Sensory Garden Design and Construction for Playgrounds
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Sensory Gardens

Sensory Garden Plants

A Sensory Garden is a carefully designed planting area, where plants are grown which please all five of the senses: Sight, Touch, Sound, Scent and Taste.

SchoolPlaygroundDesigners.co.uk have vast Planting Knowledge which allows them to create the most stunning Sensory Gardens imaginable.Dependant on the School area available, an ideal Sensory Garden would have separate planting areas for each of the 5 Sensory types.

Where?

Sensory Garden Design

Generally speaking, Robert places a School Sensory Garden in a sunny position. He creates raised planting beds with footpaths and walkways throughout.

Children are encouraged to follow the paths along a Sensory Trail. Great fun and considerable learning is achieved by children being set Sensory Trail tasks. This encourages them to explore the different senses they experience of plants through an inter-active and hands on approach

Other Sensory Features

Sensory Playground Features

SchoolPlaygroundDesigners.co.uk introduce other visual, tactile or audible elements into a School Sensory Garden. Their sensory Mosaic Paths are a much requested feature. These can include water features, wind chimes, bridges, arches and seating areas all constructed from different materials (bamboo, smoothed timbers, rustic poles, smooth stones, rough stones, gravel and chippings). If space is limited, one raised bed can be constructed containing all 5 types of the School Sensory Plants

Taste Sensory Plants

School children (under supervision) can have great fun trying out different tasting plants.

Taste Sensory Planys

Examplse are Herbs, Nasturtiums, Mint, Water Cress, as well as a variety of Wildflowers, Fruit, Vegetables and Nut Trees. Robert likes to include both Fruit and Vegetable Gardens in his designs whenever possible.

Touch Sensory Plants

Many plants are rugged to touch particularly those with flaking bark (Eucalyptus, Silver Birch); children love the soft velvety feel of Lambs Ears and Pussy Willow Catkins.

Touch Sensory Plants

Feathery leaves are always popular with school children, both for their visual look as much as for their touch; Mimosas, Silk Trees and Tamarix are good examples

Visual Sensory Plants

Children love brightly coloured plants and these are generally easy to grow. Examples are Marigolds, Polyanthus, Red Hot Pokers, Sunflowers, and Pansies.

Visual Sensory Plants

Also included are plants with weird, exotic, unusual or massive leaves such as Palms, Tree Ferns, Gunnera, Ornamental Cabbage and Gypsophila.

Audible Sensory Plants

This section includes plants which rustle, chatter and whistle in the wind such as Long Grasses, Bamboos and Palm Trees.

Audible Sensory Plants

Many plants have seed pods which “rattle” in the wind such as Campanula, Campion, Yellow Rattle and the Indian Bean Tree.

Scent Sensory Plants

Robert likes to include as as many heavenly scented and fragrant plants as possible.

Scented Sensory Plants

These regularly include Mexican Orange Blossom, Sweet Pea, Geranium varieties, Honeysuckle, Star Jasmine, Curry Plant, Lavender varieties, Lemon Balm, and a variety of herbs such as mint, chives, sage, bay leaves, dill and coriander.

Example - A London Sensory Playground

An Example of a  Sensory Garden

See this Playground >>

A Fairy Poem

The Pin Cushion Fairy by Cecily Barker

Designing Playgrounds Fairy People come and look at me,
Asking who this rogue may be?
Up to mischief, they suppose,
Perched upon the briar~rose.
I am nothing else at all
But a fuzzy-wuzzy ball
Like a little bunch of flame,
I will tell you how I came.
First there came a naughty fly,
Pricked the rose, and made her cry;
Out I popped to see about it;
This is true, so do not doubt.

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