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The Off-Season Garden: 6 Tips for a Beautiful Winter Landscape

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The Off-Season Garden: 6 Tips for a Beautiful Winter Landscape

November 19, 2024

We’re a month away from the winter solstice, but that’s no reason to ignore your garden. In his debut book, Plants for the Winter Garden, nurseryman and garden designer Warren Leach celebrates the off-season garden. A plantsman by trade, Leach catalogs the many plants with interesting seed heads, enduring stalks, prominent berries, and evergreen leaves. However, this book goes well beyond a list of plants that offer the proverbial “winter interest.” Leach also discusses the design principles that make a garden sing in winter. In Leach’s photos many plants are shown within a garden context, so readers can see how they are actually used—not just close-up glamor shots of berries, blossoms, and bark (although there are plenty of those to be enjoyed). In a particularly satisfying maneuver, Leach also shows us several gardens in their full summer glory and from the same angle in deep winter.

“The garden should be celebrated all times of the year,” says Leach. He hopes that this book will not only inspire gardeners to plant for winter beauty, but also get outside and interact with their winter landscapes. “I grew up in Maine, I love walking around in winter,” says Leach. “I go for a walk with my dog first thing in the morning and I love just seeing hoar frost or the patterns of ice, and the light and the foliage.” With Leach as a guide, gardeners might just find themselves welcoming the winter months. Here are 6 favorite plants and techniques from Plants for the Winter Garden:

Photography by Warren Leach.

1. Focus on the entry garden.

In this entry garden, the horizontal branches of a stout Pinus parviflora ‘Glauca’ contrast with the vertical frame and pendant branches of Chamaecyparis nootkatensis ‘Van den Akker’.
Above: In this entry garden, the horizontal branches of a stout Pinus parviflora ‘Glauca’ contrast with the vertical frame and pendant branches of Chamaecyparis nootkatensis ‘Van den Akker’.

If you’ve never designed or planted with winter interest in mind, Leach suggests starting with the garden near the entrance to your home because it’s a place you’ll see often even in the most frigid weather. In the book, Leach devotes a chapter to entry gardens, showcasing six that he has designed. He suggests something as simple as adding a winterberry holly or a lush, evergreen groundcover can give you beauty all through the winter.

2. Include strong vertical forms.

Buxus sempervirens ‘Graham Blandy’, seen above, is the most common columnar form of boxwood. (If deer are a problem, Leach notes it may be preferable to yew, as they find it unpalatable.)
Above: Buxus sempervirens ‘Graham Blandy’, seen above, is the most common columnar form of boxwood. (If deer are a problem, Leach notes it may be preferable to yew, as they find it unpalatable.)

“Vertical forms are focal points, obviously, but they can be used in many different ways,” says Leach. “They stop your eye or allow you to look past them. They can subdivide space and make a small space seem larger. They’re very dynamic in terms of design.” However, there is one place Leach cautions not to place a strong vertical form: Next to the corner of the house. “They need to be their own, so their own silhouette is striking,” he says.

3. Choose plants for their”‘enduring remnants.”

Above: Summer and winter views of a mixed herbaceous garden designed specifically to be drought-tolerant and to sustain structural interest and winter beauty.

As gardeners move away from overzealous “fall cleanup,” they’ll discover the beauty of the remains of summer-flowering perennial. Among the “enduring remnants” that have presence in the winter garden, Leach highlights the six-foot-tall candelabras of Olympic mullein (Verbascum olympicum) and Culver’s root (Veronicastrum virginicum), a smaller herbaceous perennial with woody flower stems that support candelabra spikes, and showy stonecrop (Hylotelephium spectabile), whose flat, umbel flowers become attractive flat, brown disks that collect snow. As a bonus, Leach points out that spent flower heads provide food, and stems and leaves offer shelter for beneficial insects and pollinators.

4. Let witch hazel enchant you.

Hamamelis ×intermedia ‘Jelena’, a graft on Parrotia to create an upright tree form. Their copper orange flowers are one of Leach’s all-time favorites.
Above: Hamamelis ×intermedia ‘Jelena’, a graft on Parrotia to create an upright tree form. Their copper orange flowers are one of Leach’s all-time favorites.

“Witch hazels are so underused,” says Leach. He encourages gardeners to explore the many varieties, including our native American witchhazel (Hamamelis virginiana L.) and the Asian witch hazels, like Hamamelis × intermedia ‘Arnold Promise’ or Jelena.“Witch hazels are these wonderful plants that bloom for months, but there are so few of them,” laments Leach. “I tell the garden clubs it’s their responsibility to plant one in a public library, a post office, or some public space.” A versatile understory tree, Leach notes that witch hazels will grow in anything from full sun to partial shade, but like any flowering plant more sun equals more blooms.

5. Focus on verdant foliage.

Magnolia virginiana var. australis is well-suited for climates to Zone 5.
Above: Magnolia virginiana var. australis is well-suited for climates to Zone 5.

“A verdant garden appears fresh and alive,” says Leach, and therefore evergreen plants are essential in the winter garden. Leach includes a section on evergreen broadleaf trees and shrubs, and a particular favorite of his are plants with glossy, green leaves like evergreen magnolias like Magnolia virginiana Sweetbay.’Those plants are very striking because of their larger evergreen leaves—they’re a strong presence in the winter,” says Leach.

Another evergreen option: Hardy ferns. “Their delicate, pinnately dissected green fronds offer a contrast to the snowy winter landscape,” says Leach. His list of native evergreen ferns include species of Polypodium, Polystichum, Dryopteris, and Asplenium. For an unusual form, Leach suggests Hart’s tongue fern (Asplenium scolopendrium), whose leaves have a tropical-looking appearance.

6. Simplify your plant palette.

Plants for the Winter Garden Perennials, Grasses, Shrubs, and Trees to Add Interest in the Cold and Snow by Warren Leach is available now wherever books are sold.
Above: Plants for the Winter Garden Perennials, Grasses, Shrubs, and Trees to Add Interest in the Cold and Snow by Warren Leach is available now wherever books are sold.

Leach says once you get excited about plants with winter interest it can be easy to get carried away. He cautions to avoid planting one each of a dozen different plants. “Be selective in what you’re picking, it can be very simple,” he says. “I won’t say it’s a bad thing, but having a menagerie of too many colored dwarf conifers, for example, might not always be harmonious.”

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Frequently asked questions

Why should I pay attention to my garden in the winter?

Although it's the off-season, there are still ways to make your garden beautiful in the winter.

What are some tips for a beautiful winter landscape?

Focus on the entry garden, include strong vertical forms, choose plants for their enduring remnants, let witch hazel enchant you, focus on verdant foliage, and simplify your plant palette.

What are enduring remnants in the winter garden?

Enduring remnants are the remains of summer-flowering perennials that add interest and beauty to the winter garden.

Why are witch hazels recommended for the winter garden?

Witch hazels are underused but beautiful plants that bloom for months and can add color and interest to the winter garden.

What is the importance of evergreen plants in the winter garden?

Evergreen plants with glossy green leaves add a fresh and lively appearance to the winter garden.

How can I simplify my plant palette for the winter garden?

Be selective in your plant choices and avoid planting too many different varieties to ensure a harmonious look.

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