Saudi Press

Saudi Arabia and the world
Saturday, Feb 22, 2025

How to Plant a Meadow Garden—Even in the City

How to Plant a Meadow Garden—Even in the City

A garden meadow can be in a front yard, backyard, on a hillside, even in urban areas. Here are the tips you need to plant one at home.

I have a neighbor who planted a meadow in their front yard and little do they know that I pay it a visit at least once a week. No, I don’t go on their property and start singing “The Hills Are Alive” like Julie Andrews in The Sound of Music, but I do love to stand at the curb and admire the view. At less than, I’d say, 600 square feet, the meadow is often populated with birds, while pollinators buzz about the flowers.

There’s something so engaging about meadows, isn’t there? I find my neighbor’s meadow garden helps my eyes rest as they meander through the flowers and foliage—and I’m not alone. “Meadows lend a meditative, slow vibe to a garden,” says Dani Coulter of Collecting Flowers, a landscape design team in San Francisco. “They invite you to take a pause.”

They also happen to be a great way to replace a lawn, which the Collecting Flowers team did when they created a meadow in one client’s yard in San Francisco’s Bernal Heights. “The old lawn was high-maintenance and using too much water, and we’re always in a drought,” Coulter says. “Now you walk through a meadow to get to a deck and a cabana. It works as a lovely pass-through space that feels really calming.”

There are myriad other benefits. At Leach Botanical Garden in Portland, Richard Hartlage of Seattle-based Land Morphology created a meadow to “engage visitors, create drama and interest, and change through all seasons,” he says.


“You can put together something that’s gorgeous and enhances the architectural style of your residence, and there are ecological benefits, too,” says Jonathan Harnish of InSite Landscape Design in Los Angeles. “The seeds from grasses provide food for birds and wildlife. And when you have a meadow, you don’t have a weekly gardener coming by with a lawnmower and a blower to clear it out. Its unkempt style is its charm.”

I couldn’t agree more. Here, tips on how to plant a meadow big or small, with the help of three garden designers who’ve done so to beautiful effect.

Tip 1: Choose and Prep Your Site


Where you place your meadow is key to its success. “Full sun—as in, at least six hours of sunlight—good soil drainage, and effective air circulation are key characteristics to consider when choosing a site for a meadow garden to thrive,” says Harnish.

To prep your site, Coulter recommends removing your lawn and/or any weeds, and to be thorough. (Weeds can compete with the plants in your meadow.) Next, lightly till the soil, put down about an inch of compost, and work that into the top half-inch of soil.


Tip 2: Schedule Your Planting


You don’t want to plant in the hottest months of the year. Instead, says Coulter, “try to schedule your planting for late fall or early spring when the soil is wet and the plants will take root easier and won’t be as stressed as they would be if you planted them in the summer.”

Tip 3: Get Thee to a Nursery


Check your local nursery for native species that will support wildlife in your region. To keep costs down, use 4-inch to 1-gallon plants for instant impact. “Smaller plants are cheaper and establish just as fast as 1-gallon and larger,” says Hartlage. However, avoid using seeds. (Some meadow plants can be difficult to germinate, and weeds can quickly become a problem.) Keep in mind that meadows are made up of at least 50% grasses, according to Coulter, so if you want a natural look, you want to consider a 50-50 mix of grasses and flowering plants.


Tip 4: Have a Plan


Harnish strongly recommends putting a plan down on paper before planting day. It doesn’t have to be a formal landscape plan—just a bubble diagram with circles and measurements so you know how big your plants are going to get. “You have to be careful how you place plants,” he says. “It’s all about thinking about scale and hierarchy—how big the final plant is going to get.”

Tip 5: Think High, Medium, Low


Consider shape and texture when selecting your plants. “I make sure I have a ‘high-medium-low mix’ of plants, even if my ‘high’ is most likely only about 3 feet at maturity,” says Coulter. The idea, she adds, is to mix wispy grasses with blooming plants like California buckwheat. Coulter also likes mixing swaths of ornamental grass, like blue fescue, with native Salvia, which adds height.

Harnish, meanwhile, likes to mix perennial grass Berkeley sedge with ‘Munstead’ English lavender and common yarrow.

Tip 6: Avoid Straight Lines


Planting in drifts is something all three designers recommend. In a real meadow, plants grow in an organic shape rather than in a line along the front of the house. (The way one would plant roses, for example.) “[You should] plant with lots of repetition,” says Hartlage. “I tend to plant in waves to draw the eye through the landscape.”

Coulter agrees: “I think the most important thing is to plant drifts of plants—you don’t want blue fescue grass by itself, you want five to 10 planted in a beautiful drift, then you want five to 10 Salvia planted in a beautiful drift.” She adds: “If you look in nature, that’s how they naturally group themselves. You won’t see one fern on a hike, you’ll see a grouping of ferns.”


