Fences come in all shapes and sizes, yet in one way or another they all serve the same purpose: to separate one area from another. At Glen Villa, my garden in Quebec, the oldest fence separates a former farm field from a driveway.
![It's obvious that this barbed wire fence is old -- the maple tree has grown around it.](https://glenvillaartgarden.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/untitled-13-of-15.jpg)
It’s obvious from the way the tree has grown around it that this barbed wire fence was put up a long time ago.
An equally practical but more decorative fence is the one I designed to protect shrubs from the deer that are such a plague in country gardens. I found the style so effective that I’ve used it in fences in the upper and lower fields, the Asian meadow and the Upper Room.
![I designed this fence made of steel posts and wire cable to be attractive but as invisible as possible from a distance.](https://glenvillaartgarden.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/untitled-11-of-15.jpg)
I designed this fence made of steel posts and wire cable to be as invisible as possible from a distance and attractive up close.
A totally impractical but decorative fence in the Asian Meadow uses ornamental Chinese tiles inset into a low wooden fence to delineate the edge of the meadow and separate it from a picnic area.
![Decorative Chinese tiles are set into a simple wooden structure.](https://glenvillaartgarden.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/untitled-14-of-15.jpg)
This photo shows how important hard landscaping can be in areas where snow comes early and stays late.
One of the most attractive deer fences I’ve seen is the one below, spotted in the Bridge Garden on Long Island. The casual arrangement of long sticks is a variation of a Japanese style.
![This simple structure and imaginative structure is an effective protection against the deer.](https://glenvillaartgarden.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/untitled-1-of-15.jpg)
This simple and imaginative structure is an effective protection against the deer.
Compare it, for example, to this more formal fence at the Morikami Japanese Garden in Florida.
![Tied bamboo fences are a staple of many Japanese gardens.](https://glenvillaartgarden.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/morikami-1-of-1.jpg)
Tied bamboo fences are a staple of many Japanese gardens.
Some fences are purely practical but even practical fences needn’t be unattractive. I saw the one below at Madoo, the Long Island garden of the late Robert Dash, and while its material is utilitarian, its colour lightens the surroundings and adds interest to the plants at its base.
![This fence probably screens an unattractive sight at Madoo, Robert Dash's garden on Long Island. It picks up on the strong primary colours used throughout the garden.](https://glenvillaartgarden.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/untitled-7-of-15.jpg)
The strong green is repeated throughout the garden along with other strong primary colours.
Some fences make strong visual statements. At Veddw, the Welsh garden created by Anne Wareham and Charles Hawes, an opening into a farm field needed to be fenced. The ground on one side was much higher than the ground on the other, and the land sloped markedly from end to end. They solved this problem with imagination, and at low cost, by using slats of varying heights.
![The uneven slats make a virtue of uneven ground.](https://glenvillaartgarden.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/untitled-8-of-15.jpg)
The uneven slats make a virtue of uneven ground and create an interesting silhouette.
A similarly imaginative fence is at The Grove, the garden of the late David Hicks, where the silhouettes of famous landmarks decorate one side of a very plain fence.
![A skyline at The Grove.](https://glenvillaartgarden.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/untitled-15-of-15.jpg)
An over-the-top fence at The Grove features the Parthenon among other buildings. How many can you identify?
For a fence that illustrates the interests of the gardener, one designed by Christine Facer Hoffman, a medical scientist turned garden designer, tops my list. Ms Facer Hoffman’s dog is named Pi and this fence makes his name a reality… it is an endless sequence of numbers listing the decimal points of pi. The fence is also practical, keeping gravel out of the vegetable garden.
![An aesthetically pleasing fence](https://glenvillaartgarden.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Througham-1-of-1.jpg)
The low metal fence that surrounds the vegetable garden at Througham Court is aesthetically interesting. I wonder, though, if anyone has ever tripped over the raised numbers.
It’s easy to install a low-cost utilitarian fence, but how much more interesting it is to design one that suits the situation, the interests and the aesthetics of the garden owner. A wonderfully contemporary fence at Pensthorpe Nature Reserve combines open and closed spaces, a principle that informs many garden designs. At first glance, the fence is a solid barrier.
![A mass of flowers soften the appearance of the fence.](https://glenvillaartgarden.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Pensthorpe-2-1-of-1.jpg)
A mass of flowers soften the appearance of the fence.
But as you walk alongside it, the fence opens to allow flowers to peep through.
![I love the combination of materials and colours in this Corten steel fence at Pensthorpe Nature Reserve.](https://glenvillaartgarden.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/untitled-2-of-15.jpg)
I love the combination of materials and colours in this Corten steel fence at Pensthorpe Nature Reserve.
Designing a fence like this takes skill and imagination. Add the wonderfully toned plants and you have a winner.