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Landscaping With Australian Plants PDF

192 Pages·16.834 MB·English
by  MasonJohn
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CONTENTS CREDITS 5 PREFACE 6 CHAPTER 1 HISTORY OF AUSTRALIAN GARDENS: EARLY INFLUENCES 7 Early gardens 8 People who influenced australian garden design 11 CHAPTER 2 LANDSCAPING APPLICATIONS 15 Formal native gardens 16 Natives for hedging 18 Natives for edging formal gardens 23 Shaping natives for formality 28 The australian bush garden 33 Other types of dry gardens 39 Woodland garden (dry sclerophyll forest) 41 Heathland garden 42 Bush tucker gardens 43 Rainforest gardens 54 Useful tips when landscaping and designing with natives 56 CHAPTER 3 FUNCTIONAL USES OF AUSTRALIAN PLANTS 57 Windbreaks 58 Designing and planting a firebreak 60 Supporting wildlife 63 Land erosion 67 Shaping sloping ground 70 Settling soil 70 CHAPTER 4 GROWING NATIVES 71 General growing 71 Guidelines 71 Environmental factors 72 Nutrition 73 Soils and plants 73 How to plant a native 78 Pruning 81 Pests and diseases 84 CHAPTER 5 COMPONENTS OF A LANDSCAPE 85 Components of a landscape 86 Climate 86 Microclimates 88 Water and plant growth 89 Watering 91 Australian plants for water wise gardens 94 Using water as a garden feature 96 Formal ponds 96 Informal ponds 96 Water garden practicalities 99 Native rockeries 100 What is natural gardening? 103 What is a natural, wild or bush garden? 103 Natural pest control 104 Natural weed control 105 Birds in the garden 105 Designing garden spaces 108 CHAPTER 6 NATIVE TREES 111 Choosing your trees 112 Other popular trees 122 CHAPTER 7 SHRUBS 127 Where to use shrubs 128 CHAPTER 8 FLOWERS 156 Using natives for colour 157 Some plants which flower for long periods 158 Acacias 160 CHAPTER 9 GROUND COVERS AND CLIMBERS 161 How to use groundcovers 162 Climbers 162 Others 169 CHAPTER 10 CONIFERS AND PALMS 170 Conifers 171 Palms 173 CHAPTER 11 FERNS 174 Australian indigenous ferns 174 Tree ferns 187 APPENDIX 189 Distance learning and online courses 189 E books by John Mason and ACS staff include: 190 Printed books by John Mason 190 Useful contacts 192 ACS global partners 192 Social media 192 > BACK TO CONTENTS PAGE CREDITS © Copyright: John Mason The information in this book is derived from a broad cross section of resources Written by (research, reference materials and John Mason and personal experience) from the authors staff of ACS Distance Education and editorial assistants in the academic department of ACS Distance Education. Photos: It is, to the best of our knowledge, John Mason composed as an accurate representation Leonie Mason of what is accepted and appropriate Nicholas Mason information about the subject, at the Stephen Mason time of publication. Layout: The authors fully recognise that Stephen Mason knowledge is continually changing, and awareness in all areas of study Contributors & Editorial Assistants: is constantly evolving. As such, we Adriana Fraser encourage the reader to recognise Gavin Cole that nothing they read should ever be Rosemary Davies considered to be set in stone. They should alway s strive to broaden Published by their perspective and deepen their ACS Distance Education understanding of a subject, and before acting upon any information or advice, P.O. Box 2092, Nerang MDC, should always seek to confirm the Queensland, Australia, 4211 currency of that information, and the [email protected] appropriateness to the situation in which www.acsbookshop.com they find themselves. P O Box 4171, Stourbridge, DY8 2WZ, As such, the publisher and author do not United Kingdom accept any liability for actions taken by [email protected] the reader based upon their reading of www.acsebooks.com this book. Cover Photo – Made up of several photos, the main cover photo is ISBN: 978-0-9922988-3-8 taken at the Royal Botanic Gardens at Cranbourne, a relatively new garden that commenced development in the 1990’s. PAGE 5 > BACK TO CONTENTS PAGE PREFACE Australian gardeners have over the past two centuries explored and experimented not only with the cultivation of indigenous plants, but also with ways of using them for various landscaping purposes. This book explores both the plants and the ways in which they might be used in landscaping. Australia has a very broad variety of indigenous plants, ranging from alpine species that survive under deep winter snow cover to desert plants that persist through extended periods of hot and dry conditions, which sometimes last for years at a time. There are tens of thousands of different Australian indigenous plants, many of which have never been seriously cultivated. Others which have been grown widely in Australian gardens are only just now being discovered by the