garden with flowers bloom beside a flower pot and an ornamental wire cage for composting leaves

Post: November 7, 2025

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Compost structures combine science, nature, and art

How to take an artistic approach to compost structures

By Kari Ranten, Skagit County WSU Extension Master Gardener

 

 
Kari Ranten

Showing home gardeners how to compost yard and garden waste successfully is a cornerstone of the teaching priorities embraced by the WSU Extension Master Gardener program. It’s an age-old concept of allowing naturally occurring microbes to convert leaves, grass clippings, and other garden materials into a soil amendment and home for beneficial insects, worms, and other creatures.

“Gardeners have used compost for centuries to improve their soil and help plant growth. Incorporating compost into light, sandy soil helps it hold both moisture and nutrients, while adding it to heavy soil improves drainage.” (Rosen et al. 2018).

About Master Gardener Herta Kurp

Herta Kurp has served as a Skagit County WSU Extension Master Gardener volunteer since 1995 and, in addition to helping lead the composting program, is responsible for many of the creative installations throughout the Discovery Garden. Her projects include the archways at the main entrance and northwest corner of the garden; the plant house shade structure; a tall fence camouflaging the greenhouse and various benches, trellises, fences, and gates to individual gardens.

She also created the design for the dogwood sculpture near the main entrance, which was fabricated by the Skagit Valley College 2022-23 Weld Club. She also designed and helped construct the new worm chalet at the Skagit County WSU Extension office. Kurp grew up in Germany, where she developed a deep appreciation for agriculture and the environment. She studied architecture, came to the United States while in her 30s, and owned her own architectural firm specializing in residential design. Her latest projects have focused on building creative, attractive, and small-scale compost structures in the garden.

smiling woman in garden working
Master Gardener Herta Kurp | Photo © Crowell Photography

The process also reduces the burden on the environment. “Composting reduces the flow of wastes to landfills or burn piles and produces valuable organic matter for the soil at the same time… Composting is a simple, yet important way to improve our communities and the environment.” (Cogger et al. 2017)

Despite the proven benefits, a compost pile may not be the homeowner’s favorite thing to tend to or look at all year long. Gardeners often contain compost in an enclosure using wire or wood fencing, cement blocks, bricks, or a commercially available bin to prevent the materials from spreading or blowing away.

The good news is: There are more artistic options. The Skagit County Master Gardeners’ Discovery Garden provides examples of small-scale composting structures that take an attractive and creative approach, thanks to longtime Master Gardener Herta Kurp.

compost tower with twigs and vines woven through wire cage holding compost leaves
Some of Herta’s composting creations are built out of simple wire structures with twigs and vines woven in for interest. © Crowell Photography
twig and vine structure in garden
Other structures, built from pruning waste, are designed to blend into the surrounding environment like this one in the Meadow. © Crowell Photography
pumpkins in front of structure built of twigs and branches with a hole in middle for looking out.
This structure in the Children’s Garden is designed to be a photo op for adventuresome kids and adults. © Crowell Photography

Kurp has been involved with the Discovery Garden since the mid-1990s, before trees were planted and structures built. She helped shape the plan and built environments of the garden and led the composting program. Until the past couple of years, a centralized system of bins was in use to support composting for the entire 1.5-acre garden.

More recently, Kurp and other master gardeners have started to explore the use of smaller composting stations within the 30 different garden “rooms” at the garden. So far, about 10 percent of the material generated for compost has been redirected to the individual gardens’ smaller compost stations, creating efficiency and points of interest.

Know & Grow


Creating Outdoor Holiday Arrangements

Free, no registration required
Just in time for the holiday season, Skagit County Extension Master Gardener Karen Bruce will demonstrate how to create a festive outdoor container display using a variety of readily available greenery and berries from the landscape, such as evergreen branches from fir, pine, cedar, spruce, and other greenery. If you have greenery to share with others, you may bring some along for attendees to take home for an arrangement.

Join us for this free, pre-holiday event!

Tuesday, November 18, 2025 – 1 pm – 2:30 pm

NWREC Sakuma Auditorium 16650 State Highway 536, Mount Vernon


 

pot on porch with evergreen and holly branches

At the Discovery Garden, Kurp has always focused on her keen interest in composting, permaculture, and caring for the environment, while also nurturing her creative side through hands-on design and building structures. The outcome is the development of a series of informal “habitat heaps” within individual gardens that carry an artistic flair, using materials readily available within the garden.

Kurp collects items pruned from the garden during routine maintenance and uses those supplies to construct interesting compost structures that blend into the garden landscape. Twigs, vines, branches, and raspberry canes are turned into small-scale compost piles, creating a natural, artistic look that blends into the landscape. This approach supports the insects, birds, and other creatures of the garden, is less expensive, and more attractive.

