Harmonize Meals

Nature provides a peace-inspiring backdrop – here’s how we harness it

November 2024. By Cassy Aoyagi: Al fresco dining unifies two great strategies for creating harmony: sharing a delicious meal and gathering in nature. While I love to cook, I enjoy creating just-right natural spaces even more.

Here are a few ways we set the table for harmonious connection long before anyone makes a meal.

Outdoor spaces feel more spacious. Bea’s Secret Garden | Garden Conservancy Pasadena Open Days

Place with Space

Wrapped in lush, leafy foliage, an al fresco dining area equal in size to a home’s dining room will feel more spacious. People tend to stand and move about in a way they will not indoors. This brings a relaxed vibe amplified by the oxygen and visual variation of the natural environment.

Views of nature create a sense of calm. Showcase Spanish, Holmby Hills

Trade TV for Trees

Where open floor plans invite the TV to dinner, we like to create spaces that invite the trees. Their rustling beauty adds a calm to conversation that no show or game can match. For those who prefer later meals, a fire pit can also provide a fun focal point.

Victory gardens can be vertical. Seascaped Contemporary | “Kitchen Trends,” Forbes Magazine

Serve Munchies

The grape vine that softens this fencing nourishes the eye – it can also be harnessed to save the hangry. Of course grapes can be selected, washed in the outdoor sink, and displayed in a lovely dish – they can also be a delightful reward for those invited to make themselves at home and snatch a snack.

Meals can be a choose-your-own-adventure. Adored Meadow | Native Plant Garden Tour, 2019

Invite Foraging

Collaborating on a meal invites conversation and connection. We love offering guests the opportunity to select their own salad greens. We often add biodiverse, native hedges and a selection of sages – each can engage the adventurous in taste-tests to find just the right match for the meal.

Whether you choose to host your meals indoors or out, we wish you harmony, connection, collaboration and joy during the holidays and always.


More Information

Forbes Mountain Retreat, La Cresenta

Water sinking and fire defensive garden evolves with the seasons

First featured on the Native Plant Garden Tour in 2022, the Forbes Mountain Retreat opened again for the rainy-day 2024 tour. The Certified Wildlife Habitat provides an abundance of wildlife-friendly foliage, including rare chaparral native plants. Its hyper-local plant palette is responsible for its ever-evolving, ever-blooming, lush and leafy year-round aesthetic.

Beyond the beauty, the Retreat is a powerfully water positive property. It actively slows, spreads and sinks stormwater to refuel LA’s groundwater. The features that do so offer pollinators and birds safe spaces to hydrate. We hope you’ll find it as restorative as they do!

Sunset Magazine included the property in a rundown of fire defensive actions homeowners can take to improve wildfire safety. It’s lush, leafy aesthetic impressed.

Designing for fire defense doesn’t mean you can’t still have an enjoyable entertaining paradise.

Sunset Magazine, 2024

Project Snapshot

Beyond the beauty, the Retreat is a powerfully water positive property. It actively slows, spreads and sinks stormwater to refuel LA’s groundwater. The features that do so offer pollinators and birds safe spaces to hydrate. We hope you’ll find it as restorative as they do!

See the gardens dramatic seasonal changes in the full project gallery in Houzz, where you can save your favorite ideas.

Plant Palettes

Want to create a powerfully water-positive garden? Beautifully retain slopes? Check out the plant palette of the Forbes Mountain Retreat, and save your favorite slope-saving ideas in Pinterest. For Gordon Ownby’s tips on capturing spectacular wildlife photos, see our Client Insights section.

Coastal Canyon Retreat, Santa Monica

Established tree canopy and wildfire dfense

Nestled in Santa Monica Canyon with deep, healthy redwood groves, this modern landscape epitomizes an authentic LA coastal canyon aesthetic. Vibrant natives surround the home with greenery and blooms throughout the year. While heat and drought tolerant, they also add stability in deluge. Ember resistant and permeable hardscape materials create a distinctive aesthetic in harmony with the home’s compelling architecture.

Sunset Magazine illustrated an effective, ember resistant and clutter-free Zone 0 in a 2024 explanation of how to protect homes now that fire season is year round.

When it comes to breaking down the defensible zones within your landscape,
FormLA encourages using landscape to provide a final layer of defensive strategy.
The most important landscaped space is the five feet closest to the home.

Sunset Magazine 2024

Project Snapshot

Designed and built while LA experienced several years of drought, the Coastal Canyon Garden’s owners aimed to protect their expansive, established tree canopy and complement their home’s distinctive architecture. We designed and built a smartly irrigated understory paired with ember-resistant, water-permeable patios, and walks through clusters of fragrant native foliage to support their lifestyle and add a layer of fire defense.

The property was featured on the 2017 Pacific Palisades Garden Tour.

See the gardens dramatic seasonal changes in the full project gallery in Houzz, where you can save your favorite ideas.

Plant Palettes

Want to protect established tree canopy in drought? In a high fire severity zone? Check out the plant palette of the Coastal Canyon Retreat, and save your favorite fire defensive ideas in Pinterest.