“Gardens, like people, gain character with age” is a truism which, at least  in the dream of things, is TRUE.   In both cases good fortune is a necessity.   Both people and beautiful landscape gardens can be destroyed, ‘ killed ‘ by the same tornado, mud slide, flood, fire, or earthquake.  As a generalization, however,  the adage IS true, at least in the ideal.

Both beautiful people and beautiful landscape gardens usually  need  help, care and attention   especially when young to develop their ‘glow’ in later life.   It’s  living human beings who  make  judgments on the matter, however.

Most homeowners who do love and seek beauty in a landscaped garden are folks with average income, or are retired from years of average, or slightly above average income.   The super wealthy usually hire university degreed   landscape artists to  line things up  the way artists are trained to do.   Hedges become popular and can be practical in the setting.  After all, a wall is a wall is a wall.   One might even appear beautiful someday.

Sometimes for some folks,  the more expensive is deemed more beautiful merely by its cost rather any notice of  something ‘beautiful’.

Most of our plants which provide structure in beautiful landscape gardens are sun-loving.   Massive deciduous trees may become beautiful on their own account as individuals  after a century of living in the landscape garden, but because of root expanse and the living tree’s demand  for light,  living woody plant matter whether young or old doesn’t have much of a chance to compete in such an environment .

In our Northland, East exposure  to the Sun is the location superior to all other woody plantings for best growth.   South is runner up.  It’s hotter.    West, where the ground is usually hot longer and  drier,  is an ‘also ran’, with North dead last, often a sure killer for countless beautiful woody specimens when the season is with wind and severe cold without much snow cover.

Do remember, however, that the nature of the ambient soil does have a dictate in the health of  plants in their domain.   A sand ‘bottom’ is a far drier environment  for most  plant roots  than  clay.

Sometimes trees and shrubs, and occasionally people,   gain character from periods of  suffering….   While we root for human avoidance of  the condition,  older trees which survive  years of  suffering can become among the most beautiful in form  in ones landscape garden.  Skillful prunings can relieve many a landscape  tree or shrub suffering from ugliness and/or  general disorder.

We at Masterpiece invite folks to review the ‘beauty quotient’ of their existing trees and shrubs.   If your plants are not gaining character with age, do call us for advice and action….at 952-933-5777…..even if they look old and crusty.   Some plants can live with character  for centuries, you know.