Landscaping Tools

OK so you don’t want to use a landscaping service and you want to tackle the garden on your own, or with whomever else you can rope into the project. You are going to need some tools for the job; here we will go over a few of the commonly used tools for landscaping. The basic tools for gardening and landscaping are rakes, trowels, shovels and hand cultivators; every home with a garden (that has not overgrown into a forest) should have these tools in the shed or nearby. Using just those tools you are able to keep your landscape in good condition.

You can use the shovels to turn over the soil and dig holes needed to plant trees and plants. Use the rake to smooth out the planting beds and for preparing the soil. Use the trowels and hand cultivators when you plant the smaller plants and flowers and areas that require some attention to detail. Another couple of tools you will need for landscaping are pruners and shears, used to cut small branches off to tidy up trees and bushes and generally allow you to keep things neat. (more…)

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Saturday, July 26th, 2008

Deadly Landscaping Sins

Deadly <a href=Landscaping Sins” width=”160″ height=”121″ />The trick of designing a well functioning home can be difficult for the lay architect and there will be many people during the construction process that will influence the final built product. You need to keep these influences in check and remain focused and vigilant about keeping your original design ideas in your plan.

Yes, designing and building a house can be an unrelenting juggling act but if you at least plan to avoid the seven most common design mistakes hopefully it will result in a well functioning and cost effect house that will sit well in the local landscape for many years to come.

Don’t resort to those skinny standard-issue sidewalks that contractor originally installed when you house way built. These small sidewalks that are only wide enough for one person aren’t landscape friendly when trying to layer plants and make it look natural. By widening these sidewalks a homeowner can get more welcoming and natural look for a walkway. (more…)

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Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

Palestine Public Librarys Landscape Gets A Facelift

Some very noticeable changes are being made to improve outdoor aesthetics at the Palestine Public Library this week — changes that will make the library more convenient and pleasing to its patrons.

“Our new look is fresh, attractive and inviting,” library director Carol Herrington said. “Every day, at least one library patron comments to me about how much they like it.”

The project includes the construction of steps and a paved walkway from the rear parking lot, the removal of shrubs around the building and the addition of butterfly and friendship gardens to the library’s landscaping.

A new irrigation system also has been installed; and the removal of the bushes in front of the building created four new much-needed parking spaces near the library’s main entrance.

“Since I have been director here, about 90 percent of the suggestions I have received included the need for additional parking spaces,” Herrington said. “So I know patrons will appreciate getting those additional spaces out of this change.”

The new set of steps and pavestone walkway also have been a long-time need at the library — providing directionality to its patrons.

“We have had people park in the rear lot and not know where to come in,” Herrington said. “The walkway and new signs will make a big difference.”

To give its patrons a sense of ownership, Anderson County Master Gardeners included the “Friendship Garden,” in their landscaping design. That garden, located at the front of the building, will be filled through a bulb exchange event set for June 7.

“We want patron to bring bulbs from their garden to plant here at the library and to exchange with other gardeners,” Master Gardener and landscape design coordinator Nancy Waggoner said Wednesday. “The goal is to have people to walk by and say ‘that bulb was from my garden.’

“We want them to have a sense of pride and identity when they visit the library,” she added.

The butterfly garden, located at the rear of the library, will be included as a means to educate the patrons about plant and animal life. A new curved pavestone walkway will allow visitors a full view of the area.

“We have designed the landscaping so that there will be something blooming all season,” Waggoner said. “And as the plants mature through the years, I think it is only going to get better.”

According to Herrington, the project came about after learning about the cause of the library’s ongoing flooding problems — the large shrubs around the building were holding water against the walls.

“The Library Board decided to go forth and develop a new landscape design for the library,” Herrington said. “The library board took bids for the design, which was developed and won by the Anderson County Master Gardeners.”

Also winning bids for the landscaping project were Jo Ann Pigeon Landscaping, Blackstone Irrigation and Palestine Concrete & Tile. A community work squad from the local Gurney Unit has provided much of the labor.

“City Engineer Ron Sullivan was able to bring the Gurney crew in, which saved us a significant sum of money,” Herrington said. “Warden Karen Brown and her crew have done and great job. We could not have done this without them.”