Tip 7: Don’t Be Afraid to Break a Few Rules


For the Bernal Heights project, Coulter also planted Lomandra ‘Platinum Beauty,’ which one wouldn’t normally find in a meadow, because it stays green all year. “It’s really nice to have one thing that doesn’t die back,” she says. She also installed a traffic-friendly groundcover, Dymondia margaretae, to shade out weeds and provide a walking path through the garden, and she likes to incorporate boulders, pea gravel, or Mexican beach pebble. “A meadow can be a meditative space, so you want a boulder or cedar bench tucked away somewhere,” she says.

Newsletter

Related Articles

Saudi Press
0:00
0:00
Close
Saudi Arabia and the United States Strengthen Ties Amid Global Developments
Saudi Arabia Hosts Global Conference to Promote Islamic Unity
The Impact of Artificial Intelligence on Education and Child Development
Saudi Arabia Announces Competition for Best Founding Day Outfits
Saudi-EU Food Security Officials Hold Talks to Strengthen Collaboration
Putin Expresses Gratitude to Saudi Crown Prince for Hosting US-Russia Talks
UK and Saudi Arabia Enhance Collaboration in Innovation and Technology
Denmark's Embassy in Riyadh Showcases Danish Cuisine with Saudi Influence
Saudi Artist Salman Al-Amir Unveils 'Tafawut' Exhibition in Riyadh
Saudi Arabia Offers Condolences to Kuwait Following Military Exercise Fatalities
Saudi Ministry of Islamic Affairs Completes Ramadan Preparations in Madinah
Etidal Secretary-General Hosts UN Counter-Terrorism Director in Riyadh
ADNOC Drilling Targets Over $1 Billion in Investments for 2025 Amid Gulf Expansion Plans
Derayah Financial Achieves Remarkable Growth in Saudi Brokerage and Asset Management
Saudi Arabia Shortlists 30 Firms for Mining Licenses in Eastern Province and Tabuk
Saudi Foreign Minister Engages Counterparts at G20 Meeting in Johannesburg
Oil Prices Decline Amid Rising US Inventories
Saudi Arabia's NDMC Plans Green Bond Issuance by 2025
Moody’s Affirms Egypt’s Caa1 Rating Amid Positive Economic Outlook
Oman and Saudi Arabia Strengthen Economic Ties with New Agreements
Saudi Arabia Investments Propel Expansion of Qurayyah Power Plant
Saudi Capital Market Authority Advances SPACs and Direct Listings
Global Energy Leaders Gather in Riyadh for Symposium on Energy Outlooks
Al-Ahsa Region Sees 500% Growth in Tourism as Saudi Arabia Prioritizes Development
Saudi Arabia Advances Entrepreneurial Ecosystem in Al-Ahsa with New Agreement
King Salman Approves Official Saudi Riyal Symbol
Saudi Credit Card Lending Reaches $8.4 Billion Amid Digital Payment Expansion
King Salman Approves Official Symbol for Saudi Riyal
Putin Thanks Saudi Crown Prince for Facilitating U.S.-Russia Discussions
Saudi Foreign Minister Attends G20 Meeting in Johannesburg
Saudi Arabia Prepares for Nationwide Founding Day Celebrations
Inauguration of Hira Park and Walkway Enhances Jeddah's Urban Landscape
Crown Prince Hosts Leaders for Informal Meeting in Riyadh Amid Gaza Rebuilding Plans
Saudi Official Highlights Achievements and Media's Role in National Transformation
Three Expatriate Women Arrested for Prostitution in Riyadh
Saudi Arabia's Diplomatic Evolution Highlighted at Saudi Media Forum
Healthy Eating and Preparation Essential for Ramadan Fasting
Saudi Arabia and Japan Forge Sustainable Textile Partnership
Advanced Limb Surgery Restores Mobility in Pediatric Cancer Patient
Jeddah Event Explores AI's Role in Boosting Saudi Arabia's SME Sector
UN Representative Highlights AI's Role in Perpetuating Gender Stereotypes
Saudi and Jordanian Leaders Discuss Enhanced Security Cooperation in Amman
Saudi British Society Honors Cultural Bridge-Builders at London Gala
Saudi Media Forum 2025 Explores AI's Role in Modern Journalism
Saudi Arabia's Saqer Al-Moqbel Appointed as WTO General Council President for 2025–2026
Saudi Deputy Ministers Engage in Diplomatic Discussions with U.S. and Dutch Officials in Riyadh
Saudi Arabia to Launch Iftar Program in 61 Countries During Ramadan
Saudi Visitors Expected to Spend £942 Million in UK During 2025
Saudi Arabia Gifts Kaaba's Kiswah to Uzbekistan's Center of Islamic Civilization
Digital Cooperation Organization Concludes Fourth General Assembly with Multiple Agreements
×