Archive for the ‘Landscaping Contractor’ Category

Holly Hardin offers lushly landscaped Ridgmar home

Holly Hardin offers lushly landscaped Ridgmar home

Positioned under a canopy of mature trees and surrounded by lush landscaping, this desirable Ridgmar home offers a beautiful setting for family living and entertaining.

“This spacious and well-maintained home draws the outside beauty inside through large windows that frame tree-filled views,” said Holly Hardin of the Fort Worth office of Virginia Cook, Realtors. “It is a serene environment every member of the family will enjoy and be proud of.”

Located at 6313 Juneau, the home offers more than 2,700 square feet of living space in a design that includes four bedrooms, three baths, a living room, dining room and formal sitting room.

Guests and family will be drawn to the inviting fireplace in the living room or the breakfast atrium where vistas of trees are showcased. French doors in the formal sitting room spill out to the open patio and landscaped backyard, and an additional outdoor seating area is located off the well-equipped kitchen.

“Whether outside at play in the backyard or riding bikes in the long swing driveway, children and adults alike will love the outdoor features of this home,” said Hardin.

The spacious design places the master suite and a secondary bedroom downstairs, and two additional upstairs bedrooms features decorative window rail, thermo windows and cozy or joint sitting area.

Additional amenities include a wet bar, sprinkler and security systems, ceiling fans, storm doors, thermo windows, an Alcoa Aluminum roof, LeafGuard gutters and a high quality AC and furnace system.

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Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

Urbandale Garden Part Of Tour

An Urbandale resident’s interest in creating overwhelming beauty in small spaces landed his yard among the featured stops on the eighth annual Extraordinary Gardens by Ordinary People tour set for Saturday.

The event includes gardens in Des Moines, West Des Moines, Urbandale and Clive. Each site was designed by a Polk County Master Gardener.

“My backyard has been in constant transformation since we moved here in 1979. I add things, move plants if they aren’t doing well and play with the landscaping. One of the main features of my yard is the retaining wall I added,” said King.

The two dispel the belief that good fences make good neighbors. Friends since Borchardt moved to the neighborhood in the 1980s, the two share plants and ideas, and they collaborate on landscaping to be sure it complements the other’s yard.

Krogulski’s yard boasts a garden filled with nearly 125 hosta varieties. Adding to the beauty is a rock-water feature and a dry stream bed that creates a natural divider between the two gardens.

For Borchardt, who volunteers for the Urbandale Demonstration Garden, the thrill of gardening comes from its maintenance.

“I hope people take away from our two gardens that gardening is enjoyable, that it should be an addition to your life and not a chore. For me, it is my little bit of reverie; it’s a stress relief to go out and pull weeds,” Borchardt said.

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Friday, June 20th, 2008

Landscaping Project On Mission Street Has Begun

Caltrans officials announced Wednesday that crews have begun a landscaping project along Highway 1 on Mission Street in Santa Cruz, between Town Terrace and Swift Street.

Crews will be working Mondays through Fridays between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. installing tree grates in the sidewalks and landscaping the medians. Alternate lanes will be closed with at least one lane open in each direction at all times. Expect delays of up to 15 minutes. The project is expected to be complete by the end of July.

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Friday, June 20th, 2008

Stones Rewarded For Yard Work

landscaping.gif”>The yard of Rick and Terry Stone, 1803 E. Howard St., has been named the June 2008 Yard of the Month by the Beautification Committee of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce.

The Stones have resided in the house they built 14 years ago and every year has led to a little more of their landscaping touches.

While not too much of the front yard can be seen because of a privacy hedge along Illinois 116, the open areas at both ends of the curved driveway give a glimpse of the beauty within.

“While the hedge does shut off a lot of view it also has its advantages in that it cuts down a lot of traffic noise from the roadway,” said Terry Stone.

One thing that cannot be overlooked is the unique driveway paving material chosen by the Stones. The off-red gravel-looking material is named “rotten granite” and gives the large curving driveway its own special soft color very different from routine run-of-the-mill white or gray gravel.