Funding for the project has been provided by a $15,000 matching grant from the Palestine Economic Development Corporation, with the Friends of the Library and the Library Memorial Board contributing the initial funds.

“The library appreciates the efforts and cooperation of all the participating entities to make the landscape project come to fruition,” Herrington said. “It is amazing what can be accomplished when people work together for a common goal.”

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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

Controversy Surrounds Waterfront Donation

Lindsey Griffin, owner of L.R. Griffin & Associates, Inc., a commercial landscaping company in Greenville, donated eight Crape Myrtles to the city of Washington to be planted between the former Maola Plant and the N.C. Estuarium. The planting of the shrubs at the specified location had been approved by the Washington City Council, but there were disagreements about whether Crape Myrtles are shrubs or trees.

“The idea was brought to the council as planting shrubs,” Washington City Manager Jim Smith said Wednesday. “It said shrubs in the minutes.”

The primary concern with the Crape Myrtles was their size.

“I started getting calls about trees being planted, not shrubs,” Smith said. “The things being planted, Crape Myrtles, are technically shrubs, but they grow to 30 feet. The ones we had delivered are already eight feet.”

One of those concerned was Washington Mayor Judy Meier Jennette. From the motion that the council approved, Jennette said she assumed that the shrubs would be much smaller.

“I just wanted to make sure that whatever was going down there was what we agreed on … in keeping with what we actually voted on,” Jennette said.

The planting of the shrubs, which was scheduled for Wednesday morning, was put on hold so that the Washington City Council could deliberate on the situation.

“I pulled the council together this afternoon,” Smith said.

There was some disagreement between council members during the deliberation.

“There was great debate between the council over whether they were trees or bushes,” Jennette said.

The issue was eventually resolved, according to Smith.

“The majority were fine with the shrubs,” Smith said.

The planting of the shrubs was approved, in part, because they were a “very generous donation,” according to Jennette.

“We decided that it was a great idea to accept them whether they were trees or bushes,” Jennette said. “I’m not looking a gift horse in the mouth. I’m glad to accept the gift.”

Development between the former Maola Plant and the N.C. Estuarium has been a hot topic in Washington.

“Everyone’s always suspicious when the site gets touched,” Smith said.

Jennette reaffirmed Smith’s statement.

“I know it’s a very touchy situation down there,” Jennette said. “There’s a group of people that are very intense about getting certain things in place.”

Jennette was pleased with the new shrubs, but said she wants to make sure that any future work done to the area has the City Council’s approval.

“It’s just that I want to make sure we follow some rationale as we prepare the park area over there,” Jennette said.

The planting of the shrubs between the former Maola factory and the N.C. Estuarium was the second phase of a proposal that Griffin brought before the City Council. Griffin, who owns a commercial landscaping company, approached Jennette about making a significant donation to the waterfront.

“He approached me several months ago about donating some trees to the waterfront,” Jennette said. “He said that he would donate four trees if the city bought four.”

Griffin, a resident of Greenville and owner of “Lrg Time,” a houseboat permanently docked on the Washington Waterfront, said he was unimpressed by the small trees that lined the promenade.

“He really wanted to do something on the waterfront,” Jennette said. “He said ‘You really don’t notice the trees because they are so small’.”

After meeting with Jennette, Griffin spoke with Smith regarding his idea.

“He went to the city manager to make arrangements with Parks and Recreation,” Jennette said.

Plans were set in place for the waterfront trees after the Washington City Council approved their planting.

“The city bought four at $2,000 a piece, including transplanting and everything,” Jennette said.

Jennette was happy with the work done by Griffin on the waterfront.

“The trees look great; you can really notice them now,” Jennette said.

The trees formerly lining the promenade were moved to the Washington Veteran’s Park on Third Street.

Unlike the trees lining the Washington Waterfront, the eight Crape Myrtles were donated in full by Griffin. Bud Brooks, owner of Brooks Construction, and employees Johnny Ayers, Jimmy Shed, John Carson and Mike Woolard volunteered to transplant the shrubs.

