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From The Garden Club of America Collection at the Archives of American Gardens

 

June 26, 2019

Espaliers, Attractive and Functional. Who Knew?

These days, many espaliers are designed to accent a garden, providing an intricate visual attraction to visitors. Trees or shrubs are trained on a wall or on a trellis to form different, oftentimes decorative, patterns. But did you know that they serve a functional purpose as well?

In the 17th and 18th centuries fruit trees were often trained against kitchen walls. Not only did the trees provide an ornamental aspect to the garden but the planting location aided in fruit production. The fruit was of a better quality and grew faster because of the warm and sheltered environment. Placing fruit trees along a wall also enabled fruit to grow in a compact space while providing shelter to vegetables growing below.

The Oxford English Dictionary defines espalier as 1. a lattice-work or frame-work upon which fruit trees or ornamental shrubs are trained and 2. a fruit tree trained on a lattice, usually of woodwork, or on stakes. While espalier refers to the framework thatsupports the plant, the term also implies the whole process, the framework, the plant, and the act of training the plant.

Although it is not used as much, the term espalier can also refer to plants trained to create borders. Plants are trained in such a way that they establish a dividing line or defining edge for a garden, but without the extensive work of cutting and grafting the plants required in pleaching. In 1741 English writer and encyclopaedist Ephraim Chambers referred to a ‘British espalier’ as a row of trees planted around the outside of a garden or plantation for its security.

The next time you are wishing that you had apples sooner, consider planting an apple tree right along your kitchen wall.

First photo: La Colline, Philadelphia, PA. May 2008. Wendy R. Concannon, photographer.

Second photo: The Patterson Garden, Litchfield, CT. May 2010.  Marla J. Patterson, photographer.

All images are from The Garden Club of America Collection at the Archives of American Gardens. By Julie Hunter, AAG/GCA Garden History & Design Intern. August 2012.

 

 

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