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Designer Ideas for Inspired Pathway Plantings

How to get the most bang from your pathway plantings

By: THURSD. | 11-05-2021 | 8 min read
Garden Plants
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Hmm, where to start when landscaping the yard—the plants or the paths? Do you lay the groundwork first, mapping out the space with your network of walkways, or do you first think about where you want stunning stands of plants and then add a way into the space?

Style Meets Function in These Inspiring Pathway Plantings

Whichever comes first, plants or path, no landscape is ever really complete without a soulful marriage between the two. Plants need paths for navigation and structure; paths need plants for softness and impact. Whether you're all about a seamless transition from the look of your house or you want to explore more dramatic contrast in your design, knowing how to get the most bang from your pathway plantings is mostly understanding how style meets function. Designer Ideas for Inspired Pathway Plantings

Adding Soft Texture to Walkways

This billowing, beautiful garden is on a property located in the canyons above Los Angeles where the need for low-water usage plants is central to any landscape design. Designer Judy Kameon created a series of paths that lead to linked patios throughout the landscape. The informal pea gravel path (seen above) leads to raised beds beyond; by adding a screen of dwarf olives to conceal those raised beds, she created visual and spatial separation while maintaining open sightlines.

Designer Ideas for Inspired Pathway Plantings Soft Texture Walkway Photo by Erik Otsea, courtesy of Elysian Landscapes
 

This curvy stunner of a path just above the road is on the same property, but a totally different mood. Concrete pavers wind through a slope-side setting edged in an informal arrangement of a fluffy cloud of grasses with colorful shrubs and purple-leafed agaves completing the picture. See more of this seductive garden here.

Design Advice:

Kameon puts a premium on designing situation-appropriate sized paths that allow space for plants to overflow and soften the edges, maintaining their natural organic forms. When designing a path, consider how it will be used; the gravel path (above) with its generous width is ideal for two people to walk side by side to the front door. The more narrow streetside path is perfect for one person out exploring.

3 Favorite Plants From This Garden

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Karley Rose Oriental Fountain Grass: Graceful smoky rose-purple flower spikes that nearly glow when back lit by the sun. Full sun. Zone: 5 - 10 Afterglow Echeveria: Big rosettes of powdery lavender-pink-tinged leaves are almost luminescent. Orange-red flowers, too. Full sun. Zone: 9 - 11 Icee Blue® Yellow-Wood: First podocarpus tree with distinctive blue foliage! New growth emerges lime-gray-blue then matures to cool gray-blue-green. Full sun. Zone: 9 - 11

Planting a Romantic Woodland Path

A simple path of irregular flagstone pavers has an organic forest floor feel that works perfectly with the lush part-to-full shade plantings in Ellen Lathi's zone 6B garden. In what looks like a hundred shades of green, Lathi combined a variety of forms and textures such as ferns, large-leafed hostas, and strappy grasses, and then punctuated the soothing palette with that glorious red Japanese maple and plenty of seasonal flowering perennials and shrubs.

Designer Ideas for Inspired Pathway Plantings Romantic Garden Walkway
Photo by Keller & Keller, courtesy of Ellen Lathi

Design Advice:

The trick to making a winning flagstone path is to first lay out all stones to ensure a comfortable stride from middle to middle of each stone and then dig out a few inches of soil below each stone to "seat" them securely.

3 Favorite Plants From This Garden

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Red-Leaf Japanese Maple: Well-suited as a small lawn tree or in a woodland garden or urban setting. Up to 18' tall and wide. Full to partial sun. Zone: 5 - 8 Regal Splendor Hosta: Creamy gold-edged version of 'Krossa Regal'; blue-green foliage and gold margins on upright, vase-shaped variety. Partial to full shade. Zone: 4 - 9 Red Sentinel Astilbe: Perfectly content in shady woodland gardens, but equally happy in dappled light under moisture-loving shade trees. Partial to full shade. Zone: 4 - 9

Fuss-Free Plantings Between Pavers

This coastal zone 10A garden would be one for Instagram no matter what, but it's the thoughtful addition of a soft carpet of creeping thyme between pavers that adds that finishing touch. Natural flagstones make up the path which is surrounded by diverse and colorful drought-tolerant plantings and succulents. Mexican Snowball Echeveria (right) and Blue Glow Agave (middle left) are just a few of the plants that designer Joni L. Janecki & Associates chose for their bold textures, year-round interest, and dynamic movement.

Designer Ideas for Inspired Pathway Plantings Fuss-Free Walkway Photo by Holly Lepere
 

This path functions as a more informal link between the nearby outdoor fireplace and pond. It allows visitors, including the client’s dog, to meander through the garden instead of ‘sticking’ to the main path. We love the addition of boulders that were sourced from a local quarry. See the entire garden here.

Design Advice:

Planting between pavers is easy if you pay close attention to choosing a ground cover that grows well in your climate and with the site’s soil type, level of moisture, and sunlight. We love the effect of a low, nearly solid mat, but consider popping a few taller plants near the edges for contrast.

