Archive for the ‘Garden Design’ Category

Flower Bed Design – Practical Gardening Tips

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

For beginners, raised flower beds might help you out if you have difficult soil, or if you have bad drainage troubles. They might also be layed out to be attractive as well as functional, and when strategically positioned, they can enhance the natural beauty of your garden, or attract the eyes off from a less desirable region.

Raised flower beds are not just for flowers as the name hints, rather they are an outstanding way to produce herbaceous plants and vegetables as well. A lot of people – if you say raised flower beds – think of maybe a stepped flower bed, or something of that variety. In fact, raised flower beds can be virtually any form or design that you want. The kind of material you use to build your raised flower beds might enforce some limitations on the designs you can accommodate.

While a few raised flower beds may be pricy in their creation, due to the price of the materials needed to construct them, there are numerous materials you can get around your place to manufacture raised flower beds at a lower cost. One outstanding instance of this that I have seen recently is an used claw foot tub filled with earth and converted into a raised flower bed. A lot of you can benefit from the fact that, it is actually possible to create a particular material to replace the soil in flower beds – go here to learn much more about Hypertufa.

Cedar is an excellent option for making raised flower beds, and while it is attractive and lasting, it’s higher cost may exclude from many people’s wallets. Numerous people create their raised flower beds from railroad ties or pressure treated lumber materials. While numerous people have expressed fears regarding the chemicals utilized in processing the wood, for a strict flower bed most people don’t seem to mind as you don’t eat flowers. This might be a legitimate care if you intend to apply your raised bed for growing veggies.

You can greatly enhance your garden by putting in some extra work and create a truly special flower bed. You could look around your property, or as mentioned previous someone else’s. You may be able to get many appealing materials to build your raised bed from. One in particular that have been used rather successfully is decorative stone. Numerous people have experienced success and singularity building with slate or plain old rock. Others have opted to use bricks or blocks. Mortar can be needed with several of these materials, while others do well enough when just being stacked.

The contemporary in open-air material is PVC. Because its makeup is plastic, it won’t wear down as fast as wood. It’s longevity is outstanding, nonetheless there are drawbacks to its utilization. One such drawback is the restricted palette of colors. Another would be the requirement of specialized instruments for sawing and connecting it. You would be better of to check out the colors and needed instruments when considering PVC for your outside building projects.

It is more often than not advocated to limit your raised bed to an elevation of 40 to 45 centimeters. This is mostly because of lowering the risk of your bed tipping over. I have personally experienced, and made raised flower beds that exceed this elevation. It is important, though, that if you plan to overstep this height you pay proper attention to the details that will create stability to your bed.

The first thing you need to do is design your bed, then do some research and obtain your building materials. Now you’re ready to build your raised flower bed. The place to start is with guaranteeing your bed can be battened down to the ground. This is most normally done with a ditch having a depth that allows for a couple inches of material to be sunk. After that you simply add new layers until the bed reaches the desired height

Much more help and inspiration on tending to your garden and how to make Hypertufa pots in specific will be offered freely on my homepage. Here you can be informed about how to make Hypertufa pots and countless other creative gardening hints.

Attention! Fall is a Great Time for Home Herb Gardens

Monday, December 14th, 2009

Fall brings colors to your yard as gold, red and brown as well as to your home herb garden. You have been growing your own herbs and now is the time to dry them and prepare them for winter.

Your blooming plants will give you seeds for growing garden herbs in the spring. Capture the seeds by placing a paper bag over the flowers. Put your hand around the bag and grab the stem. Trim the stem to release the bag. To release the seeds from the pod, rub the bag. Remove the seeds and store for the next planting. I label an envelope and put all the envelopes in a shoebox.

Some people dry herbs by tying a few sprigs together and hanging them up to dry. Sun light will strip the taste and dry up the oils in herb that are drying, so find a good dry and dark location. Once the herbs are dry you can strip the leaves storing for your culinary needs. Look at the stems, if there is a nice looking one, put in a container of oil or vinegar. The jar of oil is a quick way to add essence to your cooking. You can find nice looking jars are most everywhere. Once I have the jars filled and rested for two weeks, I add a bow and give as gifts. Most of us will enjoy adding a little tarragon vinegar to our salads or vegetables.

