|
Bible Garden
Designs
F. Nigel Hepper
Building
your own Biblical Garden by
F. Nigel
Hepper
Happily
there are no hard and fast rules to follow - in fact there are really no rules
at all related to planning a Bible garden. You can make it as you wish,
projecting your own interests, enthusiasms and personality. Of course, there are
horticultural and botanical aspects to consider as well as design practice, but
this is normal with any garden.
A special-theme garden deserves special
attention from the outset. The simplest way is to adapt your existing garden by
inter-planting it with biblical species and labeling them accordingly. This is
what I do in my own garden at home. I have several small patches here and there
devoted to particular species, as it is inappropriate, for instance, to have
onions and other vegetables in the herbaceous border. I also separate the
cereals and inter-sow them with this-tiles and poppies to form an attractive
mini-cornfield.
If you have room for trees and shrubs, plant as many of the
biblical species as you can, as they help to give all-the-year interest when
herbaceous plants are over. Green-house plants and tender species can be
incorporated during the summer, so make sure that your design accounts for them.
If you have sufficient space at school, college or church to devote an area
specifically to a Bible garden, the initial design will be an important factor
in its success.
|
For example, you may wish to have separate displays of
vegetables, fruits, spices and herbs, and so on, or to adopt an ecological theme
with aquatic, desert, woodland and field plants. Perhaps you can think of other
groupings that would enhance the display. Whatever the design, be sure to keep
the scale appropriate with small beds and narrow paths so that visitors can see
the plants and read the labels. Public gardens need to provide access for bigger
groups of people and to spread out the displays with larger clumps instead of
individual plants. |
The needs of disabled and handicapped visitors must be kept
in mind. Can you, for instance, use a sloping path
in place of a flight of steps? Carefully positioned seats transform a garden
into a place of tranquility, prayer and meditation. The choice of site is vital:
a shady damp place is sure to be a disappointment, whereas an open well-drained
site with light soil is best for these Mediterranean plants. See whether you can
make a level site more interesting by creating undulations or adapting a bank to
give a rock garden.
Even the excavations from a pool can be used to good purpose. If you want to
make a pool your centerpiece, it should be in a sunny place and not
over-shadowed by trees. It is as well to look ahead when planting trees and make
sure they will not cast their shade over the garden as a whole. An important
part of your planning should be how to maintain it after construction - the work
of knowledge-able weeding, sowing, propagation and other jobs should not be left
to unskilled laborers.

Bible Garden Pond
Labeling the plants in your Bible garden Good labeling can transform a
miscellaneous, obscure collection of plants into an interesting and instructive
garden. You will probably want to adapt the labeling according to your own
particular requirement, either for a private gar-den, or for one attached to a
college or church where the labels will be read by many visitors, but the
principles of clarity and information apply to both. Very large labels are
likely to be too obtrusive, and I would advise choosing ones that can be read
clearly, yet do not dominate the display.
Plastic labels may be ordered from the suppliers listed, or sometimes may be
purchased at garden centers. Anodized aluminum tickets are difficult to read, as
the wording has to be written in pencil along their length, and as they hang
down they must be read sideways. I suggest square plastic labels set in the
ground or hanging on tree trunks, with bold lettering that can be read by adults
standing upright as it is tiresome to have to bend down to scrutinize every
label! Engraved laminated plastic labels are even better if you can afford them.
Restrict the information to such items as the common name
in your language, the scientific name (even the Hebrew or Greek for the
erudite!) and a Bible reference. It may be possible to quote a verse or to
summarize a reference, for example:
Darnel
grass, Lolium temulentum
Parable of the Tares, Matthew 13 |
If visitors have to guide themselves around the garden, I suggest an
introductory plan and explanation on a board near the entrance. Alternatively, a
printed or duplicated leaflet could provide additional information which gives
wide scope for teaching aspects coupled with, say, Bible study groups. In
situations where the garden may be threatened by vandalism, such leaflets could
take the place of vulnerable labels, with the plants marked by numbers
corresponding to the notes and plan.

|