Bring the Shoreline to Your Backyard

Build a wind-resilient, salt-tolerant garden that captures the relaxed beauty of the coast — right at home.

Why it works

A coastal garden in a backyard works because it embraces rather than fights the elements. The open exposure typical of backyards mirrors the windswept conditions of shoreline landscapes, making salt-tolerant grasses and resilient perennials feel perfectly at home. The palette — silvery blues, sandy golds, and sea-glass greens — naturally harmonizes with outdoor furniture and poolside settings. Coastal plants are inherently low-water once established, making this a practical style for warm-climate backyards. The naturalistic, flowing planting style softens hard boundaries and creates movement that feels alive even on still days, turning a standard rectangular yard into something that recalls a dune walk.

How to achieve this look

Start by creating gentle mounds of sandy, free-draining soil to mimic dune contours. Plant ornamental grasses as the backbone: Muhlenbergia capillaris (pink muhly grass) for autumn plumes, Panicum virgatum (switchgrass) for height, and Ammophila breviligulata (American beachgrass) for authenticity. Add flowering perennials like sea lavender (Limonium latifolium), blanket flower (Gaillardia), and seaside goldenrod (Solidago sempervirens). Use weathered driftwood and smooth cobblestones as accents between plantings. Lay a crushed-shell or pea-gravel path through the garden. For screening, plant saltbush (Baccharis halimifolia) or shore juniper (Juniperus conferta). Finish with Adirondack chairs and solar lanterns to complete the coastal atmosphere.

See it with AI first

Arden lets you photograph your flat backyard and instantly see it transformed with dune-like mounds, swaying grasses, and shell paths. Experiment with different grass heights and driftwood placements until the coastal mood feels just right — all before buying a single plant.

よくある質問

Do I need to live near the coast for a coastal garden?

Not at all. Coastal garden plants are simply tough, drought-tolerant species that happen to thrive by the sea. They perform beautifully inland too — you are recreating the aesthetic, not the geography.

How do I handle wind in an exposed backyard?

Plant a windbreak layer of shore juniper or wax myrtle along the most exposed edge. Ornamental grasses naturally flex in wind rather than breaking, making them ideal for breezy sites.

What mulch works best for a coastal garden?

Crushed shell, pea gravel, or coarse sand are the most authentic choices. Avoid bark mulch — it blows away in wind and clashes with the coastal palette.

あなたの屋外空間を一新しませんか?

Ardenを無料でダウンロード — 数秒でお庭の変身をご覧ください。