Archive for the ‘Specialist Gardens’ Category

Feng Shui Gardens

A Feng Shui garden, once constructed is a place to relax and reflect and a place to get closer to mother nature.

By utilising the four elements and the compass points within the garden you can create a well balanced and relaxing environment with out conflicting with the natural feelings of the area.

Lifestyle Landscapes work in conjunction with Helen Lickerish from Maia Design who is a Feng Shui expert, our Feng Shui designs are overseen by Helen’s expert eye to give the perfect Feng Shui experience in your garden.

Working closely with Maia design enables us to complement the harmony between garden and house, using Helens skills to cleanse and balance the energies in the house and our skills to cleanse and alter the garden, we really can provide a complete Feng Shui experience.

For more information on Feng Shui in your garden, please get in touch.

Sacred Gardens

This is a whole or part of a garden set aside for ceremony, spiritual communication and celebration. It is specially tailored to the client’s needs, and is planted more formally, although this planting may be a formal structure containing soft waves of wild plants, as well as stones, crystals and monuments with sacred significance. Its key elements are;

  • Formal and highly symbolic structure
  • Symbolic planting
  • Strong linear or curving paths
  • A focal point, often symmetrically placed

A sacred space can be created within another kind of garden, such as the meditation garden, adding an extra dimension to an already tranquil place.

For more information about Sacred Gardens please get in touch.

Spritual Gardens

Spiritual GardensWe live in a society that is losing its spiritual way. We find it hard to find inner peace and the extra dimension to life that gives us joy, energy and strength. We want to turn back to the land to rediscover that spiritual dimension.

I work with energy to encourage harmony and balance, strengthening it all with specific plant combinations for rest, healing, protection, stimulus, psychic work or ceremonial use.

If modern elements, such as busy roads, detract from the serenity of an ancient place, then native trees (e.g. oak for strength and permanence, elder for spiritual protection) can sometimes be planted to provide a screen. Soft sounds from moving water, grasses and bamboos can also divert the mind from unwelcome noise.

How do the different aspects of a spiritual garden work?

Trees

Trees

Trees are the strongest link to earth, and they encourage the flow of those energies through the other plants. After all, in more spiritually aware times, trees were often important landmarks and meeting places.

 

Water

waterWaterA watercourse is a natural channel for the energies in a garden, providing both stimulus and serenity.

The sound of rippling, trickling water can aid meditation, and a still pool of reflected light, plant shadows and sky can add another whole dimension to the landscape.

 

Often a pool will become the spiritual focal point of the garden, just as springs and wells were sacred in earlier times. Pets, birds and wild animals also find them irresistable.

Lawns and Paths

lawnLawns & PathsWalking on soft, silent grass is a wonderful feeling, and I like to use turf in healing gardens. Grass is the foil for planting schemes and can be important in inducing a sense of calm. 

However grass is not suitable for all gardens, and paths made of local materials like bricks, cobbles, stone or wood, serve to divide the space, channel energies and lead the eye to a focal point, a monument, a water feature or a seating area.

Seating

SeatingSeatingBeing still and giving ourselves the chance for contemplation is central to the restorative power of a lovely garden. In order to encourage an enhanced sense of the spiritual in an outdoor space, seating is carefully placed for maximum peace, privacy and vision.

 

It might be a scented, shady place looking out over a garden filled with colour and light; it might be a private corner framing a vista; it might be a simple linear view ending in a special feature, a pool, an ornament or a monument.

Plants

PlantsPlantsColour, perfume, texture, sound, flavour, all the stimuli we need to awaken the senses in our spiritual search. Native flowers and trees link us directly to the land. They flourish in this climate and encourage a balance of insects, birds and mammals to build a healthy ecosystem.

 

 

Herbs and medicinal plants add strength to the spiritual links in a garden, as the sun releases their healing oils. Some well-loved flowers have rich healing properties too;

  • Foxglove- to treat heart and gall bladder; calming
  • Geranium- to treat depression
  • Honeysuckle – to treat poor circulation, lungs and bowel
  • Hypericum (St John’s wort) – to treat stomach problems such as ulcers
  • Lavender – to treat sleeping disorders
  • Lilies – to strengthen the immune system
  • Marigolds – to aid in healing tissue
  • Rosemary – to stimulate memory
  • Snowdrops – to aid in grieving and depression

In addition to the special properties of chosen plants, colour combinations can be planned to achieve a particular effect in healing, meditating or spiritual work and ceremony.

Garden for the less able

The begining of work providing both access and a usable area for a wheel chair bound client with the incorporation of a gravity fed watering system taking the rain water from the house.

During

Garden for the less ableGarden for the less ableGarden for the less ableGarden for the less able

 

 

 

 

 

After

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Meditation Gardens

Meditation Gardens
Gardens for meditation should be well balanced, harmonious and peaceful. The energies within these gardens need to be more subtle and distractions from every day life, such as a water feature will aid in the clearing of the mind prior to meditation.

Meditation Garden
 

 

 

Its key elements are:

  • Still or softly moving water
  • A peaceful seating area
  • Gently moving, textural plants ( bamboos, grasses)
  • Soothing colours and scent

This garden can also contain beautiful framed vistas, archways or moon gates, and winding pathways to aid the meditation process.

Pebbles and crystals can also aid in clearing the mind for meditation.

Meditation Garden

 

 

 

Sometimes the planting or the construction of the walkways can be symbolic, involving patterns significant to the client or to the spirit of the place itself.

For more examples of our Mediation Gardens, please see our portfolio page.

Healing Gardens

Healing GardensA healing garden is one in which the central focus is on the whole person, family or group, in body, mind and spirit. It is a place where plants are specially chosen for their medicinal properties, or for their traditional uses in cleansing and restoring our natural balance.
This may also be a place where healers, health practitioners and therapists work, so it may contain a room or enclosure surrounded by an oasis of healing plants, including, if needed, health-giving fruit and vegetables. Its key elements are;

  • Sensitive and specific planting
  • Sensory stimulus using colour, texture and scent
  • Harmonious layout and structure
  • A relaxing space to enjoy looking at the garden

Each healing garden is unique and tailored to the clients specific needs.

For more examples of our Healing Gardens, please see our Portfolio page.

Garden Design for the less able

The garden design for the less able is tailored to the individual, taking into account the restrictions and limitations of the client.

Lifestyle Landscapes always try to design the garden so the client can maintain as much of the garden as they wish to and are capable of.

Every client is different there are no hard and fast rules about what to include in the design.

Contact us to see what we can do for you.

Please see below for examples of our work: