Gardening tips, gardening info and heaps of ideas to help gardeners of all experience get more out of their hobby and out of their gardens.
The way I see it, there are three main types of gardener - the Starter, the Finisher or the Maintainer. And while many of us well-rounded gardeners - ahem!! excuse my while I barf - think we are truly the embodiment of all three, each of us tend primarily to one of them. We may display characteristics of all three but when 'push comes to shove' we find that one of them truly characterizes our gardening behaviour.
So let's explore all three and see whether we can associate with any one in particular.
1. The Garden Starter
The Starter is a gardener who becomes empassioned for new projects. They love to pioneer new areas within their garden or take on a task that requires an inordinate amount of inspiration and creativity. In fact, if a Starter is unable to find something new to create within their garden they can easily become distracted or even bored with their garden.
Now, we all know that every gardener starts new things in their garden. A new flowering border, some landscaping that needs to be solved or a project to enhance different elements of the garden. Yet the difference between someone who is a Starter and other gardeners is that they truly find limited joy in the other two types of gardening behaviour.
A Starter is usually a bad Maintainer. When confronted with a sick plant they view it as an opportunity to replace it rather than revive it. Fertilising is only performed when a plant is dug into the soil and weeding is seen as the antithesis of gardening as a hobby.
And they are also bad Finishers. Most of their projects get half-completed and another is started because "it was becoming a little boring".
You can always tell whether a gardener is a Starter by taking a tour through their garden with them. Rather than spend copious amounts of time enjoying the plant specimens, the Starter will be quick to show you their plans for the future. A new garden bed here; a water feature there; and that area in the back is going to be an amazing [Starter's add your own project here].
2. The Garden Maintainer
Where would we be without the Maintainers? This behavioural tendency is best displayed by those who love to topiary. If you get any satisfaction from clipping and shaping a hedge, and doing it more than once, then you're most likely a garden Maintainer.
Maintainers love to keep the garden looking at its prime. Lawns are manicured, hedges are uniformly trimmed and flowering perennials are dead-headed daily. Now this may be the extreme Maintainer but if you can associate with keeping your garden at a level of some perfection then you probably fit into the Maintainer category - although most Maintainers don't think there are categories to fit into!
The Maintainer usually struggles to be creative by themselves and will often draw on other gardener's inspiration for new projects. And while they may actually do a better job than the Starter their projects will usually lack the flair and charisma that Starters can produce.
Maintainers usually aren't good Finishers either. They can often balk at projects or plant specimens that require some extra oomph! to get them completed and would rather cover them up with something that can easily be maintained than work at finishing them.
3. The Garden Finisher
The final persona to discuss is the Finisher - the clean-up guy! A Finisher is usually a gardener that loves to come into a garden or landscaping project towards the end rather than the start. They will most often buy an established home with gardens that need renovating rather than a house that is just sand and builder's rubble.
The Finisher takes great delight in bringing completion to the garden. No new projects are started without every other task completed and put to rest. When you take a tour with this type of gardener they will most likely discuss what has been done in the garden than what is likely to happen in the future.
Finishers are pretty good at maintenance though not to the same level as a Maintainer. They see maintenance as a finishing task rather than just the upkeep of a beautiful garden. Their lawns are mowed regularly because that's how lawns are supposed to be finished. Hedges might be trimmed if that is part of the garden style but you will never find Finishers shaping a topiary.
Yet, with all their skills as Finishers and their ability maintain gardens they struggle to start gardens. They will often look at a blank canvas with a similar blank view not knowing where to start or what to do.
Conclusion
Me, I'm a bona-fide Starter. I suck at maintaining the garden and there are more than one project that could do with a little finishing. But, I'm starting to acknowledge my gardening strengths and weaknesses - honing the strengths and working on the weaknesses.
It's the part of me that truly enjoys reading gardening blogs. There are some gardeners who are awesome Maintainers who make me feel guilty inspire me to continue with my struggling plants or achieve a higher level of excellence within my own garden. Likewise there are some great Finishers who can enthuse me about finally completing some of my projects - so that I can go and start new ones, of course.
So which type of gardener are you - a Starter, Finisher or Maintainer?
Comments
I'm a starter for sure!!
Posted by: sandy | June 9, 2008 9:18 AM
A starter for sure!!
Posted by: sandy | June 9, 2008 9:19 AM
I am more on self starter and maintainer I love gardening and I whenever I start one I make it a point that I can maintain it. I want them to see to full grown on my garden.
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Home Garden
Posted by: Home Garden | June 9, 2008 4:51 PM
I dont know what I am. I do like to start things but I do finish them as well. I enjoy maintaining my garden but not to the extent of topiary etc. I suspect I am a maintainer.
Posted by: Helen | June 9, 2008 8:37 PM
Great topic! My wife said if there ever was a garden starter that is me! She says I'm so eager to get going in the spring and once everything is in the ground I like to watch and not participate. I don't think I'm that bad but maybe.
Posted by: nhnursery | June 9, 2008 10:41 PM
Definitely a starter. Just this weekend my husband told me that he thought I liked the idea of gardening better than the gardening itself. Given that I was complaining about going out to weed and deadhead, I suppose he's right.
Posted by: Tracy | June 10, 2008 3:07 AM
I like the whole process, it is calming to prepare the beds and inspiring when the veggies really take off.
Posted by: Mittleider gardening | June 10, 2008 9:20 AM
I think I'd fall into the "starter" catagory, while Dh is more a "maintainer". I think that works to our advantage. We work well together and, fortunately, we both like to see our projects finished.
Our preferred garden styles were (still are sometimes) quite different, which makes it garden-planning interesting! How about you and your wife...do you agree on your garden's style?
Posted by: Lin | June 10, 2008 4:06 PM
I guess I'm a starter, although that's because we keep moving and I have to start a new garden all over again. I would love to be a finisher someday...
Posted by: walk2write | June 11, 2008 5:02 AM
Lin - sometimes. Usually one of us compromises on some aspect of our style or the one we're trying to achieve in a particular part of the garden.
Posted by: Stuart | June 11, 2008 10:26 PM
I'm definitely a maintainer. I love to preen, deadhead, and trim.
Weeding though, not so much! I don't enjoy it, but I do it anyway. I don't spend long sessions weeding though. I yank them as they come up in the normal course of doing the other 'maintainer' tasks I enjoy. The quicker I pull the weeds the smaller and easier they are to yank, and the fewer there are since they don't get a chance to flower and go to seed.
Posted by: linda | June 15, 2008 9:24 PM