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Monday, May 12th, 2008

Eco Gardens: How To Grow Fruit And Vegetables

The vegetable patch has become the most fashionable home improvement accessory, a makeover for the credit crunch era that should add value to your property in the long term. The “home allotment” (its virtues are extolled by Jamie Oliver) is not only proof of your impeccable green credentials, it is also a source of cheaper food Landscaping Stone. The cost of staples such as rice, bread, eggs and meat are rising relentlessly around the world, with no sign of let-up, and consumers are increasingly being forced to opt for less expensive fruit and vegetables to make their household budgets stack up.

But all that sowing, mulching, watering and reaping to grow your own may not be as much of a chore as you suppose, and fruit and veg simply tastes better if you eat it fresh from the ground. It’s all to do with the sugars: the natural sugars in a courgette, for example, will start turning to starch within minutes of it being cut from the vine, a process that will rob the courgettes of much of their beautiful sweet flavour.

Can anyone grow their own fruit and vegetables? The answer is yes. Even someone with a window box or small balcony can cultivate a wide variety of herbs, vegetables - or even fruit. Home allotments are easy to get going and now is the perfect time of year to start.

First, you will need a growing area. This can be a few large pots or a couple of grow bags. If you have the space, build a raised bed using timber. In my work as a garden designer in southeast London, I build stylish raised beds for my clients using untreated French oak railway sleepers, which are bolted together. These raised beds are normally 480mm (19in) high by 2.6m long by 1.3m wide, but they can be virtually any size.

A raised bed is prepared by first adding a layer of shingle for drainage. It is then filled with a mixture of good landscaper’s loam and farm manure. Choosing the right location for your raised bed can be difficult within the restrictions of most gardens, but try to find the sunniest spot and not under overhanging trees.

The principles for large pots, grow bags and window boxes are the same: just remember that the smaller the container the more watering they will need. One useful tip for containers is to stand them on a tray or saucer filled with gravel. This helps to stop the soil from drying out, while the gravel stops waterlogging around the roots. Now you have prepared your planting area, you can choose what to grow. The options are vast, from exotic pak choi to the humble spud. My choice for the garden allotment would have to include courgettes, French beans, strawberries and sweetcorn. You could also try an apple tree. Or why not be adventurous and give blueberries a go?

Courgettes (Cucurbita pepo): these are among the most productive vegetables you can grow. Aim to have three or four plants and to stagger the planting. Start by sowing the seeds in 7.5cm pots, 3cm deep in moist compost, placing the pot on a warm windowsill. When well-established, plant out in their final position and give them room to grow.

Sweetcorn (Zea mays): freshly picked, they are a treat. Again, sow them in pots or trays indoors and stagger the sowing, so that you get a steady flow of ripe cobs and not a flood. Sweetcorn is a hungry plant, so before planting out make sure to add plenty of organic fertiliser to the bed. Plant sweetcorn in blocks and not rows, so that they crosspollinate. Try them straight on to the barbecue - just fabulous.

Beans: French beans (Phaseolus vulgaris) and runner beans (Phaseolus coccineus) are a must in any home allotment. They like well-drained soil and need support: dwarf French beans require a few twigs to support the plants, while runners need a framework of bamboo poles or similar. Sow the seeds in 7.5cm pots, 4cm deep in moist multi-purpose compost, and place on a windowsill. Once germinated, harden off by placing outside in the shade during the day, and plant out two to three weeks later. Water well.

Strawberries (Fragaria x ananassa): Fruit such as these are best bought as plants in late summer or early autumn. Choose a good all-round type such as “Cambridge Vigour” or a perpetual fruiter like “Aromel”. I like to plant strawberries through a landscaping fabric. Simply spread a sheet over the area to be planted and secure it with pegs to the raised bed surround. Cut holes in the fabric and then plant into the prepared soil beneath. This will keep the soil around the shallow roots moist and warm, ensuring an early crop of fat beautiful strawberries. I have tried the landscaping fabric planting method on many plants, and it also works well for courgettes, tomatoes and sweetcorn.

