How To Design a Moon Garden
Scented plants in silvery white hues keep the garden glowing
When evening falls and it's too dark to weed, deadhead or start a new project, it's time to turn off your busy mind and turn on your senses. The garden becomes a whole new place after dark, filled with mysterious sounds, fragrances, and luminous colors.
What Is A Moon Garden?
A moon garden can be enjoyed from dusk to dark by both sight and smell. It's an especially pleasant space to be savored after the heat of the day has dissipated and folks are looking to relax in a calm and restful setting. It is typically defined by pale/light-colored plants that are heavily scented.
There are lots of easy ways to make your garden a more compelling destination in the magical light of evening. Incorporating just a few of them will keep you outdoors as long as possible, and hopefully add a whole new dimension of enjoyment.
Add a Rest Stop
If you want to tune into your garden in the evening, you need to slow down. Way down. In fact, the best way to tune in is to just sit down. If you don't already have a bench or two in your garden, get yourself something to sit on. Like a sensory garden, you want visitors to focus less on navigating long paths and bumpy terrain, and more on relaxing. Having a destination is important — especially after dark.
Best Plants For a Moon Garden
Fragrant Flowers
There are many flowers that become more heavily scented after dark because they use their fragrance to attract moths and other nighttime pollinators. In the calm, moist air of evening, the fragrance of these flowers can seem to hover over the entire garden. Add a few of the plants listed below (or add them all!) and enjoy an olfactory adventure as you follow your nose to seek out the source of each scent. Here are some favorites.
Casa Blanca lilies are especially fragrant.
Plants | Why We Love It |
Nicotianas | N. alata and N. sylvestris, which are both white, are the most fragrant. |
Brugmansia and datura | Both are scentless in the daytime; they turn it on after dark. |
Moonflower | A vine that thrives in heat, it has fragrant, white, trumpet-shaped blooms. |
Licorice plant (Helichrysum petiolare) | Silvery foliage is soft to the touch |
Lavender | A heady fragrance combined with dusty gray leaves and purple blooms. |
Dahlias | 'My Love' and 'Eternal Snow' are pure white, while 'Eveline' sports edges tinged in purple |
Stock | This is a lackluster name for a beautiful annual with a carnation-like scent |
Artemesia | Feathery silver foliage glows at dusk |
Tuberose | This is a tender bulb that needs to be dug and stored indoors over the winter |
Mockorange (Philadelphus coronarius) | This shrub has fleeting but fabulous white flowers |
Alyssum | More fragrant in the sun, alyssum's honey-scented blooms are still fragrant after dark |
Cosmos | Tall, billowy annuals are easy to start from seed and boast white and pink flowers. |
Lilies | 'Casa Blanca' is especially fragrant |
Heliotrope | Both the purple and the white varieties have a vanilla fragrance. |
Pick Plants That Glow
At dusk, and especially when there's moonlight in the garden, white flowers become luminous and can be seen from quite a distance. Most of the evening-scented flowers described above are white as well as fragrant. Other flowers to consider adding to your garden include white varieties of the following: clematis, roses, foxgloves, daisies, cosmos, impatiens and cleome. Sprinkle them around the garden to create little patches of moonlight.
Pale gray foliage, especially if the leaves are slightly fuzzy, really seems to glow in the evening light. The best plants for this effect are lamb's ears (Stachys byzantina), Artemesia, Lamium maculatum, lavender, garden sage (Salvia officinalis), Plectranthus argentatus 'Silver Shield', Licorice mint (Helichrysum petiolare), and Russian sage (Perovskia atriplicifolia).
Include Gentle Lighting for Ambience (and Safety)
If you want to add lighting to your evening garden, keep it subtle. To appreciate the white and silver plants, you'll need to let your eyes adjust to the fading light. If there are bright lights scattered through the garden, that effect would be lost. Overly bright lighting has also been show to be detrimental to bats, birds, and other wildlife who may require darkness as part of their life cycle. Low-voltage or solar outdoor lights can add a soft glow, as will candle-powered lanterns. You might even use some white twinkle lights to accent a special tree or garden structure.
Special Features to Add to the Moon Garden
Once you've got plants and seating figured out, it's time to add some extras:
- A white or pale-colored arbor or trellis glows at night, and serves as a great support for vining plants like clematis or moonflower.
- Moving water catches moonlight in a magical way, and a little pond or self-contained water feature can take on a whole new life after dark.
- As winds calm and ambient noise levels drop, you can really start appreciating the sound of leaves that rustle (think about an ornamental grass) or the soft tinkling of wind chimes.
Whether you enjoy your moon garden in the company of friends and family, or on a silent stroll by yourself, you'll find it's a soothing, soulful way to put the day to rest.
Last updated: 10/05/2023
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