As the weather cools down, a Northwest garden comes into its own
3 Ways to Maximize Fall Color in Your Garden
David E. Perry

When she took on this West Seattle backyard, landscape designer Lisa Port wanted to create a garden that would shine year-round. But she admits to playing seasonal favorites: “I really love this garden in fall because it gets kind of unruly,” says Port. That’s when the ripe grasses turn golden and the dogwoods’ leaves blaze scarlet, the late afternoon sun intensifying the quintessentially autumnal palette. 

It’s a far cry from the ratty lawn Port found when she arrived on the scene, hired by homeowners (and Alaska transplants) Kathryn and Mark Daughhetee. Port achieved the low-water dreamscape by combining perennials like gaura and orange sedge that peak late in the growing season with evergreens like mugo pine, rosemary, and sedums for year-round lushness. She also kept a few existing plants that look their best in the fall, including Stewartia and coral-bark maple. But it’s the red leaves of the fernleaf fullmoon maples that really make the garden, Port says. “Against the blue sky, they glow.”   

Ebbs and Flows

With a mix of low groundcovers, mid-size perennials, and well-­established trees, the backyard was designed to lead the eye along peaks and valleys of vegetation. Combining traditionally pruned hedges with more wild, mind-of-their-own grasses and fall-blooming gaura adds points of interest without disrupting the natural flow of the landscape. The path provides tantalizing glimpses of Puget Sound before the garden opens up to a view of the water and the Olympic Mountains. 

David E. Perry

Steely Approach

Sleek and modern without being distracting, the Corten steel wall acts as a break in the garden and leads the way toward the house. The rusted façade works in all seasons, but can’t be beat when bathed in the light of a low-lying sun while ­surrounded by golden blooming grasses and fall’s changing leaves.

Point/Counterpoint

The pink flower clusters of ‘Morning Light’ Japanese silver grass and the straw-gold plumes of ‘Karl Foerster’ feather reed grass add movement and color. After they’re cut down in winter, attention shifts to the evergreen mugo pine, red-stemmed ­Sedum ‘Matrona’, and rosemary. All parts of the garden are watered with drip irrigation.