3 Favorite Plants From This Garden

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Blue Finger: Pencil-like, slightly curved leaves point upward and form a dense, beautiful groundcover mat. Small white summer flowers. Full sun. Zone: 10 -11 Blue Sedge: A small clumping grass with slender, silver-blue blades. Plant en masse for a splendid effect as seen here. Partial to full sun. Zone: 5 - 9 Woolly Thyme: Durable herb with aromatic leaves, perfect for filling between stepping stones. Creates lush mat of soft green foliage. Full sun. Zone: 5 - 8

Planting to Brighten-Up A Shady Footpath

The crunchy sound and mixed colors of small-sized gravel add to the tactile experience of strolling through this textured shade-loving garden. Here are two views of this coastal oasis set in a busy city.

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(Left) This zone 7 West Vancouver BC garden designed by Barbara Longe is all about layers and layers from the tall viburnum in the back to the hardy begonias and hellebores toward the front. (That's Yellow Wax Bells in the foreground--we knew you'd ask!). (Right) Cool and green and shady (with a pop of black in that hidden bench) mix of hardy ferns, hostas, coral bells and rhododendrons are repeated throughout this space. Located on the coast where fog is a way of life, these robust, rich greens are a smart choice, becoming even more beautiful in that grey-ish light.

Design Advice:

Plants that thrive in shade can be exuberant growers quickly overtaking a walkway. Lining the path in stones and excavating about two inches of soil before spreading gravel help keep things tidy.

3 Favorite Plants From This Garden

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Eastern Snowball: Large shrub with masses of large, pure white, snowball-like flower clusters that make a showy display in late spring. Full sun. Zone: 3 - 8 Cascade™ Blush Hellebore: Deep purple-pink blooms on mounds of deeply-lobed, leathery evergreen foliage. Partial to full shade. Zone: 4 - 9 Ghost Fern: Neat, formal, upright mound of silver-green fronds with deep purple midribs. Perfect as a backdrop to hostas. Partial to full shade. Zone: 4 - 9

Planting for Wet, Soggy Spots

The front yard of this urban Northwest zone 8B residence was transformed from bricks and lawn to one that's more waterwise using stormwater management techniques including the landscape stone swale shown here that helps keep precious water on site. That attention to water conservation is already plenty cool, but the raised boardwalk above the swale created to get you from the street into the yard is just genius.

Designer Ideas for Inspired Pathway Plantings Soggy Pathway Plantings Photo by Ken Gutmaker
 

To attract pollinators, designer Lisa Port added shrubs and perennials that don't mind wet feet and that also provide a buffer from the street. Bees buzz over the bee balm (front right) and coneflowers, penstemmons and salvias tucked into the space. The effect is one of happy plants that just naturally popped up in place.

Design Advice:

Rather than fight conditions, use them to your advantage! Water was running off this site into the street; it is now captured in this swale and used to power the pollinator plants installed there. The boardwalk adds a modern contrast to this cottage garden. See more of this garden here.

3 Favorite Plants From This Garden

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Pacific Fire Vine Maple: Creamy-yellow and coral-red stems make a striking winter specimen; green leaves through summer turn yellow in fall. Full to partial sun. Zone: 5 - 9 Thriller Lady's Mantle: Ideal for moist soils; vivid golden-yellow flowers held on stems in open, airy sprays above shiny, gray-green leaves. Full to partial sun. Zone: 3 - 9 Caradonna Meadow Sage: Spikes of violet-blue flowers on striking purple-black stems rise above the contrasting gray-green leaves. Pollinator favorite. Full sun. Zone: 4 - 9

Shaping Up a Formal Setting

We are impressed with how much impact designer Linda Dallas delivered with this pairing of shaped and sheared plants that provide depth in a small space and the angled concrete paver and gravel path. Plants in this zone 8B garden were meticulously chosen for their adaptability to regular pruning. Sheared shrubs like boxwood, euonymus, and laurel along with narrow Tiny Tower cypress are ideal candidates. (Colder zones try Castle Spire® Blue Holly, Variegated English Boxwood, and Spartan Juniper.)

Designer Ideas for Inspired Pathway Plantings Formal Garden Setting Photo by Doreen Wynja
 

Design Advice:

Laying pavers at a 45 degree angle to the lines of your house has the effect of making the space feel more intimate. Pavers cut to mirror curves of the wall ups the cost, but add grace to the design.

3 Favorite Plants From This Garden

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Otto Luyken English Laurel: Dwarf and compact, offers year-round interest with glossy dark green leaves and showy flowers. Full to partial sun. Zone: 6 - 9 Candy Apple™ Hydrangea: Compact with long-lasting flowers that start lime and age to nearly pure white.  Full to partial shade. Zone: 4 - 8 Green Velvet Boxwood: Develops a vigorous, rounded form if not pruned. Provides year-round, cold-hardy color and structure in the garden. Full to partial sun. Zone: 4 - 9 For more information about inspiring pathway plantings, visit Monrovia. (info and images via Monrovia)

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