Knock-out roses in a deep red are repeated throughout the yard along the front, back and side.

“The roses have done so well and bloomed so profusely this year. I have lots of daffodils which did not bloom that well this year and I was afraid other perennials might follow the same course,” she said. “Instead what a pleasant surprise it has been with the roses and a few others, including the purple perennial salvia.”

“I have also been a little disappointed that more perennials like black-eyed Susans and purple coneflowers are so much later this year. I’m guessing the cold and wet spring has put everything a little behind,” she said.

Rick Stone’s project this spring has been starting some maple trees from maple “helicopter” seeds that blew into the yard.

“While the seedlings look good, they are still small, it’s too early to tell how they will do once set into the landscape as trees,” she said.

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Monday, June 16th, 2008

Ideas Sought To Protect The Broads

Families and business leaders could hold the key to protecting the environment on the Norfolk Broads - and officials are seeking new ideas which could be backed up with a share of a ï¿¡200,000 grant.

The Broads Authority has today called on local people, companies and organisations to come forward with solutions which could help protect wildlife and reduce the carbon footprints of the tens of thousands of tourists who visit the Broads every year.

Each year since 2002 the government has provided ï¿¡200,000 to each of the UK’s National Parks to inspire communities to come up with bright ideas which will benefit the area.

The Broads Authority has used the money to form a sustainability fund, helping promote sustainable tourism, with green business, boating, biking and canoeing projects, education programmes and projects to help disadvantaged people.

Funding has also now been given for a study and carbon audit of the Broads to be carried out by the Cred carbon reduction programme, based at the University of East Anglia.

The study will provide a picture of where carbon emissions come from and how much is produced, so the Broads Authority can draw up a carbon reduction plan to comply with government targets.

In the past the cash has helped launch the Broads Society’s Go Electric! campaign which gave grants for eight private boat engine conversions from diesel to electric.

Subsidies have also been given to help fund the only Green Boat Show in the UK, held on Salhouse Broad in September last year.

The Hewett School in Norwich has also been given an ï¿¡8,000 grant to pilot a project, landscaping the grounds and building allotments, an amphitheatre and a wildlife garden.

A spokeswoman for the Broads Authority said: “The projects we fund are wide-ranging but have several things in common. They are all innovative, sustainable, and improve the life of people living in and working in the area. The Broads Authority is keen to help young people and support projects which do not qualify for other public funding. No project is too large or too small.”

Some of the organisations which have benefited from funding in the past include the Norfolk Schools Sailing Association which was awarded a ï¿¡15,200 grant to buy five new Wayfarer dinghies to help introduce schoolchildren to sailing.

The boats will replace 20 year old boats which were beyond repair.

David Wrenn, commodore of the association, said: “The help and support we have been given from the Broads Authority is brilliant. It is fantastic that they are helping projects like ours that bring a benefit to the community.

“Everyone who works here is a volunteer and gives their time for free so having the grant and being able to upgrade the boats has been a big boost for us.”

A leaflet, Bright ideas wanted, explains who and what qualifies for funding. It is available from the Broads Authority office at 18 Colegate, Norwich and at information centres.

The project follows the launch of the Broads Tourism Forum 2008 A Day in the Broads campaign with Visit Norwich, supported with funding from the Broads Authority’s sustainable development fund.

The focus of the campaign this year is to encourage green tourism with prominence being given to activities such as cycling, walking and nature spotting.

In December last year, the Evening News revealed how The Broads Authority had been awarded an extra ï¿¡1.3m of government funding over three years to be spent on important conservation projects.

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Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

Noblesville Tour Of Gardens Set For Saturday

The third annual Noblesville Tour of Gardens is from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. June 14, rain or shine, and will take visitors “beyond the garden gate” into eight of North Noblesville’s most beautiful gardens.

