Gardening
on a Grade:
Building
a Living Retaining Wall*
by
Susan Fernalld, Master Gardener
In 1990
I built a retaining wall at my home at 8,400 feet in the
mountains west of Boulder. It faithfully holds back
a steep slope with only earth and plant roots as mortar
and it doubles as a flower garden. Following
the shape of an east-facing sunny slope for most of its
length, the wall curves at one end under a stand of aspen
trees, making that portion of it a shady and cooler north-facing
retaining wall. In midsummer, the wall garden features sun-lovers
like Heterotheca villosa (Golden Aster), Eriogonum umbellatum
(Sulphurflower), Erigeron speciosus (Showy Daisy), Campanula
rotundifolia (Harebell), Stachys byzantina (Lamb’s
Ear), Potentilla gracilis (Cinquefoil), Artemisia ludoviciana
and Monarda menthaefolia (Horsemint). The shady portion
of the garden features Trollius laxus (Globeflower) and
Polemonium caeruleum (Jacob’s Ladder). The only non-natives
on the above list are the Lamb’s Ear and the Jacob’s
Ladder.
The retaining wall is made of double bull nose concrete
blocks (12” wide, 8” high, and 16” deep).
The bottom course of blocks is buried flush with the ground,
and each successive course is set half upon the blocks below
and half into the hill so that the wall looks like a broad
stairway. As I dug into the hillside to make the wall, I
quickly transplanted plants taken from the hillside into
the earth-filled cavities of the concrete blocks.
The retaining wall in very easy to maintain. The garden
propagates itself by re-seeding or spreading via roots down
through the block cavities into the underlying soil. I have
incorporated very few non-natives into this zone 3 wall—
opting for native plants, with their proven survival skills
at high altitude. Other
native plants that bloom at other times of the growing season
in the wall are Rosa woodsii (Rose), Potentilla fruticosa
(Shrubby Cinquefoil), Sphaeralcea coccinea (Scarlet
Falsemallow), Aquilegia coerulea (Blue Columbine), Sedum
stenopetalum (Stonecrop), Linum lewisii (Blue Flax), Castilleja
miniata (Indian Paintbrush), Gaillardia aristata (Blanketflower),
Antennaria rosea (Pussytoes), Calochortus nutalli (Sego
Lily), Cerastium arvense (Field Chickweed), and Thermopsis
montana (False Lupine or Golden Banner).
*
A retaining wall over four feet in height may require a
building permit and may need to be designed by a structural
engineer.