Another drying method is to strip the herb leaves laying them out on paper or a screen. A sweater screen is perfect.When the leaves are dry, put them in your marked containers. Fall is the perfect for cleanup up the herbs in your herb garden by trimming. If you have cold winters, then bring the tender herbs inside for the winter’s rest.

Even through you have cut, dried and thinned the herb garden plants, there is plenty more to do. Autumn is the perfect time to plant. Garlic, chives, french tarragon and thyme are great autumn plants. Those of us in hot region can plant dill and parsley in the Fall. Two other herb garden plants for fall planting are shallots and saffron. Schedule their planting with the daffodils.

Autumn is a wonderful time of the year to be out in your home herb garden clipping, thinning and planting. Spending time in your home herb garden is so much fun in the Autumn. Mealtime is full of flavors from your home herb garden. Do share the recipes.

Design Your Landscaping For Christmas Decorating

Monday, December 7th, 2009

Every landscape or garden is created differently to suit the vision and needs of the owner. Putting out Christmas lights and other holiday decorations is one of the best parts of the holidays for a lot of people. So designing electric outlets and access into their landscaping can prove to be very convenient when time to decorate for the holidays.

For most folks, landscaping for Christmas simply considers certain plants in the Winter garden. A common symbol of Christmas, Holly is also an evergreen that keeps its color all through the Winter. It’s also common to see wreaths made out of them. Many other plants that produce red berries, again like the Holly, also can create a Christmas atmosphere throughout the Winter landscape.

While adding Winter interest to landscapes and gardens can be as simple as adding certain types of plants, Winter interest isn’t necessarily the real topic of this article. What this article looks at first is the folks who enjoy decorating their yards, homes, and landscapes for Christmas and other holiday in a big way. For them, a special consideration in their landscaping design plans is for decorating, decorations, lights, and preparing the landscape to use them in an efficient and unobtrusive way. What this means is to provide electricity access throughout the whole landscape.

A lot of the modern Christmas yard decorations and light displays use a lot of electricity because they’re so detailed and involved. From small displays of lights to magnificent digital lighting setups that spread out over the entire yard. The amount of electricity that these decorations and lights use may be more than the house or property has available. The majority of landscape designs never give any consideration to adding electricity where it’s needed for doing such things as Christmas yard decorations. Right out in the yard itself.

Besides Christmas and other holiday decorations, electric boxes placed in your yard can be a convenience for other things. And while we most generally plan for low voltage electrical lighting throughout the landscape, very few of our clients ever consider the need for house current in the yard until we mention it as an option in their design.

So once you decide to add decorating access to your landscaping plans, all electrical components need to be professionally installed. Anything electrical has no room for errors. It’s a good idea for the entire network to have its own panel box and circuit breakers. With its own designated source of power, you’ll have the assurance of always having plenty of juice for the entire system. Also, if anything goes wrong with the system, it can be worked on and maintained without shuting down the power to the house.

Another thing to consider if you’re adding electrical receptacles throughout your yard and landscaping is how visible they will be. If you’re going to spend the time and money landscaping, it doesn’t make any sense to leave electrical outlets visible everywhere if you don’t have to. If the yard and landscaping has flower beds, electrical junction boxes and plugs can easily be hidden among the plants in the planting areas. They can also be hidden in specially designed weatherproof outlets that are installed directly in the ground. They can be used when needed and are otherwise unaffected by sprinkler systems, mowing, and weather.

Once again, all landscaping projects should be a reflection of their owner. Lots of people put a lot of thought and effort into decorating their yards for Christmas and other holidays. when it comes to time to decorate for the holidays, having electrical outlets in their yards and landscapes can be a real time saver and convenience.

Art of Bonsai – How They Replicate Nature’s Beauty

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

Who invented the art of bonsai? One can only imagine that in some remote age, someone in touch with their creativeness and nature had the idea to grow dwarf trees. In the first flush of this feeling, the idea must have come into his mind to copy some of the beauties of nature, in miniature, in containers- in other words, to create the art of bonsai, or dwarfed potted plants.

The oldest authentic record of bonsai is pictures of dwarfed trees and herbaceous plants in containers in a noted scroll written in 1310. Through the long eras of the civil wars in Japan the cults of nature-bonsai, flower arrangement, and tea ceremony became deep-rooted in average men and great heroes alike.