This year’s tour ranges from an intimate shade garden, to a National Wildlife Federation Certified Wildlife Habitat, to an 8-acre pastoral spread. Tucked among the blooms and fronds will be artwork, live music and gardening experts speaking on various subjects (including many “green” topics). In addition, one Noblesville home will open up its restored bicycle and tractor collections to visitors, and serve up grilled brats and refreshments.

Visitors are invited to park at the Noblesville Intermediate School and let a shuttle take them through the tour. Tour maps and directions will be available at the school and at the tour’s first stop, Harbour Trees Golf Club, for people who prefer to drive themselves.

Proceeds benefit the Noblesville Preservation Alliance, which works to enhance the quality of life in Noblesville by promoting the preservation of historic neighborhoods and resources.

Tour of Gardens Front Door Sponsors are Industrial Dielectrics, Inc., Noblesville Daily Times and Logan Street Signs and Banners. Front Porch Sponsors are Smith’s Jewelers, Peterson Architecture, Community Bank, Martin K. Deafenbaugh, M.D., P.C., Dr. and Mrs. Jose F. Caro, Green Vista Landscaping, and Church, Church, Hittle and Antrim. Sponsorships for the upcoming Noblesville Tour of Homes in September are available.

Ticket price is $12 (children ages 12 and under are free). Advance tickets will be available at the three Marsh Supermarket locations in Noblesville, Noble Coffee and Tea Co., and A Corner Cottage. On the day of the tour, parking, shuttles and ticket sales will be available at Noblesville Intermediate School, 19900 Hague Road. Tickets also available on the day of tour at Harbour Trees Golf Club, 333 Regents Park Lane.

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Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

Rta Takes Part In Garden And Landscaping Outdoor Living Exhibition

RTA is taking part in the regional Garden, Landscaping Outdoor Living Exhibition; which opens today at Dubai International Convention and Exhibition Centre, and continues through 27 May.

The event boasts participation of 150 exhibitors from 23 countries specialized in gardens & outdoor landscaping.

Engineer Nabeel Mohammed Saleh, Director of Roads Dep’t at RTA Traffic & Roads Agency, spoke about the objectives of RTA participation in this premier global exhibition. “We are intending to showcase the important role played by Roads Beautification & Landscaping Section at RTA Traffic & Roads Agency in upgrading & expanding greenery in areas surrounding roads, which is part of an overall plan to keep abreast of urban development expansion in the emirate of Dubai.

“RTA participation also aims to have a presence in this world event and exchange concepts & experiments with suppliers and specialized entities. It will also enable us to review the best practices & latest technologies in the field of plantation & landscaping. We will be able to explore the possibility of applying these aspects in Dubai, with a view to applying them in our future projects.”

“RTA is having a prominent stand covering an area of 295 square feet; where a group of projects undertaken by the Section will be exhibited, reflecting various phases ranging from design to full implementation. By the end of last February, RTA completed works in seven large landscaping projects costing about 60 million dirham, spanning an area of 98 hectares. Construction of more projects is underway at various locations in the emirate of Dubai, and they are expected to be completed during this year” said Nabeel.

Traffic & Roads Agency has an integrated plan aiming to expand the green areas in the emirate and create a picturesque view of roads & surrounding patios. The Plan envisages provision of safety & security elements, artistic effects, and environmental requirements. The fast-moving property development in Dubai warrants keeping in place a modern road network, and applying innovative concepts of road landscaping.

The exhibition marks the significance attached to outdoor landscaping sector in Dubai in particular and the whole region in general; and also showcases the required tools & equipment for indoor & outdoor decoration.

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Saturday, May 31st, 2008

Before You Landscape Have A Plan

If you’re thinking about upping the curb appeal of your house or redoing the back yard for a big event, here are some landscaping ideas from Peggy Krapf. She’s a member of the Virginia Society of Landscape Designers and owner of Heart’s Ease Landscape and Garden Design in the Toano area of James City County.