Apples (Malus Sylvestris var. domestica): To achieve the best results you need a sunny, sheltered spot. Apples are best grown in the ground, but there are some varieties that can be pot-grown. The height and size of an apple tree is mainly determined by the root stock; ask your garden centre for advice on which variety to choose. Most apples require a second tree for pollination, so buy two trees of similar varieties. After planting, water well throughout the first two summers and thin out fruit as they develop.

Blueberries (Vaccinium corymbosum): Landscaping Stone For the more adventurous gardener, these fruit bushes prefer acid soil and slight shade or sun. Blueberries are also good in pots: use a 38cm or bigger pot and plant in ericaceous compost. One tip is to use collected rainwater and to feed with organic seaweed extract regularly throughout the growing season.

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Sunday, April 27th, 2008

Mproving The Landscaping Can Add Value To Your House

A few years ago, when Alicia Morgan-Cooper and her husband Fred decided they needed more space for their growing family, several items on their house-hunting list were non-negotiable.

“We wanted plenty of trees and greenery, a large backyard for the kids, and it had to have a garden,” says Morgan-Cooper, a pediatrician and mother of two, with a baby on the way. “I’m an avid gardener, and my garden is my sanctuary.”

Landscaping Services In spring 2005, the couple moved into their dream home, a six-bedroom colonial situated on half an acre in the city’s Guilford neighborhood. Soon after, they launched a series of home improvements, starting with the landscaping.

“We totally revamped the landscaping,” says Morgan-Cooper, who worked with a professional landscape architect, Plant Genie in Towson, as well as a landscaping contractor.

They planted nine flowering pear, crabapple and other trees, had two flagstone patios built off the kitchen and sunroom, complete with a walkway, and filled the flower beds with colorful azaleas, daylilies, rosebushes and much more.

“At first, there was a lot of mud,” says Morgan-Cooper, who said the overhaul was motivated in part by property damage due to past flooding. “But now we love it Landscaping Services. I’m not ever leaving.”

All said, the project cost about $90,000 — money the couple says was well spent. After purchasing their home for $750,000, they say it’s now valued at more than $1 million.

While professional landscaping was once viewed as a luxury, more homeowners are beginning to recognize that planting a perennial garden, installing a pond or building an arbor, may have more than only aesthetic value. Many experts say landscaping — which runs the gamut from so-called softscaping (such as turf maintenance and planting) to hardscape installation of patios and walkways — can increase the value of one’s home, and in a tight housing market, help attract potential buyers.

“Studies have shown that landscaping can increase the value of your home by 15 percent,” says Vanessa Finney, executive director of the Maryland Nursery and Landscape Association Inc., an industry trade group whose members include nurseries, garden centers, landscapers, arborists and suppliers.

“It’s about curb appeal,” says Brent Flickinger, a Realtor with City Life Realty in Baltimore, referring to that intangible factor that makes a prospective buyer want to look beyond the “For Sale” sign. “Years ago, people were fighting over houses. Now, houses are sitting longer, and the longer they sit, the less desirable they seem to people,” he adds. “Landscaping helps your house stand out. It can help the real estate agent get showings, get people inside the house. If they don’t get in the door, it doesn’t matter.”

James McWilliams, a co-owner of Maxalea Inc., a landscape contractor in North Baltimore, says he often fields calls from homeowners desiring to spruce up their houses before putting them on the market. “They may need to clear plants that are overgrown near the house, or edge and delineate the flower beds. Sometimes we are checking for insects or diseased trees. We address all sorts of things.”

Three generations of his family have worked in the horticultural business since the 1920s, and today, Maxalea employs some 80 horticulturalists, architects, landscape designers, groundskeepers, nurserymen and others.

McWilliams says their clients typically spend between $5,000 to $50,000, but it’s not unheard of, he adds, for higher-end clients to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars landscaping their mansions and estates.

“When you spend that much on a home, you don’t want 20 random plants,” he says. “You need a plan, Landscaping Services and a professional who can help you design a landscaping layout that will be beautiful.”

To that end, his team members will schedule consultations with homeowners to discuss everything from “form and function” to plants, materials, color schemes and whatever signature look the homeowner is seeking. They then sketch out a plan and draw up a budget.