Then came the Tokugawa Era. Turning the leaves of old Japanese gardening books published in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, I often came across illustrations and descriptions of bonsai. From these I am convinced that the people of that time were very skillful in dwarfing and training plants and that they had a great desire to find new kinds of plants that could be dwarfed successfully.

When the graft unions are completed, all the branches of Sawara cypress are to be cut off and the whole tree converted into a different tree.

These are not childish attempts or vague ideas but are the products of long years of an age of military ascendancy, when every profession was hereditary- the time called the Tokugawa Era. In those wonderful long peaceful years, the Japanese people were accustomed to escape from daily life into something that interested them; they devoted their leisure time to things that freed them from the restraint of social life; they entered into friendly rivalry with their fellow fanciers or tried to surprise them in some way.

When amateurs have their enthusiasm aroused, they are always without regard for the gain or loss involved; that attitude greatly advanced bonsai.

Professional men have been interested only in seizing the cream of the amateurs’ discoveries in ideas and in materials. Therefore I praise the amateur bonsai fancier. In Japan there are nearly as many amateurs as bonsai trees. Example of an Amateur

As an example of an enthusiastic amateur bonsai fancier, I will tell you of a Mr. Watanabe of the city of Takamatsu, a place noted for bonsai and cage-bird fanciers.

Mr. Watanabe is a salaried man, past middle age. Since the time in his youth when he worked in the Takamatsu post office, he had been enthusiastic about bonsai as a hobby and had built up a varied and interesting collection. Gradually, relieving him from self-abandonment, his enthusiasm for bonsai revived and crept back into him.

People all around the world are now taking up the hobby of learning how to grow bonsai. Once the basics are learned anyone can be a grower of these wonderful specimens. Good luck with your bonsai interests.

The Living Art of Bonsai

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

The majority of the dwarfed potted trees which are called bonsai are developed from ordinary nursery stock or from somewhat dwarfed trees found in a natural habitat. This is where the art of learning how to grow bonsai lies.

From mountains and ragged woods, a tremendous amount of material is dug and brought to the training beds of dwarfed potted trees specialists each year. In the ease of naturally occurring, partially dwarfed trees, there is need only for a few wires and a little training. Trees that have lost the greater part of their roots are a more serious problem. To illustrate, I will now describe the collection of Japanese Black Pine.

On the mountain of Shodoshima or Shodo Island which is located in the Seto Inland Sea National Park a countless number of Japanese Black Pine for dwarfed potted trees have been dug by professional collectors. Many renowned and valuable dwarfed Black Pines were produced from the material collected here.

On the islet opposite my house a Black Pine was collected many years ago, which became the most precious and dearest of all dwarfed potted Black Pines. Seeing the spot through Bald Cypress (Taxodium distichum) and Cypress-Pine (Callitris glauca) in the Acclimatization Gardens as I am writing, I vividly recall the days when collectors came to the island in autumn and spring.

The surface rock is granite. Higher up on the mountain the rocks weather into coarse whitish sand and the layer of soil is very thin; at lower levels there is a greater depth of soil and always some moisture. The summer is very hot and almost bone dry.

On the upper parts of both sides of the ridge, Black Pine dominates; next comes Red Pine (Pinte densiflora) and in far lesser numbers the Needle Juniper, Rhododendron reticulatum, Rhododendron kaemferi, Bush Clover (Lespedeza bicolor) and Balloon-flower (Platycodon grandijlo-rum). Three feet is generally regarded as the maximum height of dwarfed potted trees. To keep within the golden rule of the art of bonsai, the larger trees are often sharply pruned.

For example, on discovering a very dwarfed pine five or more feet in height with a trunk five or more inches in diameter, if the lower branches are three feet from the ground and picturesque in form (or promise to be so if trained), the upper portion of the main trunk is sawed off.

Undesirable branches are cut off. Only the tap root remains uncut. First the straw rope is coiled cautiously and rather firmly thrice or more horizontally around the ball and then all around the surface of the ball, so the very porous, coarse, sandy soil ball is firmly held about the roots; the tap root is finally sawed through, and the tree is removed.

You may wonder at the proportionately small size of the ball, but usually seventy per cent or more of the trees collected survive and become well settled as dwarfed potted trees; occasionally in very dry, hot summers, fifty per cent or so succumb.

Once the bonsai have been trained with wire for 1-2 years they become established and robust.