Creating a Garden Sanctuary
Design Ideas to Help You Get Started
June 11, 2009 John
Stuart Leslie

Sara grinned as she
approached her garden entrance, the gargoyle gazing intently as she walked through the gated
archway. The morning sun brimmed the stone wall just as she sat down on her carefully positioned
bench. Right on cue the rabbits and quail made their way to the feeding spot, sheltered by the
majestic Palo Verde tree. A butterfly hovered so ever close as she noticed a lotus flower petal
floating in the pond. Then -- a gentle breeze awakened the delicate sounds of the wind chime,
soothing her spirit.
Sara has a secret garden, a sanctuary where she can go to escape the
rigors of daily life, to read, meditate or watch the sunset. Anyone can create their own sanctuary
garden using some selective design principles. Here’s a quick primer on how to design your own
sacred space.
Select a location within your yard that is secluded, away from the
main activity areas. Ideally, the spot will be under the canopy of a tree, screened from view yet
provides observation of your natural views like the mountains or the sunset. Make the space
intimate, but enough to support a couple of chairs or a bench and the plants and accessories
within. A trellis with vines can be built to provide screening and a canopy.
You may have just the spot. If you have a home in a subdivision with
rectangular lots side by side to your neighbors, make sure your neighbors windows don’t look down
onto your space. Be aware of nearby air conditioner equipment and other mechanical equipment that
would be in view, not to mention the noise. Avoid views of power lines or anything you find
objectionable.
Let’s say it’s going to be about 10 x 10 feet or so. This is just
enough to handle your sitting area and perhaps a focal point, small fountain or other unique
feature within the space. In order to create the space, you must create its enclosure by creating
the walls. If not using existing fencing or your house walls, you can create the enclosure with
plant material (hedges), wood fencing, block walls or iron work that would support vine growth or a
combination.

Next, decide on the
flooring material. It could be formally paved such as concrete, traditional bricks, or concrete
pavers laid in a unique pattern. It could be more casual or rustic as using fine crushed granite,
perhaps with a small area of paving to support the heavier structures. Or use stepping stones set
in the soil with ground cover growing between for a softer look. A checkerboard pattern using 12”
square bricks with clover, moss, grass or creeping Thyme in between is always a popular
option.
The space should have a focal point that could be a fountain or
perhaps a gazing globe or statuary. For color, you may consider flowering shrubs, colorful annuals,
a uniquely glazed pot or particular garden art. A pleasing wind chime and a water element such as a
small fountain or birdbath will add the dimensions of sound and movement. Make sure you select
colors and accessories that have a special meaning to you. You could even use an item that is
inside your home provided it can withstand the outdoors. A comfortable chair or bench carefully
positioned with a small table will complete the space.
A sanctuary garden is ideally designed to reflect one’s inner
emotional needs. The garden can be a source of strength, renewal, contemplation, appreciation of
nature, peace and joyfulness. A sanctuary having the purpose of functioning as a retreat from a
hectic world is easier to design because it has a single purpose function. All your design and
material decisions will be based on how does this contribute to the sense and feeling of a
sanctuary, and how is it special for my needs and tastes?
Creating a garden that functions as a sanctuary can be generic in its
elements. However, you can take it a step further by creating a theme such as “My Tuscan Sanctuary
Garden”, “My Hawaiian Tropical Getaway” or “My Asian Serenity Garden”. Of course, once you get
inspired to build such a space, you may find the motivation to renovate the rest of your
yard…
Related Articles:
What is a Spiritual
Garden?
The Soul of a
Garden
John Stuart Leslie is creator and founder of My Sacred Garden. A website
that blends the mind, body & spiritual lifestyle of the conscious consumer with the
pursuit of gardens, gardening, design and art. He holds a Master's degree in Landscape
Architecture and has been a landscape designer and contractor since 1982.
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