Chris Moss arrived at Ivy Cottage four years ago. Its position is delightfully rural, backing on to ancient woodland that is part of Ebernoe Common, managed by the Sussex Wildlife Trust, and the immediate area hums with insects and wildlife, including nightingales, goldcrests, buzzards, countless bats and even glowworms. Built in 1780, the pretty tile-hung cottage is diminutive in scale, so Chris’s aim has been to literally “engulf it in plants”.
“As the summer progresses the planting gets higher and higher,” he says. “I plant very densely so the need to weed is largely dispensed with.” This is a rented property (Chris rents it from a client who is happy to give him free rein), so hard landscaping has purposefully been kept simple. A gently curving path made of locally made bricks, left unpointed, runs between several planting beds to the front porch.
There are four of these beds, set into grass. “I planned the first two by the gate to feel as though you are approaching the cottage through a meadow. Initially, I put in plug plants of natives including common yarrow, lesser knapweed, ox-eye daisies and field scabious. They’re designed to be mowable at the end of the season and they have a loose, informal feel to them.”
Chris's advice on creating a modern cottage garden
Bu hikaye Gardens Illustrated dergisinin July 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye Gardens Illustrated dergisinin July 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
![Bright blooms Bright blooms](https://reseuro.magzter.com/100x125/articles/8833/1983388/cYvaKTklB1738748443519/BRIGHT-BLOOMS.jpg)
Bright blooms
Flowering shrubs bring much needed colour and scent to the garden in late winter and early spring. Expert Tony Kirkham selects the best
![SWEET DREAMS SWEET DREAMS](https://reseuro.magzter.com/100x125/articles/8833/1983388/SRqjSocuN1738749536342/SWEET-DREAMS.jpg)
SWEET DREAMS
A new book on one of the UK's favourite flowers is filled with beautiful photography, but is more than a coffee-table tome, says cut-flower grower Georgie Newbery
![VERDANT VALLEY VERDANT VALLEY](https://reseuro.magzter.com/100x125/articles/8833/1983388/RDHHf2HgC1738748170786/VERDANT-VALLEY.jpg)
VERDANT VALLEY
For his own Mediterranean garden, designer Maurizio Usai has gone against the trend for drought-tolerant planting and created a lush, green natural oasis
![Food for thought Food for thought](https://reseuro.magzter.com/100x125/articles/8833/1983388/KxHIguPS01738748332176/FOOD-FOR-THOUGHT.jpg)
Food for thought
More people than ever want to grow their own, for a variety of reasons, says Dr Richard Claxton, and this one thing can improve our health and help the planet
![CREATING CONTEMPORARY PLANTING BEDS CREATING CONTEMPORARY PLANTING BEDS](https://reseuro.magzter.com/100x125/articles/8833/1983388/EgqdRV39j1738749178419/CREATING-CONTEMPORARY-PLANTING-BEDS.jpg)
CREATING CONTEMPORARY PLANTING BEDS
Designer Charlotte Harris reflects on the shift towards organically shaped 'island' planting beds, and reveals inside tips on how to get the right effect
![ARE PLANTS PEOPLE TOO? ARE PLANTS PEOPLE TOO?](https://reseuro.magzter.com/100x125/articles/8833/1983388/kiU8iccbh1738749798758/ARE-PLANTS-PEOPLE-TOO.jpg)
ARE PLANTS PEOPLE TOO?
Some recent research suggests plants may be able to learn, sense and communicate. So, asks Darryl Moore, should we now rethink how we treat them?
![HEUCHERA AND TIARELLA HEUCHERA AND TIARELLA](https://reseuro.magzter.com/100x125/articles/8833/1983388/XPQbtoA1c1738747938206/HEUCHERA-AND-TIARELLA.jpg)
HEUCHERA AND TIARELLA
With their striking foliage in a range of bold colours, heucheras, and the associated heucherellas and tiarellas, are low-maintenance plants that offer year-round colour
![The future for Sissinghurst The future for Sissinghurst](https://reseuro.magzter.com/100x125/articles/8833/1983388/_gPB--On_1738743626923/THE-FUTURE-FOR-SISSINGHURST.jpg)
The future for Sissinghurst
The climate crisis is affecting us all. Head gardener Troy Scott Smith outlines the challenges he faces and explains how he is now working differently
![JINNY BLOM'S - favourite plants JINNY BLOM'S - favourite plants](https://reseuro.magzter.com/100x125/articles/8833/1983388/76HA0c5pY1738743808815/JINNY-BLOMS-FAVOURITE-PLANTS.jpg)
JINNY BLOM'S - favourite plants
Award-winning landscape designer Jinny Blom set up her studio in 2000 and has since designed many beautiful, thoughtful gardens, both large and small, around the world.
![BEECH GARDENS at the Barbican, ten years on BEECH GARDENS at the Barbican, ten years on](https://reseuro.magzter.com/100x125/articles/8833/1983388/MbNgHGUFY1738747600072/BEECH-GARDENS-AT-THE-BARBICAN-TEN-YEARS-ON.jpg)
BEECH GARDENS at the Barbican, ten years on
As a new phase of planting begins, Professor Nigel Dunnett looks at how the iconic public gardens he created at The Barbican Estate in London have evolved over the past decade