Garden visit: Late summer in Therese’s classic garden
Sunflowers and dahlias shine in warm autumn tones, giving Therese’s garden a cozy and atmospheric feel. It’s the perfect time to take a deep breath and enjoy everything that has grown over the summer.

About the garden:
Garden owner: Therese Penne Rusten, @so_far_so_garden on Instagram, her husband Jo, and their children Mathilde and Sondre
Garden: Semi-detached house with an outdoor space in a classic style, approximately 300 square meters
Hardiness zone: Hosle in Bærum, H3-H4
The air is filled with the scent of blooming sweet peas and ripe apples. Late summer and autumn bring a different atmosphere to the outdoor space. The colors change, the light hits differently, and the air feels fresher. At Therese’s, the pink and white cosmos are in full bloom, and the large dahlia heads shine toward the sun. In this garden, romance and tradition blend, creating a soft and inviting expression.

Enjoying rather than striving
“The end of the gardening season is more relaxing than the beginning. I no longer need to fertilize as much, water constantly, or tend to tiny seedlings,” says Therese.




Now it’s time to enjoy all the work that has been done earlier in the season—preferably in the sun, surrounded by abundant flowerbeds and planters.

Early in the autumn, the daybed on the terrace gets a lot of use. The family loves to relax here after work and school. With its covered roof and heat lamp, outdoor life can be enjoyed here well into the season.
A splash of color
The flowers in the beds, planters, and container garden on the terrace are still kept in the classic color palette from earlier in the season—pink, white, and purple. But with the autumn sun, orange dahlias and yellow sunflowers have also opened, adding extra warmth and depth.



A bouquet of happiness—entirely grown in the garden. Could there be a greater sense of luxury?
Shrubs, trees, and perennials that return year after year have shifted to more reddish tones. The tall sunflowers stretch toward the sun and serve as a camouflage wall for the garden’s trampoline—an idea Therese came up with herself and has tested over several seasons. ‘Moonwalker’ is the sunflower variety she swears by because of its bushy growth, multiple flowers per stem, and excellent width coverage.

Therese has created a perennial bed with organic shapes around the trampoline to hide it as much as possible. Tall, bushy sunflowers of the ‘Moonwalker’ variety form a vertical camouflage wall.
Therese’s clever flower tricks
In DIY planter on the terrace, a dahlia hedge shows off its most beautiful side, full of flowers and buds. When the frosty nights approach and Therese digs up the dahlia bulbs, she replaces them with flowering bulbs so the planters burst into a full spring celebration when the sun warms up. This way, she maximizes flowering throughout the season in the same spot.
“Camassia, the great bear’s-foot, is one of my absolute favorite flowering bulbs. It has a unique look with spikes that I love, and it comes in many different colors. It can be planted alongside columbines, as they bloom beautifully at the same time. I also swear by Darwin tulips. They return year after year. Here, ‘Salmon Impression’ and ‘Light and Dreamy’ are among my favorites.”

The container garden on the terrace is overflowing with blooms. In the background, you can see the planters where Therese grows dahlias from early summer. When the bulbs are dug up, flowering bulbs are planted in their place to ensure a floral celebration early in the next season as well.
Therese’s top tips for succeeding with summer flowers
- Fertilizing is important, especially when summer flowers are in pots. Therese gives them pelletized chicken manure once a month, sprinkling it around each plant and then watering thoroughly. It’s also smart to fertilize when rain is forecast.
- Regularly cut flowers for bouquets and pinch off dead flower heads, as this stimulates more blooms.
- Starting seedlings indoors can be a good idea. This allows for earlier flowering, and the plants become more robust against slugs and other pests.
- If you’re going away for a few weeks, you can cut off all the flower heads on your summer flowers. This encourages them to set new buds, so you’ll return to a garden in full bloom.
Autumn = a flower bonanza
The dining area by the outdoor kitchen is set for an autumn feast. A tall and generous arrangement from the garden takes center stage on the table. Apples and small pumpkins are scattered across the tablecloth.
“One of the best things about autumn is that the lushness is at its peak. I love making bouquets and decorations with flowers from the planters and beds now. Something that always looks stunning is placing chicken wire at the bottom of a tall vase, filling it with water, and then arranging flowers and branches in it until I’m happy with the shape. So simple and so decorative,” she says.


Beautiful flowers are scattered on top of the cake stands, adding the finishing touch. The muffins are baked by the children and decorated with blackberries they picked themselves just a meter from the table. It’s harvest time in the garden! A climbing plant with long branches full of ripe blackberries spreads across the entrance to the terrace, tempting everyone to pause and taste as the family comes and goes.
“I recommend choosing the ‘Thornless Evergreen’ variety, which has no thorns. It’s the most child-friendly,” Therese advises.

