Reading the Land: Borrowed Scenery and Sightlines
Use trees, pergolas, and strategically placed boulders to frame distant features the way a park overlook frames a mountain rim. A simple timber arbor can tighten your view, guiding the eye toward a church steeple, a ridge line, or even a glowing sunset.
Reading the Land: Borrowed Scenery and Sightlines
Borrow a ranger’s approach to layered vistas. Establish a textured foreground with meadow grasses, a sculpted midground with shrubs and stones, and a calm background canopy. Even in small yards, careful layering creates depth that feels expansive, dignified, and unmistakably park-like.
Reading the Land: Borrowed Scenery and Sightlines
On a foggy morning in Shenandoah, a veteran ranger moved our group twelve steps forward, and the valley snapped into focus. At home, lowering a deck by eight inches revealed a hidden skyline. Tiny shifts can unlock astonishing, breathtaking views—try one this weekend and report back.