 

© Kari Ranten

 

“This stirred my imagination and creativity,” she said. “We can use all of the materials that would go into a burn pile or compost. The structure itself is organic and can become compost in the end.”

In the Meadow area of the Discovery Garden, a tall structure built of larger branches complements a nearby 15-foot tree snag that was intentionally left to support the environment. On a late spring day, a fledgling robin took a break on the compost structure during an early flying lesson. 

In other areas, a teepee shape is built and enhanced with wreaths made of dogwood branches that are pliable when first pruned and easily fashioned into a circle.

“It becomes a part of the personality of the garden and every season it looks different,” Kurp said of the natural structures. “In winter, the structure comes to the fore, like the skeleton of the garden. In other seasons, it blends more into the surrounding growth, providing a screen for the compost pile.”

The artistic compost piles have a serious, science-based task, but also create “whimsical, playful” shapes in the garden, she said. “We have some nice examples, and it’s a good demonstration, which is what we are all about at master gardeners. It’s an invitation to be creative in the garden in a new way.”

paper with line drawings of compost structures.
True to her artistic training, Herta tests her ideas on a sketch pad before building. © Herta Kurp
structure build of branches and twigs in garden
The composting structures standout during some seasons, during other seasons they blend into the background. © Crowell Photography
twig and brush compost structure
This compost structure in Meadow at the Discovery Garden provides easy composting for leaves and garden debris. © Crowell Photography

Visit the Discovery Garden, which is open to the public daily from dawn until dusk, to see examples of a variety of composting options:

  • The creative compost structures made of branches, twigs, vines, and stumps can be found in Naturescape, the Children’s Garden, and the Meadow.
  • The main, centralized compost station features a series of bins where master gardeners separate branches and green material, which is chopped into smaller pieces to expedite organic breakdown. Interpretive signs provide information, and master gardener volunteers are often on hand on Tuesday mornings from March through October to explain the process.
  • A few small, classic wire enclosures are tucked into individual gardens, including one along the path in the Fall/Winter garden with explanatory signage that showcases the different colors of the layers of compost as it breaks down, with the dark mulch at the bottom and the latest additions on top.

Resources:

Resources readily available about how to get started with home composting; the benefits, different methods (including hot and cold), and storage structures include:

References:

Cogger, C., Sullivan, D., and Bary, A. (2017) Backyard Composting. Washington State University Extension. Publication #EB1784E.

Rosen, C., Brown, D., Mugaas, R. and Halback, T. (2018) Composting in Home Gardens. University of Minnesota Extension.

Shell, L. (2020) How to Make Compost at Home. Based on HG 35 Backyard Composting. University of Maryland Extension

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Kari Ranten is a retired journalist and health care communicator who became a certified Skagit County WSU Extension Master Gardener in 2024.


Questions about home gardening or becoming a master gardener may be directed to Skagit County WSU Extension Office, 11768 Westar Lane, Suite A, Burlington, WA 98233; by phone: 360-428-4270; or via the Skagit County WSU Extension website.

Washington State University Extension helps people develop leadership skills and use research-based knowledge to improve economic status and quality of life. Cooperating agencies: Washington State University, US Department of Agriculture, and Skagit County. Extension programs and policies are available to all without discrimination. To request disability accommodations contact us at least ten days in advance.




garden fence with conifer bush on the left side

Post: October 17, 2025

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Conifers in the Homescape

Selecting and caring for conifers will provide year-round beauty and function

By Alison Hitchcock, Skagit County WSU Extension Master Gardener

Alison Hitchcock

Conifers make a valuable addition to any garden, providing a variety of landscape uses: hedging, windbreaks, ground covers, or specimen focal points. They provide year-round color, texture, and a range of appealing attributes. Once established, conifers require very little care, rarely need fertilizer, resist most insects and diseases, and pruning becomes an optional task.

The term conifer is derived from the Latin words “con” and “ferre, referring to the cone, and the term “to bear”. Broadleaved trees such as holly, laurel, or eucalyptus reproduce with flowers and fruits; conifers reproduce through cones. Both pollen (male) and seed (female) cones are formed; all are wind-fertilized. Most conifers are monecious (Greek, one house) with male and female cones occurring on the same tree, but several genera are diecious (two houses). The age at which a conifer bears cones varies, but it usually takes at least 10 years before cones appear. Maturation can vary from 1 to 3 years. Some dwarf varieties never develop cones.

 

Know & Grow Series:

Conifers in the Home Landscape

Free, no registration required
Listen to Master Gardener Alison Hitchcock speak on caring for conifers in the home garden. Alison Hitchcock has been a Skagit County WSU Extension Master Gardener since 2001. Prior to retirement, she worked for the Department of Natural Resources as the Northwest Regional Silviculturist.

