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An Expert Guide to Planting Design
with DAN PEARSON — Acclaimed naturalistic landscape designer. Multiple Chelsea Gold Medal Winner. OBE.
Lesson 31 of 31
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Dan shares a favourite way to easily and inexpensively fill an empty space to provide immediate colour and interest, as well as discussing the value of annuals in a garden.
In this lesson, I'll share a good way to easily and inexpensively fill an empty space to provide immediate colour and interest, as well as discuss the value of annuals in a garden.
When I dug the pond, I was left with a lot of displaced soil. I brought that soil up the hill, and we made a new level that extended the barn garden out to the plum orchard. I hadn't yet decided what I wanted to do with this area, so I wanted to give myself some breathing space to think about what planting I wanted.
To do this I sowed a pictorial meadow mix, developed by Nigel Dunnett. This has provided a tremendous spectacle for this first summer while I'm getting my ideas together.
This was sown at the beginning of April onto good, bare topsoil that I had just rotavated. Since then, it hasn't been watered once, and I've just done a tiny bit of weeding to take out a few pioneers that came in with the soil. Now at the end of July, and after an unprecedented heatwave, this is still providing an incredible impact. It's a really quick and easy way to provide interest in the garden.
If you've got a new site and you're not ready or able to take the whole thing on just yet because the resources aren't quite there, something like this pictorial meadow would be a really good solution.
Annuals are a wonderful thing to use in a garden, particularly when sown direct like this, because they can provide an immediate impact and a feeling that a garden is lived in straight away.
I tend to use annuals sparingly in the main perennial planting, but where I'm doing a bit of replanting I've used Nicotiana (tobacco plant) amongst the young aster plants, and sweet peas in gaps where things have failed and I wanted to plug them with something that provides summer interest.
So annuals are fantastically useful, and you should definitely have them on your plant list:
As with any plant that you introduce into a garden, you need to match the vigour of that plant and its lifecycle to the companions that you're putting it with.
Annuals are all about being immediate, and you can use that to experiment, for example with colour. When we first arrived here, I sowed four or five of these pictorial meadow mixes in different colours. That helped me to determine what felt right for this place.
Annuals are easy, quick and cheap, and help you to make decisions quickly.
Half-hardy annuals have value, but my favourite annuals are those that you can sow directly – the hardy annuals. They are much less maintenance – you simply sow them onto the ground at the right time, thin them if necessary, and then allow them to do their thing.
I like to introduce annuals into a planting to give it an ephemeral quality. Some of my favourites include:
I am also prepared to grow some half-hardy annuals that need a bit more cosseting. I start them off on the windowsills and can then grow them during the cold frames.
Nicotiana for instance, which have a hugely long season – from June until the frosts come – are very useful to have on the back burner for any gaps that might need plugging at the last minute.
You can find out more about Nigel Dunnett's pictorial meadows, and browse all his available mixes, here.
I've also written a blog about our pictorial meadow here at Hillside.
Ammi majus
Cosmos
Centaurea cyanus
Papaver rhoeas
Papaver rhoeas 'Cedric Morris'
Linum
Eschscholzia californica
Nicotiana
Orlaya
Silene
Suggested Reading
Natural Selection: A Year in the Garden by Dan Pearson
The Gardens of Arne Maynard by Arne Maynard
The Garden Jungle by Dave Goulson
Gardening for Bumblebees by Dave Goulson
Spirit: Garden Inspiration by Dan Pearson
Home Ground: Sanctuary in the City by Dan Pearson and Howard Sooley
The Garden: A year at Home Farm by Dan Pearson
Naturalistic Planting Design by Nigel Dunnett
Piet Oudolf At Work by James Corner and Noel Kingsbury (released in UK on 23 March 2023)
My partner Huw and I developed the concept for Dig Delve – a blog about gardens, horticulture, plants, landscapes, nature, food growing and eating. There are four seasonal issues each year and new stories every week.
RSPB's Nature's Voice provides a library of podcasts covering many aspects of the UK's wildlife.
RHS podcasts cover a variety of gardening topics. Here are a few recent episodes relevant to the topics discussed in this course:
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Butter's creativity is stunning! Her ability to incorporate brilliance in small gardens is magical!
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May 30, 2026
Your Instructor
Acclaimed naturalistic landscape designer. Multiple Chelsea Gold Medal Winner. OBE.
British landscape designer, horticulturalist and writer Dan Pearson OBE, has been designing award-winning gardens since 1987. His naturalistic use of plants, light-handed approach to design and deep-rooted horticultural knowledge has made him one of the most celebrated and innovative gardeners working today. Dan trained in horticulture at Wisley and Kew, before starting his garden and landscape design practice in 1987. In 2015, his show garden for Chatsworth and Laurent Perrier was awarded a Gold Medal and Best Show Garden at the Chelsea Flower Show. In 2014 Dan was appointed an advisor to the National Trust at Sissinghurst Castle. For over 20 years Dan has written regular gardening columns, with his work a staple of The Observer, and has written a number of best-selling gardening books.
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