McWilliams, who says he favors a “clean” landscaping style with crisp edges, minimal mulch and repetitious grouping of plants, also keeps pace with the latest trends. For instance, he’s noticing a move away from wooden decks, toward more fieldstone and Formstone patios. Another hot trend is the outdoor kitchen and living area. “People are entertaining and extending it outside,” he says.

Indeed, when Lauren Quattro and partner Marichi Capino want to entertain at the home they share in the Mayfield community near Lake Montebello, they simply walk out back to a yard that’s been transformed by landscaping.

“This is the house that I grew up in,” says Quattro, a nurse who returned to her childhood home in the early 1990s after her mother died. “I’m pretty sure my parents would not recognize it now,” she says with a chuckle.

Indeed, the once-modest brick rowhouse has been gutted and renovated inside and out, fashioned into a loft-style space, complete with a renovated kitchen. The backyard has been professionally landscaped, and boasts a pond with koi, a deck and a hot tub. Capino, a native of the Philippines who was a physician in her homeland, has planted a container garden with pansies, tulips and other colorful flowers, and looks forward to the wisteria expected to bloom later this season. “It relaxes me,” she says.

While many properties in this section of Northeast Baltimore are listed in the high $200s, Quattro says she would not sell it for less than $400,000. “It’s a great house in a great neighborhood, and worth every penny,” she says.

According to a survey performed by the USDA-Maryland Agricultural Statistics Service and underwritten by MNLA, landscape installation and maintenance pumped $234.7 million into the state’s economy in 2003, the most recent year for which figures are available.

While professional landscaping is clearly big business, Jim McElroy, president of Green Fields Nursery & Landscaping Co. in North Baltimore, emphasizes that it doesn’t have to cost a bundle. “I want people to know landscaping is not just for the rich,” says McElroy. For every person who comes in wanting, say, lighting, a stone retaining wall or water features, just as many simply want terra cotta pots with nice plants.

“You can take $500 or even $50 and do basic things … Landscaping Services mulching the beds and adding pretty flowers that will catch people’s eye,” says McElroy, who also gives advice on a weekly radio show. “The key is that the home should look well-maintained. A picture is worth a thousand words.”

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Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

36Mln Rubles Will Be Spent On Improvement Of Primorye Capital

6mln Rubles will be spent on Vladivostok improvement this year. An expert on city landscaping Anna YAMKACH said it at the meeting of the headquarters on sanitary two months held in the City Administration, the correspondent of RIA PrimaMedia reports.

Including 21 million 380 thousand, Backyard Landscaping allotted on current maintenance of green plantations, 5mln - on landscaping the city center, placing of green architectural forms and taking care of them. It’s planned to spend 1,5mln Rubles on flower decoration of retaining walls, funds for their repairing are also stipulated.

“Flower decoration of Vladivostok will include some new elements this year. These are flower “mushrooms,” “stars,” decoration of blocks for flags with flowers. Usual forms, such as balls, pyramids of flowers, decoration of viaducts will be used. Relief of Vladivostok is difficult, and we try to brighten sad alternation of retaining walls and stones,” Anna YAMKACH said.

One of the problems of city landscaping,Backyard Landscaping in the opinion of Anna YAMKACH, is theft of flowers by citizens.

“We have to take extra measures for protection of green plantations. Some citizens think that flowers on flowerbeds are a source of free bouquets,” Anna YAMKACH noted.

According to Anna YAMKACH, there are experienced landscaping experts in the city, quality flower seeds have been already bought, a detailed plan of work has been worked out. But the funds allotted from the city budget are insufficient.

“Changing of climate caused, for example, appearance of droughty periods in Primorye. Lawns and flower-beds need watering in summer, but we do not have any means for organization of this work. There is also no opportunity to plant bushes on city squares, as it’s a very expensive procedure,” Anna YAMKACH said.

For comparison Anna YAMKACH gave information on organization of work on landscaping of the city in Nakhodka Backyard Landscaping.

“130mln Rubles were allotted for landscaping of Nakhodka last year, three times more than in Vladivostok. We hope that the city Duma will follow this example and increase expenses of the city budget for purposes of improvement, Anna YAMKACH added.

