
Originally Posted by
gravitylover
Try bordering sections with leafy evergreens. I like Holly but I don't know if it'll grow where you are, it's drought resistant, deer hate it and it fills in pretty thick in just a few years but it's water intensive to get it there. Cozy is an appropriate word for it. Sometimes I just sit there "wasting time" and appreciating the quiet.

Originally Posted by
gravitylover
Shera, another thing I do is - if it comes out of the ground in the yard it goes back into it. There's more composting (rotting

) organic material than there probably should be, leaves are still here from 2 years ago not just last year and you see what I do with big branches and trees that come down. While a lot of what's growing back here is considered invasive nothing has really taken over, there's a pretty good mix of things that just like to grow here so I don't argue with it too much. I think if you're designing a new place maybe look at what grows in similar biozones and elevations around the world and see if some of them can "green up" the space and break up those shades of beige. One of those rotating barrel composters might be good to have, they don't use much water at all and you can recycle everything organic to have fertilizing, moisturizing compost. We get so much rain I just pile shit up and a year later it's soil.
Nice thoughtful response. I need to show you some pics. I live in zone 3 (-30-40F) at 10,000 elev. in the Colorado rockies, and we have alkaline soil and little humidity and generally arid, so those nice broadleaf evergreens like rhododendrons and holly won't do here. But that's ok, I have some lodgepole pine trees and I like the snow cover a lot. Also in winter it's good to let the sun in, so I'm focusing on "enclosure" for the warm months.
I had a little gardening/landscaping business at 9000 ft years ago but this is a whole other level at 10k. It's a really unique and interesting challenge. And I have a level of freedom here that I didn't have doing other people's gardens, so I'm experimenting. I'm planting aspens on the boundaries, hope to get the effect of your garden. Like a meadow clearing in a forest area, but with formality and structure. That's what I have in my head. 
I found something in an alley, smells like celery, looks like celery, but it gets as tall as your head! Oh, I'm also using hops vines. They look amazing here.
Why do the pics get rotated? How to fix? We had a hard freeze (28F) a couple of nights ago, froze the pansies solid:
Live each season as it passes; breathe the air, drink the drink, taste the fruit, and resign yourself to the influences of each.
Henry David Thoreau
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