outside world. PAGE 6 > BACK TO CONTENTS PAGE CHAPTER 1 HISTORY OF AUSTRALIAN GARDENS: EARLY INFLUENCES Australia’s first gardens were made from necessity. They were, in fact, vegetable gardens used to grow crops to feed the convicts, their keepers and the administrators of the new colony. The earliest garden built in the colony was in Sydney - surrounding Government House. The first version of this garden comprised of geometrically shaped beds planted with rows of vegetables, and it included a single Norfolk Island pine. Some thirty years or so after the first European settlement, as the colony started to become established and food production became more efficient and reliable, there was more focus on the development of ornamental gardens. Early Australian Gardens needed to be productive. This is the Vegetable Garden at Como House, built in 1847 in Melbourne. Other parts of this garden mix Australian natives including Eucalypts, with exotic plants. PAGE 7 > BACK TO CONTENTS PAGE The Craft Cottage at the Royal Melbourne Botanic Gardens – This garden mixes native plants and exotics seamlessly. EARLY GARDENS with exotic plants that were commonly cultivated in Britain and Europe. During the early years of settlement, Australia’s private and public gardens In 1818, Australia built its first botanical were largely influenced by British garden on land originally set up as and European styles, and the strong a farm (Farm Cove) - but the farm geometric shapes of the first gardens failed. The Royal Botanic Gardens started to give way to shrubberies and Sydney were built on this site under the mixed plantings. This can be seen in the influence of Governor Macquarie and influence of Governor Bligh on the later the appointment of Charles Fraser as gardens surrounding Government house the Colonial Botanist. – they changed from the utilitarian plots to gardens constructed in the ‘landscape Other botanical gardens were set up style’ popular in England and Europe at around the country from that time with the the time. Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens of Hobart later in 1818 being a close follower Many early gardens did incorporate to Sydney. The Melbourne Royal Botanic Australian indigenous plants, for Gardens followed a couple of decades example eucalypts and she-oaks. It later in 1845, Adelaide’s Botanic Garden was not uncommon at this time to see 9 years after that in 1854, and Brisbane gum trees used in designed gardens City’s Botanic Garden was opened in to provide the much-needed shade. 1855. Land was set aside in Perth, WA Usually though, native plants were mixed as early as 1829 but the area was not PAGE 8 > BACK TO CONTENTS PAGE officially gazetted as a botanical garden The influence of Britain on the early until 1872, and is now famously known as gardens of Australia was marked – as ‘Kings Park and Botanic Garden’. garden fashions changed in England so they also changed in Australia. Early landscape style gardens started to give way to the ‘gardenesque style’ (the introduction of gardens as art). Examples of this style appeared in Tasmania as early as 1840. As the colony grew, influence from other regions of the world also grew; plants started to arrive from New Zealand, South Africa, the Americas, China and elsewhere. This diverse influence also had John Mason and son Nicholas, an effect on the development of garden visiting Kings Park in Perth, in 2011 styles, which became equally as diverse. Many of the introduced plants performed By the mid 1830’s, the earliest nurseries so well in the Australian climate that they in the colony – such as one in Hobart, became pests that threatened to take started to list a number of Australian over from native species. We still see natives including Acacias, Casuarinas, this influence today, with many of these Eucalyptus trees, and Hakea species early introductions listed as noxious or within their catalogues. environmental weeds. Ripponlea House and Garden, a 14 acre national trust property in the suburbs of Melbourne – dates back to 1868 PAGE 9 > BACK TO CONTENTS PAGE Royal Sydney Botanic Gardens today – massed displays of grasses provide impact in texture and colour Royal Sydney Botanic Gardens today – Anigozanthus (Kangaroo Paws) in full bloom. Native Garden developed in 1972 by John Mason in Melbourne was typical of the time. Natives were fashionable; so people wanted 100% native plants; but Fernery at Ripponlea; claimed everyone still loved their lawns; hence to be the largest in the Southern the typical garden was a lawn fringed hemisphere, contains massive by beds of native plants, with the specimens of Australian tree ferns. ground covered in a pine bark mulch. PAGE 10

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