Abkhazi has a respectable collection of plants for the plant nuts, too. Mmm, the sweetness fo good design.
Even-ness in design and overabundance of pattern will flatten the effect and experience of the different elements, which are, in this case, rocks and plants. A professor from art school, my god of composition, used to say "Even cancels out. Like equal sides of an equation- each becomes zero." My friend Gordon says that this effect, so common in garden design, was once called the "Plum pudding effect" by Reginald Farrer, early British Rock Garden Author. No one knows what plum pudding is anymore, so I guess the design problem has gone unchequed...
{Update/Correction: Mr. Farrer's exact words were "The Plum-bun System," or, with spike shaped rocks "The Almond-pudding System," in contrast to "A More Tolerable" rock arrangement as he put it...}
It is important to resolve this because most viewers, people who are not plant collectors, will suffer the most from this effect because they are not distracted by the selection of plants. The solution is to exaggerate natural spaces, use varying sizes of rocks and plants, clump some and spread some, and maybe even leave some open ("negative") space. It takes great guts to do the latter- so few do.
The crevice garden nearby (still in Beacon Hill Park). Like childen: It's little but important.
I sat and studied this design for some time and have figured out some of its mysteries. There might be a blog about that when I have nothing better but rock blather to write this winter.
A nice Salix magnifica at Gordon's Alba Plants.
Tide pool detail on the coast of Victoria town.
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