Even in a tiny garden, a defined path tells your feet, “Come this way.” It turns the space from something you just look at into somewhere you actually walk through.
A path doesn’t have to be fancy. A few stepping stones, bricks, gravel, or even pavers placed in grass can do the job. The important part is that it guides movement: maybe from the door to a bench, from the patio to a corner with plants, or around a small bed.
When you have a path, you’re more likely to wander out, check on plants, sit for a minute, or water more regularly. The garden feels like a place to be in, not just a backdrop.
Visually, a path also breaks the garden into sections and adds structure, even if your planting is quite informal.
