Zenolinlo.
Small-space gardens · Canada

Compact yards, planned for a Canadian growing season.

Zenolinlo collects working notes on laying out small residential gardens in cold and short-season climates — how to fit beds, paths, seating and growing space into a few hundred square feet without crowding any of them.

A densely planted mixed border in a small garden
A layered mixed border packs height, mid-storey and groundcover into a narrow strip. Photo: Wikimedia Commons (CC).
What gets covered

Design decisions that matter most in a small Canadian garden

A limited footprint and a limited frost-free window change the priorities. These are the recurring themes across the articles.

Layout

Zones before plants

Walking routes, a sitting spot and growing beds are sketched first. Plant lists come after the structure is settled.

Climate

Hardiness and microclimate

Canada's plant hardiness zones range widely; a sheltered city courtyard can read a zone warmer than the open lot next door.

Soil

Raised beds and drainage

Where native soil is heavy or frost-heaved, contained beds give a faster, more controllable root zone.

Planting

Native and adapted species

Regionally native perennials and grasses tend to handle local winters and pollinator needs with less intervention.

Hardscape

Paths that earn their width

In a tight plan, a path is also a sightline and a frost-free standing area. Material and width are deliberate choices.

Seasons

Short windows, staged tasks

Spring prep, summer maintenance and fall cut-back are sequenced around a frost-free period that may last only a few months.

Articles

Field notes

A planted walkway dividing garden beds
Layout · Updated June 3, 2026

Planning a Compact Canadian Yard

Turning a small, awkward lot into zoned space: measuring, mapping sun and wind, and deciding what to leave out.

Read the article →
A timber raised vegetable bed
Soil & structure · Updated June 3, 2026

Raised Beds in Cold-Climate Gardens

Why contained beds suit short seasons and heavy soils, how deep to build, and how frost shapes the materials.

Read the article →
References worth keeping

Where to check the regional details

For figures that change by location — hardiness zone, last-frost dates, regulated species — these public sources are the ones consulted rather than reproduced here.

Government of Canada — Plant Hardiness

The national plant hardiness zone maps and species models. planthardiness.gc.ca

Canadian Wildlife Federation — Native Plants

Regional native plant guidance for gardens and pollinators. cwf-fcf.org

Contact

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