Show off the house. Make the front door the focal point from the street. “Frame” the house with the landscape — don’t obscure it.

Do it stylishly. Consider the architecture and surroundings of the house — formal, cottage, contemporary, etc. — when selecting plants to create a landscape “style” appropriate to the setting.

Think about color. Select plants and flowers that echo the paint or brick colors on the house. Fill large containers on the porch or steps with annuals that repeat the front door color for a designer look.

Big is best. Create wide, sweeping, curved bed lines in proportion to the size and scale of the house. Bigger is usually better.

Space properly. Plant shrubs at least 3 to 4 feet away from the foundation of the house and allow enough room between plants for them to reach their mature size. Read plant tags carefully! Don’t overplant — plants will grow!

Stagger sizes. Plant dwarf, slow-growing or low-growing plants under windows; use taller plantings at corners or along blank walls. Use pyramidal plants carefully as accents.

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Saturday, May 31st, 2008

Urban Landscaping

On the North Shore, however, a wide range of soil and climate conditions can add levels of challenge not experienced elsewhere. We went to the experts to get the lowdown on how to get more out of your yard and have fun doing it.

Martin Wouters of local landscaping firm West Coast Home and Property Services sees some common errors when people set about planning their gardens. Martin and partner Glenn Whitted have built a solid reputation with both residential and commercial customers and have seen a lot of gardens in their career.

“People forget to check to see if the plant or shrub can be grown in their area,” says Wouters. “When buying shrubs, make sure you find out what zone you are in and when selecting plants make sure they are acceptable for growing in your zone. People also tend to buy shrubs without checking to see how big they get and eventually their garden becomes overcrowded. Make sure you check the full size it will be at maturity by checking the tag or asking questions at your local garden centre. When selecting annual bedding plants make sure you check the tags again and plant them where recommended (sun shade). So many people plant bedding plants where they don’t belong and end up with a disappointing garden.”

Enhancing soil and growing conditions also requires more than a little digging.

“People tend to over water or over fertilize their garden,” says Wouters. “Just because the soil on top is dry it does not mean your plants or shrubs need water. Dig down a few inches with your fingers to check for proper moisture levels. Too much water will eventually rot the root system and the plant will not grow fully or bloom properly. People also tend to over fertilize. Plants and shrubs only require feeding every 10 to 14 days.”

If you’re thinking of minimizing maintenance by planting a large lawn, think again.

“Homeowners plant more grass than garden thinking that grass is low maintenance. Grass requires cutting weekly and can become a chore or a large financial expense if you have to have it cut by a local lawn cutting service. People wait too long to remove the weeds from the garden, making it a long and unwanted task. It is recommended that you cultivate your garden weekly because if you keep knocking down the young weeds they eventually will be unable to reproduce and will not return.”

As with most aspects of home decorating, trends change and design ideas evolve over time. Here are some of the latest looks and fashions,

“Rock walls, interlocking walls, stamped concrete, paving stone driveways are all very popular in today’s landscapes. They offer a very rich look to your property and blend in well with your garden landscape. Low voltage garden lighting has become popular in all gardens and new landscapes. It offers a wonderful look to your garden and landscape when illuminated in the evening. The lighting requires a small amount of electricity to operate, so they are very cost effective and easy to install. Perennial gardens have also become popular.

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Saturday, May 31st, 2008

Bellevilles Garden Spot: Couples Backyard Has The Personal Touch

Steven and Mary Weber didn’t know they had green thumbs until they moved to Garden Boulevard.

Maybe driving by the street sign every day had a psychological effect. Maybe their gingerbread-style brick cottage cried out for an enchanted forest.

Whatever the reason, the Webers have spent the past 13 years planting rose bushes, ivy, ornamental apple trees, hostas, perennial flowers and brilliantly colored impatiens.

Steven also has displayed many of his handmade wooden bird houses and squirrel feeders.

“It’s less housework I’ve got to do,” he joked last week. “No, really, I enjoy it.”

