There is a painterly quality to nearly everything that comes from Belgium. It's a region that for centuries has felt the influence of its opinionated neighbors. In almost any Belgian garden there is evidence of geometrical classicism (from France); the springtime exuberance of the Italian Renaissance, and the naturalism of English cottage gardens. The result? Gardens you would not see anywhere else in the world. The lesson? Don't be afraid to experiment.
Sandwiched between the northern and southern climates of Europe, Belgium is home to gardeners who for centuries have tested other cultures' ideas—to create an inimitable style. Here are 10 ideas to steal from Belgium—from dark, moody paint colors to velvety green backdrops—that will give any garden a luxurious Old Masters air:
Above: Belgian-based landscape designer Ronald van der Hilst planted spring beds with historical varieties of thousands of tulips at botanical garden Arboretum Kalmthout a half hour's drive north of Antwerp.
1. Use green as a backdrop. Mown lawns and closely clipped green shrubs have the same effect as a velvet lining in a jewelry box. Everything else you plant will pop out like a diamond displayed on rich fabric.
2. Put on a show in springtime. Nothing says winter's over like a clump or two of spring bulbs—tulips, daffodils, alliums, hyacinths, and more tulips is our recommendation. Autumn is the time to plant spring bulbs, so start digging. See 10 Favorite Tulips to Plant This Fall for inspiration and Gardening 101: How to Plant a Bulb for step-by-step instructions.
Above: Dwarf multi-stemmed apple trees are trained along the fence line in a narrow backyard near Roeselare in West Flanders. Photograph via Studio Verde.
3. Plant fruit trees. In the 18th and 19th century, few Flemish gardeners could afford the luxury of purely ornamental plants. Instead, they grew fruit. Large gardens had orchards. Small gardens had a dwarf fruit tree or three. In addition to the fruit, a lovely side benefit of fruit trees is that they blossom in spring and gnarled tree trunks and branches take on a dramatically sculptural look when covered in snow.
Autumn is the best time to plant fruit tree; for step-by-step instructions see DIY: Plant a Fruit Tree to Bloom Next Spring.
Above: Pear trees fan-trained in a small city garden bear fruit. For more, see Steal This Look: A Walled Belgium Garden. Photograph via Archi-Verde.
4. Train small trees as espaliers against walls. Fan-trained fruit trees take up little space in city gardens but blossom and bear fruit exuberantly. For more ideas about how to cover a fence with something green, see Design Sleuth: Vines as Espalier.
Above: Photograph by Bieke Claessens.
5. Use hedges to define space. In Belgium, where the terrain is a rolling flat expanse without natural features such as mountains or valleys, creating a relationship between a garden and the surrounding landscape can be difficult. As a solution, Belgian gardeners use hedges to create a distinct perimeter. Some of our favorite hedging shrubs are Hornbeam, Boxwood, and English laurel.
6. Create privacy with shrubbery (instead of a fence). Planted at the edge of a garden, tall-growing shrubs—pittosporum, hornbeam, boxwood, and laurel are a few examples—will grow together to create a dense privacy screen that also absorbs and blocks noise from traffic and neighbors. A hedge of green shrubs always looks better than a fence.
Above: Photograph by Maria Nation.
7. Embrace a lack of flowers. Flemish gardens often have austere, simple palettes of green on green with an emphasis on texture, shape, and size instead of bright colors. Evergreen shrubs have year-round appeal and can create a sense of symmetry and balance that makes seasonal flowering plants feel chaotic in comparison.
Above: Everything in proportion; the front door of a house located about an hour's drive northeast of Brussels is flanked by symmetrical topiaries. Photograph via Oscar V.
8. Create symmetry. Impose a sense of balance with planters that flank an entryway, identical topiaries, or closely pruned shrubs that echo each other.
Above: Our favorite shades of gray paint. For more, see Architects' Top 10 Gray Paint Picks. Photograph by Meredith Swinehart.
9. Use dark paint colors as a backdrop. Black or gray fences, facades, and other architectural details black or gray will emphasize how very green the greenery is.
Above: Photograph via Laura Kaplan-Nieto.
10. Plant poppies. "In Flanders fields the poppies blow," the poet John McCrae wrote after seeing the resilient flowers swaying on their skinny stalks in the battlefields of World War I just months after fighting had turned the landscapes to mud and blood.
Poppies want to please. Self-sowing, they are wildflowers that will spread widely and provide sanctuary to pollinators.
See our other recent posts on Garden Ideas to Steal:
- 10 Garden Ideas to Steal from France
- 10 Garden Ideas to Steal from Scandinavia
- 10 Garden Ideas to Steal from Canada
- 10 Garden Ideas to Steal from India
- 10 Garden Ideas to Steal from Greece
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