Fresh Ideas to Decorate Your Outdoor Walls With Greenery

  1. Add attractive trellising


Investing in trellising that enhances your home’s exterior – whether you choose to grow a climbing plant on it or not – can help add year-round appeal. Choose a trellis that matches your home and paint it to coordinate with your trim. Plant evergreen or flowering vines, such as the pink bougainvillea vine here, to cover the trellis.

 

  1. Pair a vine with potted plants


This is a great combination for entryways, garden sheds or along the side of a garage, because it adds interest at multiple viewpoints. Climbing fig (Ficus pumila, zones 9 to 11), planted here with potted foxtail agave (Agave attenuata, zones 9 to 11), thrives in partial shade and fills in rapidly to cover vertical surfaces with tendrils that feature dime-sized leaves.

 

  1. Hang a miniature vertical garden


Framed vertical gardens can be tucked into small nooks, helping to break up a blank wall the same way wall art does inside. Mount one next to the back door, or hang a trio of them across the exterior wall of a garden shed.

 

  1. Pair decorative metal panels with leafy greens


Metal screens featuring geometric patterns mixed with foliage plants create a bold garden statement. In this garden, vines grow up the sides to frame the panels. Here’s another example of a metal screen mixed with planting. This time the plants emerge from a built-in planter at the base of the screen, helping to anchor it more in the overall design.

 

  1. Display air plants on a trellis


Add air plants to a wall-mounted metal trellis for a clever, quick way to spruce up a blank wall. Air plants need no soil to grow (keeping walls clean) and thrive in areas with bright, indirect light. Every week or so, depending on your climate and air moisture, remove the plants from the trellis and soak them in a bucket of water.

 

  1. Create a planted wall pattern


Geometric patterns made from trained evergreen vines look fancy and aren’t too difficult to achieve if you don’t mind frequent clipping.


Start by establishing your desired pattern with wires fastened with nails or eye hooks to the desired wall or fence. Then, plant a vine like trailing ivy or confederate jasmine (Trachelospermum jasminoides, Zone 8) to grow along the lines of the trellising, cutting or rewrapping any shoots that stick out from the structure.Here, Asian jasmine (Trachelospermum asiaticum, Zone 8) was trained in a diamond pattern to cover the wall of a guesthouse.

 

  1. Install a living wall


Custom living wall systems can be expensive to have installed, but the popularity of vertical gardening has resulted in more consumer-friendly (and budget-friendly) planting options. Wall-mounted planting pockets or vertical planters, for example, can cost significantly less and can be installed without extensive structural or watering systems.

Tip: Including some trailing plants can help conceal the vertical growing structure.

 

  1. Mount a staghorn fern


Staghorn ferns (Platycerium bifurcatum) are air plants, called epiphytes, and have evolved to grow without soil on tree trunks and branches in mild, tropical and semitropical climates. They can thrive in home gardens in similar conditions, mounted to a board with a few handfuls of damped sphagnum moss. Hang one inside or out to liven up a blank wall in a spot with bright, indirect light.

 

  1. Add an elegant espalier


Training a tree into an espalier against a wall adds a formal touch to a garden or courtyard and saves valuable planting space. You can purchase a tree already staked as an espalier or train one yourself, if the tree is between three and five years old and still has finger-width-sized lateral branches.If you’re planning to train the espalier yourself, plant the tree against a wall and add trellising to support the espalier structure. Then, choose the primary lateral branches (often in matched pairs for a symmetrical form) and gently pull them down into straight, horizontal lines, fastening them to the trellising. Remove other lateral branches and cut the top part of the trunk where it meets the top of the trellis to encourage lateral growth.

 

  1. Allow trailing plants to cascade off the roof


Place potted plants on flat-roofed sheds and outbuildings, allowing vines to trail down the sides of the building for a creative, unexpected look. Place roof pots on saucers to catch excess water or make sure the roof is sloped enough for quick drainage.

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