The Weber yard is one of six Belleville properties open to the public from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday for Gardens in Bloom, a self-guided tour sponsored by St. Clair County Extension and Education Foundation. Admission is $8 in advance or $10 that day (maps come with tickets).

University of Illinois Extension master gardeners also will hold a plant sale from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday at Union United Methodist Church.

A committee of master gardeners selected properties for this year’s tour. All are residential.

“They’re all in a close geographical area, and we’ve learned that that’s what people prefer,” said Janet Burnett, county director of Madison-St. Clair Extension Unit. “Some are in walking distance of each other.”

Growing hobby

Steven Weber is a retired U.S. Air Force master sergeant who works as a military archivist. Mary is a legal assistant. They have two grown sons.

The Webers moved to Belleville from Georgia in 1995 because they wanted to be closer to family in Galena but also near an Air Force base.

Mary fell in love with the Edison Place neighborhood, which includes Garden Boulevard.

“All the houses are different or unique,” she said. “They’re not all the same like you have in some subdivisions.”

The Webers didn’t start from scratch on landscaping. Their property came with towering oak and elm trees, boxwood shrubs, yew, spirea and azalea bushes, a barberry bush and a non-bearing cherry tree.

Steven was a woodworking enthusiast, but he warmed up to the role of gardener-in-chief.

“He loves to play in the dirt,” Mary said. “He does most of the planting and transplanting. He just comes to me for guidance. He’ll say, ‘What do you think about putting this here?’ or ‘What do you think about putting it there?’”

One of the couple’s first projects was converting a child’s playground into a raised landscaping bed in the back yard. They planted hostas, coral bells, hellebore, sedum, phloxes and mums.

Steven mounted squirrel feeders on the oak tree and centered the bed with a red and black “chew, chew” that’s shaped like a steam locomotive. A large glass “engine” holds ears of corn.

“The neighbors like to harass me because I bring all the squirrels in the summer,” Steven said. “They’re always finding corn cobs in their yards.”

Creative gardening

The Webers increased backyard privacy by installing a wooden fence on one side, but they broke up the monotony with black, metal-grid inserts that serve as trellises for climbing ivy.

Steven hung some of his decorative bird houses on the fence. One is sided with twigs and pebbles. Another is patterned off a stop light with red, yellow and green circles.

The fence is connected to a small arbor over a walkway with round, concrete stepping stones. Eventually, the wooden slats will be covered with clematis vines.

“You have to wait a few years for (ivy on the fence) to grow, but I think it’s worth it,” Mary said. “It’s better than a solid wall.”

More originality can be seen in Steven’s vertical planters along the screened-in patio. He drilled staggered holes in plastic plumbing pipes, painted the pipes brown, installed them upright like fence posts and planted impatiens.

“They look really nice when they’re full,” said Steven, who used the same pipe to make flower boxes for his narrow windowsills.

Mary also has added creative touches to the yard. She turned a cup and saucer into a flower pot and a small potato sack into a hanging planter. She lined a green wagon with gift bags full of impatiens.

Other Weber “yard art” includes a concrete fountain with a boy and girl under an umbrella; a bird “mansion” with several entrances; an old-fashioned street light and four French solar lanterns; a green wrought-iron table and chairs with a matching birdbath; a butterfly box, rain gauge and Dragonfly thermometer; and several ceramic statues and metal sculptures.

Last, but not least, is Steven’s red, white and blue Chicago Cubs flag, which hangs next to the back door. It’s probably about as popular in the neighborhood as his squirrels.

Tickets for Gardens in Bloom are available through May 31 at Sandy’s Back Porch, Eckert’s Country Store and Garden Center, Effinger’s Garden Center and Hometown Ace Hardware in Belleville, University of Illinois Extension offices in Belleville and Edwardsville and Full Circle Services and Supplies in O’Fallon; and on May 31 only at Union United Methodist Church.

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Monday, May 26th, 2008