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Monday, April 7th, 2008

A Few Ways To Use Your Decorative Landscaping Rocks

Landscaping your yard is a great way to make it as unique as the people living in the house. By allowing your inner landscaping designer to come out and play, you open up a lot of different possibilities for what your yard will look like.

Of course, there are the standard tools of grass and bushes, and even a vegetable garden. But have you ever considered using decorative landscaping rocks? These pieces can add a welcomed contrast to just about any garden area that you can imagine. If youre not sure on how to use them, perhaps a few suggestions would be in order.

A Small Walk Down The Stone Path

One of the best ways to use decorative landscaping rocks is to create a place for your feet to walk while youre enjoying the garden. Indeed, these decorative stone rocks are a fantastic way to lead your friends and family up the garden path, literally. Make sure you choose stones that are smooth and level, and ones that will occasionally catch the eyes of the people walking by.

A Stone Marks The Spot

Stone walkways, of course, arent the only ways to use decorative landscaping rocks. Often these small pieces of art can be used to mark a change in your garden, or something to take notice. By placing the larger ones in strategic places, youll be able to draw a persons eyes to that particular plant of interest. Want your next door neighbor to notice how much work you put into the rose bushes in the southern corner? Place a few decorative landscaping rocks leading to the plant and chances are her gaze will rise right to it.

Camouflage For A Blemish

Of course, making something stand out is not the only object of using decorative landscaping rocks. If used wisely, they can be also used to disguise those little imperfections that any garden has. Placing the decorative landscaping rocks in certain patterns is a great way to draw attention away from certain mishaps in your garden.

A Place To Rest

A garden, if its not being used to grow vegetables is a great place just to sit down and relax. That is, of course, if you have a place to do such a thing. Using decorative landscaping rocks and a little bit of mortar is a great way to create a unique patio where you and your friends can sit and have a great conversation among the flowers.

These are just a few of the many ways that decorative landscaping rocks can be used by a homeowner to make their garden stand out. Be sure to plan everything out and go with what your instinct tells you. Chances are it will be simply beautiful.

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Saturday, March 15th, 2008

A Few Ways To Use Your Decorative Landscaping Rocks

Landscaping your yard is a great way to make it as unique as the people living in the house. By allowing your inner landscaping designer to come out and play, you open up a lot of different possibilities for what your yard will look like.

Of course, there are the standard tools of grass and bushes, and even a vegetable garden. But have you ever considered using decorative landscaping rocks? These pieces can add a welcomed contrast to just about any garden area that you can imagine. If youre not sure on how to use them, perhaps a few suggestions would be in order.

A Small Walk Down The Stone Path

One of the best ways to use decorative landscaping rocks is to create a place for your feet to walk while youre enjoying the garden. Indeed, these decorative stone rocks are a fantastic way to lead your friends and family up the garden path, literally. Make sure you choose stones that are smooth and level, and ones that will occasionally catch the eyes of the people walking by.

A Stone Marks The Spot

Stone walkways, of course, arent the only ways to use decorative landscaping rocks. Often these small pieces of art can be used to mark a change in your garden, or something to take notice. By placing the larger ones in strategic places, youll be able to draw a persons eyes to that particular plant of interest. Want your next door neighbor to notice how much work you put into the rose bushes in the southern corner? Place a few decorative landscaping rocks leading to the plant and chances are her gaze will rise right to it.

Camouflage For A Blemish

Of course, making something stand out is not the only object of using decorative landscaping rocks. If used wisely, they can be also used to disguise those little imperfections that any garden has. Placing the decorative landscaping rocks in certain patterns is a great way to draw attention away from certain mishaps in your garden.

A Place To Rest

A garden, if its not being used to grow vegetables is a great place just to sit down and relax. That is, of course, if you have a place to do such a thing. Using decorative landscaping rocks and a little bit of mortar is a great way to create a unique patio where you and your friends can sit and have a great conversation among the flowers.

These are just a few of the many ways that decorative landscaping rocks can be used by a homeowner to make their garden stand out. Be sure to plan everything out and go with what your instinct tells you. Chances are it will be simply beautiful.

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Saturday, March 15th, 2008