Tuesday, October 21, 2025 – 1 pm – 2:30 pm

NWREC Sakuma Auditorium, 16650 State Highway 536, Mount Vernon

© Naoki Suzuki | Unsplash

While the majority of conifers are considered evergreen (foliage retained more than one growing season), there is a small group of conifers: larch, bald cypress, and dawn redwood that lose their needles every year, i.e., deciduous. Despite the term, conifers do not keep all their leaves indefinitely. Needles become less efficient as they age, accumulate surface debris, and receive lower levels of sunlight due to interior foliage. These unproductive leaves are shed over time, though the needle life span will vary by species. Pines rapidly shed needles every 3-4 years; spruce and fir needles turn yellow and drop gradually; yews turn yellow and drop in the late spring or early summer of their third year. Sequoias, redwoods, and arborvitae shed small branchlets. We witness the flagging of western red cedar each autumn as older foliage dies.

 

Tree and Site Selection
When selecting a conifer, there are several things to consider: function, size and space needs, sunlight, and soil needs. Numerous cultivars of all shapes and sizes are available from local nurseries and garden centers to meet the needs of your garden design.

 

large male and female cones hanging from spruce tree
Norway spruce with female and male cones. Photo ©: Sairus Patel, Stanford University

Selected Conifer Names

Family Genus Common Name
Cupressaceae Thuja red cedar (arborvitae)
Cupressaceae Cupressus cypress
Cupressaceae Chamaecyparis false-cypress
Cupressaceae Colocedrus incense-cedar
Cupressaceae Juniperus juniper
Cupressaceae Sequoia coast redwood
Cupressaceae Sequoiadendron giant sequoia
Cupressaceae Metasequoia dawn redwood
Cupressaceae Cryptomeria Japanese cedar
Cupressaceae Taxodium bald cypress
Taxaceae Taxus yew
Taxaceae Cephalotaxus plum yew
Pinaceae Thuja red cedar (arborvitae)
Pinaceae Larix larch
Pinaceae Cedrus true cedar
Pinaceae Pinus pine
Pinaceae Tsuga hemlock
Pinaceae Pseudotsuga Douglas fir
Pinaceae Ablies true fir
Pinaceae  Picea spruce
Scadopitaceae Sciadopitys umbrella pine
Araucariaceae Aracucaria monkey puzzle
Araucariaceae Wollemia Wollemi
Podocarpaceae Podocarpus podocarp yew

A cultivar represents a deviation from normal characteristics common to a species. Though some cultivars are the result of human hybridization, most cultivars arise from mutations that give rise to dwarf and giant forms, variegated foliage, weeping, and prostate habits. If the unique traits are maintained over multiple generations, plant biologists can give a cultivar a new name and propagate it through grafts and cuttings.

 

When selecting a conifer, one must anticipate the tree’s mature size and space needs. The American Conifer Society has established four size categories for conifers: Miniature, Dwarf, Intermediate, and Large, to aid in landscape design. Once established, growth may vary slightly due to local environmental conditions, but registered cultivars should maintain their described size. It is essential to note that any conifer will continue to increase in size at the stated rate beyond 10 years. If your tree becomes too large, corrective measures are limited to perpetual pruning, relocation, or removal. In most cases, severe pruning will destroy the conifer’s natural charm, although some plants may recover over time. Often, removing and replacing a large tree is easier, although removal can be costly.

 

graph showing sizes of conifers
Shade Tolerance of Selected Conifers
Tolerant

  • Hemlock
  • Yew
  • Western red cedar
  • Redwood
  • Chamaecyparis
  • Sitka spruce

Intermediate

  • Douglas-fir
  • Sequoia
  • Blue spruce
Intolerant

  • Pine
  • Juniper
  • Noble fir

Very Intolerant

  • Larch

 

 

Shade and soil conditions can be particularly important when selecting the right conifer. Shade-tolerant species are able to thrive and reproduce under low light levels, while intolerant species require full sunlight and little or no competition. Most conifers prefer full sun and evenly moist, well-drained, neutral to acid soil. The few species that tolerate wet soils include Atlantic white cedar, dawn redwood, and some spruces. Drought-tolerant species include juniper, cypress, and pine.

