Delaware Valley Water Garden Society
  • Home
  • Events
    • February 7, 2023 - Planning Meeting
  • News and Photos
    • Photo Galleries >
      • August 6, 2022 - Stoneleigh Garden
      • July 17, 2022 - ​Pond and Garden Tour
      • 2020 PHS Philadelphia Flower Show
      • February 8, 2020 — Annual Kickoff Lunch
      • July 21, 2019 - ​DVWGS Pond Tour
      • May 19, 2019 - Plant Exchange and Pot-Luck Lunch
      • 2019 PHS Philadelphia Flower Show
      • 2018 PHS Philadelphia Flower Show
      • July 16, 2017 - ​DVWGS Pond Tour
      • June 17, 2017 - ​DVWGS Social
      • May 21, 2017 - ​Annual Plant Exchange and Potluck Lunch
      • March 14, 2016 — DVWGS Visit to the Chocolatrium
      • July 12, 2015 — DVWGS Annual Pond Tour
      • June 14, 2015 — Visit to Japanese House and Picnic
      • January 25, 2015 — Annual Kickoff Lunch
      • August 23, 2014 — Pot Luck Social
      • June 29, 2014 — DVWGS Annual Pond Tour
      • March 30, 2014 — DVWGS Trip to Winterthur
      • January 26, 2014 — Annual Kickoff Lunch
    • Newsletters
    • Articles
  • For Members
    • Join/Renew
    • Commercial Members
    • Garden and Plant Societies

Make a Big Splash with a Tiny Water Garden

Picture
by Joseph Tomocik

Plunge into the world of aquatic plants by designing a mini-pond in a small container. I’m into little water gardens in a big way. Small gardens permit you to get close enough to really appreciate the intriguing foliage of the aquatic plants, their spectacular flowers, and their sometimes vibrant scents. They’re foolproof, too. If you wind up with a design that you don’t like, it’s easy to rearrange the plants. And the plants are tough - most are almost hard to kill and require virtually no maintenance. All you need is a sunny spot with at least six hours of direct sun a day, something that holds water, and a few plants. The first step in designing a small water garden is deciding on the container. Anything that holds water can contain a water garden. I find widely sold half barrels to be perfect.

The problem, though, is that toxins oozing from the wood can foul both water and plants. My solution is to purchase a durable, plastic liner made to fit perfectly. These are available at many garden centers. Or you could line the barrel with a flexible PVC liner; just be sure to use at least two layers if the material is 10 or fewer millimeters thick; otherwise, the liner will only last a year or two. I’ve also used clay and plastic containers. To keep water from seeping into and through the porous clay of a ceramic container, I apply two coats of sealer. I also enjoy using black plastic containers that look like cast-iron pots.

Next, use plants with contrasting shapes to create appealing compositions. Plants with contrasting shapes, colors, and sizes offer interesting contrast. I like to combine the tall, slender, spiky shapes of an erect, fine-leaved marginal plant like yellow flag iris or sweet flag with the broad-leaved foliage of an easy to grow tropical marginal like taro. Marginal plants are those that are usually placed along the edges of a water garden; in the wild they grow in shallow water. I especially like using plants that have a story of their own: pitcher plants, for example, eat insects, digesting small bugs in the recesses of their large, trumpet shaped leaves. To finish off a planting, I sprinkle a few small floating plants – like water lettuce or water hyacinth over the surface of the water. I also might soften the hard edge of the container by letting a cascading plant like water mint, with its fragrant foliage and powder-blue flowers, tumble over the side. Whatever plants I use, I try to keep them in scale with the container. Huge plants spilling out of a tiny container most likely would not create a pleasing effect. There are no strict guidelines to follow, so I just aim for a plant and container combination that looks harmonious and proportionate.

For a crisp look, use only a few plants. The first mistake beginning water gardeners make is jamming too many plants into their container. Though a half barrel-sized container easily accommodates up to four plants potted in 2-gallon pots and a host of floating plants, there’s no need to use that many. An overcrowded container often results in designs that are chaotic. Keep it simple. Especially when you’re starting, it’s easiest to make pleasing designs with only two or three plants. As you gain experience, you can graduate to more complicated compositions using greater numbers and varieties of plants.

However many you use, how and where you place plants in the container is of paramount importance. The plants should fit as a unit to create the picture you want.

First, determine how the planting will be viewed. Designing a container that will be seen from a few directions is a lot easier than making one that’s meant to be viewed from all sides.

Unless the container is to be displayed in the round, place a tall, spiky plant at the center rear to create a dramatic backdrop. Then use a broad-leaved marginal or two in front or to one side, where their generously sized leaves will contrast sharply with the whiplike fronds of taller plants.

Remember to keep it simple, otherwise you risk diminishing the effect. For containers that will be seen from all sides, I put the tall, vertical leaved plant in the middle and arrange broad leafs on each side. For either kind of design, I arrange and rearrange the plants until I get the effect I’m looking for. It’s easy to change the height and position of plants by perching them on bricks or empty, overturned containers. Most marginals, whether their leaves are thin and vertical or broad and horizontal, give excellent results when their crowns are placed 6 inches or less beneath the water’s surface. Only after the main parts have been positioned do I begin adding accents like floating or cascading plants, or for a special touch, an eye-catching specimen. Container care is easy. If the plants don’t seem to be thriving, more than likely the problem is not enough light. If that’s the case, then move the container to a brighter spot. If it’s too heavy to lift, remove the plants, empty out the water, move the container, and then rearrange it.

Water plants grow quickly but I encourage them by using fertilizing tablets. For new plants, I delay fertilizing until they show signs of growth. When a plant gets big, I divide and repot it in heavy clay soil. Dense soils won’t cloud the water when containers are moved, and, just to be sure, I always firm the soil fairly tightly before lowering the container back into the water. If the plants seem too robust, I limit their growth by keeping them in small pots and trimming off the oldest and tallest leaves.

There’s no need to change the water in a container garden, although you should top it off every few days to replace liquid that may have evaporated. I’ve never had problems with mosquitoes breeding in containers, but if you want to eliminate any chance of establishing a breeding ground for insects, you might wash the larvae out by overfilling your container with water or add a few mosquitofish (Gambusia affinis), voracious eaters that feed on mosquito larvae. Aquatic nurseries (see Sources) have also developed specially formulated products for killing mosquito larvae. When winter comes, it doesn’t have to mean the end of the garden. Most water plants can be brought indoors and used as houseplants, kept in an aquarium, or even placed in a tub of water in a cool basement. Hardy plants could be left in the container but may need protection against freezing. Where winters are severe, birdbath-type heaters can prevent your container water garden from turning into a giant ice cube. 

When spring comes, plants are usually ready to divide. Use the extras to start a new water garden - by then you’ll probably be immersed in the world of aquatic plants.


©2022 Delaware Valley Water Garden Society
 Contact info@dvwgs.com for answers to all your questions about the Society.
 This web site is maintained by Sandy Grimwade.
 Contact webmaster@dvwgs.com for website problems.