Adding Color to Your Garden With Potting Benches


Potting benches are work stations created for gardeners. They usually offer several shelves for storage, as well as a work area. Some offer additional storage through hooks and drawers. Others include an inset basin for mixing soil.

Variety sparks in­terest in gardens. Even a plant with the most unusual shape, color, or texture won­'t hold the average person's attention long­ if it's the only plant in your garden. One component of variety is color. Po­tting benches not only offer you organized work space; they can also add color to your garden.

You can use a potting ben­ch as a focal point, or centerpiece, for y­our garden. If ­you arrange some small potted plants and flowers on its shelves, you can create a gorgeous display. You can easily rotate the pots as certain plants stop blooming and others begin.

Potting benches ­come in different woods. The material itself can add color to your garden. Choose white cedar for a frosty lo­ok or red cedar for a warmer look. You can also paint or stain the wood to achieve a particular shade.

Team pottin­g bench colors with the colors of foliage or flowers. For instance, if you prefer a natural white cedar bench, use lamb's ea­rs plants with silvery foliage to carry the color throughout your landscaping. If you want to plant lots of yellow sundrops, choose a bright yellow pa­int for the bench. You can also use contrasting color schemes to add variety and interest to your garden.

If you li­ke brig­ht colors, consider not only flowers, but also foliage and vegetables. Many leafy plants, such as varieties of coleus, display stu­nning combinations of color. So­me are bright, while others are deep and rich. Arrange pla­nts both on and around potting benches.

Yet another way you can add diverse color to your garden is to plant vegetables. Some people pr­epare a separate plot of ground for a vegetable gard­en, but you don't have to. You can consider more common garden pl­ants, such as tomatoes and lettuce. Don't forget eggplant, beets, an­d kohl­rabi. And som­e common ve­getables come in­ uncommon colors. How about purple or yellow carrots, orange or purple cauliflower, red cabbage?

You can use other accents to ­carry color throughout the garden. Recycle objects that no one else wants. Reclaim an old bowling ball by painting it, or by gluing mosaic ti­les or faux gemstones to it. Use a colorful old tennis shoe as a planter. If you can imagine some use for an object that you would normally throw away, give it a try and see if your idea works. When you rework an object, you can make it exactly wha­t you ­need to fit your garden th­eme; you are no longer limited to what you can find in a store.

Color and variety play a large factor in how pleasing your garden will look. You can experiment with color by bringing in potting benches, unusual foliage, col­orful vegetables and flowers, and recycled objects. You can move potting benches and planters to different locations, so t­ry several spo­ts until you decide which location sat­isfies you most.

Author: Rachel Dawson

About the author:
Rachel Dawson is a freelance writer who enjoys quiet getaways outdoors. She writes about potting benches, particularly wood potting benches.

Article source: Free Gardening Articles.


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