 

Pruning and Shearing
The pruning needs of conifers are minimal if plants are chosen to fit their allotted space. Always prune a conifer for a particular purpose: removal of diseased or dead wood, control of size, and control of shape. Though the techniques sound similar, there are essential differences between pruning and shearing. Pruning refers to the selective removal of branches for the health and proper size of a plant. Shearing removes foliage to create a uniform surface or shape without regard to branch structure. Pruning cuts encourage growth throughout the plant, while shearing is generally limited to the current year’s growth.

house with overgrown trees in front of entry
Conifers blocking windows. Photo ©: Pexels.com
small conifer growing by pavement
Whorled-branched conifer Photo ©: Alison Hitchcock
small conifer with random branches
Random-branched conifer Photo ©: Robert M Mutch Jr. | North Carolina State Extension Service

 

pruner ready to cut leader on conifer

Pruning of Douglas fir leader. Developing Quality Christmas Trees in the Pacific Northwest © Oregon State University Extension | Chad Landgren

 

Pruning Whorl-branched Conifers
(Douglas fir, spruce, true fir, true cedar, pine)

Whorl-branched trees will not form new buds on old wood, so do not cut back to the brown, aged stems. To control height or branch length, always cut back to a side branch or dormant bud. Pruning the outermost branch tips back to a bud will also encourage fullness. For a formal shape, shear in summer after new growth has expanded but before new buds form in the fall. To replace a lost leader, support the uppermost lateral branch to a vertical position with a splint and remove after one growing season.

Unlike other whorl-branched conifers, a pine’s current year’s shoots (candles) should be pruned in late spring. To slow growth or produce a more compact shape, pinch one-third to one-half of each candle; to maintain size, remove most of each candle. Shearing is not recommended for pines.

Pruning Random-Branched Conifers
(Juniper, Arborvitae, Chamaecyparis, yew, hemlock)

Pruning to maintain shape is best done in early spring so that new growth covers the cut ends. Snip branch tips back lightly. Hand pruning rather than shearing creates a more natural shape, but plants can be sheared in early summer once the tree stops growing.

Sheered topiary Photo David McElwee | Pexels.com

Yew and hemlock are exceptions to most conifers in that new growth will develop on old wood, and they are forgiving of poor pruning and very suitable for hedging. To maintain size, prune in late winter or early spring before new growth begins. Avoid trimming the tops of hedges until the desired height has been reached. If shaping for fullness or a formal hedge, lightly trim back the outermost new growth using hand pruners or hedge shears. Shearing of new growth can continue into early summer.

Incorporating conifers into your garden design not only enhances visual interest but also promotes a resilient landscape with minimal upkeep. By carefully considering their size, light, and soil requirements these remarkable plants can thrive in your garden. Whether used as hedges, focal points, or ground covers, conifers will provide lasting beauty and functionality to your outdoor space. 

When to prune or shear is mainly dependent on conifer branching patterns, either whorl-branched or random-branched. Whorl-branched (determinate) conifers put on one flush of growth each spring. Buds at the tips of the tree flush in the spring, elongate until sometime in July, and then set new buds in the fall for the following spring. Random-branched (indeterminate) conifers produce new growth from buds at the tips of the branches and from dormant buds further back on the stem than the whorled-branched species. The result is that random-branched conifers can be cut back more severely and still produce new growth.

General guidelines for pruning:

  • Remove dead, diseased, or broken branches anytime.
  • Prune all conifers, except pine, before new growth starts in the spring or during the semi-dormant period in mid-summer after growth has stopped.
  • If shearing, begin in late spring or early summer after new growth begins.
  • Do not prune evergreens in late summer or early fall; new growth will not harden off and will be subject to winter injury.
  • Do not prune into the inactive center because new branches will not form to conceal the stubs.
  • For prostrate or open-grown trees, selectively prune individual branches rather than shearing the whole plant.
pruned bush with trunk showing
Pruning into dead center Photo ©: Alison Hitchcock

Resources and References:

American Conifer Society, accessed April 25, 2025, 

Welch, H., (1966) Dwarf Conifers – A Complete Guide. Charles T. Branford Company, Newton, Massachusetts

Landgren, C. (2025) Developing Quality Christmas Trees in the Pacific Northwest, Oregon State University Extension. 

Bird, R. (1994) Ornamental Conifers. Quintet Publishing Limited, London, UK.

Hartman, J., Pirone, T., and Sall, M. (2000) Pirone’s Tree Maintenance. 2000. Oxford University Press, New York, NY.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Alison Hitchcock has been a Skagit County WSU Extension Master Gardener since 2001. Prior to retirement, Alison worked for the Department of Natural Resources as the Northwest Regional Silviculturist.


Questions about home gardening or becoming a master gardener may be directed to Skagit County WSU Extension Office, 11768 Westar Lane, Suite A, Burlington, WA 98233; by phone: 360-428-4270; or via the Skagit County WSU Extension website.

Washington State University Extension helps people develop leadership skills and use research-based knowledge to improve economic status and quality of life. Cooperating agencies: Washington State University, US Department of Agriculture, and Skagit County. Extension programs and policies are available to all without discrimination. To request disability accommodations contact us at least ten days in advance.