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Knot Garden at St Fagans museum of country life, south Wales. A knot garden is a garden style that was popularized in 16th century England [1]: 60–61 and is now considered an element of the formal English garden. A knot garden consists of a variety of aromatic and culinary herbs, or low hedges such as box, planted in lines to create an ...
The gardens and hardy collections consist of several formal displays and outdoor plantings: Alexandra Hicks Herb Knot Garden [1] - modern version of a Tudor period garden, with hedges of the yew (Taxus x media 'hicksii') and boxwood (Buxus sempervirens ‘Green Gem’), as well as lavender (Lavandula angustifolia ‘Hidcote’), creeping thyme (Thymus serpyllum), and winter savory (Satureja ...
The herb garden is often a separate space in the garden, devoted to growing a specific group of plants known as herbs. These gardens may be informal patches of plants, or they may be carefully designed, even to the point of arranging and clipping the plants to form specific patterns, as in a knot garden. Herb gardens may be purely functional or ...
Chalkboard Frame Herb Garden. This herb garden looks like a piece of living art! The frame is coated with chalkboard paint, which gives it some extra charm and a bistro feel.
The Rise Garden. This is the most expensive indoor herb garden on the list, but for good reason. House Beautiful Creative Director Nicolas Neubeck has been using The Rise Garden in his own home ...
Herb Garden (1977) - a knot garden in six sections, of herbs in juniper and boxwood edging. Historic Garden (1926) - a sequence of connected "rooms" enclosed by hedges, each built around a central feature such as a sunken garden, a small circular pool, a swimming pool, or a bronze sculpture of Pan.
Tools: The tools you use to garden flowers and plants are exactly the same for herbs but in smaller sizes, says Madeline Hooper, a gardener and the creator/host of the television show “GardenFit ...
The King's Knot Garden below Stirling Castle. Gardens, as designated spaces for planting, first came to Scotland with Christianity and monasticism from the sixth century. The monastery of Iona had such a garden for medicinal herbs and other plants and tended by an Irish gardener from the time of Columba (521–597). [1]