Sondre thinks it’s especially fun to taste the garden. Today he’s outside picking blackberries to decorate the homemade muffins for the day.
A delicious outdoor space
“The children love that there’s so much to taste. They probably appreciate it more than all the flowers. This is my favorite area,” Therese laughs. Apples, blueberries, herbs, and black chokeberries are also ready to harvest now. Black chokeberries are considered a superfood because they’re packed with vitamins and antioxidants.
“They’re a bit bitter, so we don’t usually eat them straight from the bush. But they’re perfect for freezing and using in smoothies or crumbles to boost energy through the winter. The leaves also turn beautiful autumn colors,” she says. Herbs like mint, arugula, basil, oregano, and rosemary also shine in the autumn sun.
“They smell even better when you rub the leaves between your fingers. Both Mathilde and Sondre love eating them straight from the plant. We also like to use them on pizza, in spaghetti, and in salads. Mint is the children’s absolute favorite. That’s why we have a whole bunch of different mint varieties—apple, strawberry, blackcurrant, pineapple, and peppermint. It tastes amazing to mix mint leaves with raspberry juice, sparkling water, and a bit of lime. So refreshing and a drink the whole family can enjoy!”

The bounty of the garden. It’s time to taste the harvest, and now the outdoor kitchen is overflowing.
Open to everyone
Therese is committed to creating a wildlife-friendly garden, supported by insect hotels, water baths, and various bird feeding stations.
“I notice that the birdsong increases the further into autumn we get. By then, there isn’t as much food left for our little friends. That’s why we leave the perennials untouched through the winter so they have seed heads to feed on—sunflowers, in particular, provide plenty of good food. As soon as freezing temperatures arrive, I refill the bird feeders with seeds. It’s a bit bittersweet knowing winter is just around the corner, but the garden break makes us appreciate spring even more and all the possibilities it brings.”
Here are 5 of Therese’s annual summer flowers that continue blooming abundantly into the autumn
1. Cosmos
- Light and airy, swaying beautifully in the wind.
- Comes in many colors and forms.
- Loved by pollinating insects.
- If you regularly remove faded flowers, it will bloom from July until the first frost. The more flowers you cut for bouquets, the more buds it produces.
- Easy to grow from seed. Start indoors to ensure early flowering.
- Therese’s favorite varieties: Apricotta, Apricot Lemonade, and Gazebo White
Tips!
Therese always sows this indoors to speed up flowering before moving the plants outside. When the seedlings have about two pairs of leaves, she pinches the top shoot. This encourages branching, making the plant bushier with many more flowers.
Avoid fertilizing cosmos, as it usually produces lots of foliage instead of flowers. Plant it in rich soil once it’s moved outdoors.
2. Sunflowers
- A classic that adds height to the garden.
- Easy to succeed with and can be sown directly outdoors in May and June.
- For staggered flowering throughout the season, sow at intervals from May to June.
- If your plants are troubled by slugs, it may be smart to start seeds indoors. Slugs love sunflower shoots, so giving plants a head start makes them more robust when moved outside.
- Therese’s favorite variety: Moonwalker
3. Sweet peas
- They smell amazing and bloom for a long time.
- Available in many colors and varieties.
- Can tolerate a few degrees below zero, so they can be planted out earlier than other summer flowers. Early frost exposure makes them extra robust and strong.
- Long flowering period—because they tolerate light frost, they continue flowering even as the first cold nights arrive.
- Therese’s favorite varieties: Anniversary, April in Paris, White Frills, Almost Black, Karen Louise, and Rosy Frills
4. Scabiosa (Pincushion Flower)
- Delicate addition that adds height.
- Floats above other flowers.
- Available in different heights and many colors.
- Popular with pollinators.
- Produces more and more flowers the more you cut them.
- Therese’s favorite varieties: Salmon Rose and Perfecta
- Decorative climber, can either climb or trail down.
- Available in several colors, all with a black center, hence the name.
- Grows about two meters in a season and quickly becomes decorative.
- Great for covering a plain wall—just give it something to climb on. Therese grows hers up fishing line.
- Can survive to the next season if overwintered indoors at 10–15°C.
Follow the classic garden through the seasons:

- aka @hagebonanza, garden-crazy writer and content producer who has visited over 100 of Norway's most beautiful outdoor spaces to spread gardening joy and inspiration.

- aka @rekkehusbonden, copywriter, content producer and gardening enthusiast who is passionate about the joy of growing, with a love for everything edible.
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