Broken clay pot gnome gardens are one of my favorites to create and people love seeing those little gnomes getting the perfect home. One of my most popular posts on The Garden Diaries was Gnome Home over a year ago, and has gotten more hits than any other post except for Decorating the White House, so I know that they are popular! This time, I thought I would delve deeper into the origin and history of gnomes and I came up with a few surprises.

Gnome Origins

Garden gnomes go way back to 1870’s Germany where they were first sculpted out of clay by Phillip Griebel, a sculptor of terra-cotta animals, in the town of Graefenroda. Gnome legends were very popular in Germany and Griebel made Gnome statues that spread throughout Europe. They are still being made there today by Phillip Griebel’s descendants and knowing that, I just added a stop on my planned Germany trip. I would love to see their birthplace! You can tour their production facilities and see their informative museum. To see pictures, go to http://gardengnomeshome.com/gnome-directory/gartenzwerg-museum.

Controversial Gnomes

Garden Gnomes are not without their controversy, and were banned from the high-class Chelsea Flower Show until just 2013. Accused of garden snobbery, Chelsea lifted their ban, caving to pressure, and started to allow these popular garden sculptures. Serious gardeners don’t seem to appreciate these cute creatures, so I guess that makes me an amateur gardener!

Also, gnomes are the subject of pranks, called gnoming, which is the return of gnomes to the “wild”. Many gnomes have been “liberated” or “kidnapped”, sent on trips around the world, and have become quite famous. The best known example was a kidnapped gnome taken from a garden in California, and it ended up being photographed with Paris Hilton in People magazine. These antics just add to the “tongue in cheek” appreciation of gnomes for me. I enjoy that people can have fun with gardening and gardening tchotchkes. There are many clubs and organizations dedicated to the prank of gnoming.

The best-known of these is the Garden Gnome Liberation Front. Their website is hilarious and says that, “For too long we have let our neighbors usurp the rights of these gentle woodland creatures“. They entreat people to report any gnome in captivity! Go to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WaEh8EABR-s to watch a moving video.

Polish Gnomes

The hot spot of gnomes is Poland. More gnomes are made in Poland and China than anywhere else on the planet, even in Germany. In the Wieliczka Salt Mine, called the Underground Salt Cathedral of Poland, gnomes were carved underground out of salt.

Popular in Polish folklore, in Wroclaw Poland, gnome statues dot the city everywhere and have become a major tourist attraction. A legion of little people cast out of metals, are ubiquitous – in doorways, alleyways, and street corners, but easy to miss because of their size. You can actually do a tour of these gnomes which number over 250, and they have become one of the most popular tourist attractions in the city, more so than the magnificent cathedral.

Gnome Homes

Back to making those gnome homes. Here is a tutorial on creating your own gnome habitat. If you don’t have a broken pot, you have to cut out your own, using a dremel tool.

Creating Your Abode

Select your pot; Here I chose a tall narrow one

If you pot is not broken, you can cut it out exactly how you want it to look

I used an electric dremel tool with a carbide cutting attachment available at Home Depot

Mark out your line for cutting

Use the dremel with goggles and an air mask as the cutting kicks up a lot of terra cotta dust

The piece that I cut came out in one chunk and then I knocked it on the ground to break it up further

Planting Your Abode

After adding some potting soil to the large pot, insert your shards

Starting adding plants, planning on where you will be putting the larger accessories, like a house; The blue flower is a miniature Campanula; the taller one is a mini Sheffelaria house plant

I inserted a u-shaped wire pin to fasten the long ivy plant into the soil after planting

Fill in any exposed soil with moss, rocks, colored gravel

Add finishing touches-fences, gazing balls, geodes, tiny tools, and of course, your gnome!

Water everything thoroughly and let drain

Place in a filtered light window until warm enough to go outdoors

You can use wide pots for different scenes

Here is one I found on Pinterest by Cathy Strate on http://www.fleamarketgardening.org/2013/07/16/fairy-garden-magic/

I like how she used various broken pots and sunk them into the larger container.

Below is another of my broken pot gardens in a much wider pot to give you a totally different look.

Happy Gnoming!!