Green Thumbs

Get All The Latest News..Stay Up To Date With Tips All About Gardening

Tuesday, March 21, 2006

Landscaping your Garden

Landscaping is customarily quite a big undertaking, taking lots of time and drive. But before you employ that professional, here are some tips that could salvage both time and cash.

1. Spend some time reasoning about precisely how you wish the end design to be. You need to take account of the type and purpose of your landscape. Do you desire to include a space for entertaining? A barbeque? Is there to be an area for kids to have fun, a fishpond or a swimming pool? An idea of the plants you want to be there will also help. Focus on the area where you spend most of your time. That's a satisfactory point to begin.

2. Think twice before hiring a pro. An independent designer might cost you hundreds of dollars when you may be able to access free plans on the Internet or at a nursery. But if you have an awkward block such as very steep area, a pro may give you the knowledge to save costly mistakes.

3. The style of your home must be taken into account. If you have a rural cottage, formal gardens surrounding it will look out of place. Think also about your lifestyle. Do you want to spend hours caring for many beds of annuals or pruning beds of roses? If so, go ahead and plant them, but if you'd rather spend your free time at the beach, then go for an easy-care garden and landscape.

Here are the various landscape styles you can choose for your own garden:



a. Formal. This style uses lots of straight lines and perfect geometrical shapes. Orderly arrangement of plants instead of random positioning is employed. Close arrangement and pruning is seen on many landscaped gardens with this style.

b. Informal. This kind of landscaping works well with cozy cottages. Beds with curved edges instead of straight lines and random placement of plants suit this landscape style.

c. English Garden. This style emphasizes the harmony between the house’s architecture and the garden.

d. Formal/Informal Garden. This style often comes with a brick walkway that exudes formality. This walkway leads to the rear with a circle of plants. The arrangement of plants resembles the English garden style but it has no formal borders.

e. Oriental. It is often the kind of garden found in small backyards. It uses rocks, evergreens and water. A wide variety of plants create several interesting angles with this style.

f. Woodland. This landscaping suits a house that has a wooded backyard and sloping ground.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

free web page counters