Living Room In The Garden

Theres nothing like smelling the perfume of flowers and witnessing lush greenery right in your courtyard! Outdoor living, with aesthetic utility, is at its best when nature dazzles the eye and nurtures the soul, explains Neera Gulati

Retreat spaces is what I would call them. Landscaping Services  If you have your own land and are building an independent house for yourself and the family, it would be a wonderful idea for you to create a living space away from your main house, which would be a sanctuary you will want to remove from the house to create a sense of privacy and solace. In this busy world, you would love to be away from the busy household chores and create a space outside your house, that is either in the garden area or a backyard. Or if there is space constraint, you could do something in a balcony or a terrace.

One of the most popular outdoor spaces is the outdoor dining room and kitchen. Plans for outdoor dining rooms can range from the basic to the outrageous, depending on your inclination and budget. Merely placing tables and chairs to take advantage of (or to avoid) the sun, with a barbecue set up nearby, may be all you need.

Even so, consider accents to dress up the space, like container gardens and solar powered lights. If you want to go broke, install an entire outdoor kitchen with weatherproof cabinets and appliances to form the ‘walls’ or boundaries of the space which you can then dress up with lively tiles and a dining set, and use a pergola to provide shade and some cover. Outdoor living spaces are often the only access to nature that the modern lifestyle affords. You can create natural spaces at home. It certainly isn’t difficult to build outdoor living spaces. But it does take an appreciation for the ‘divide and conquer’ approach. We take it for granted that our houses are divided into rooms, but the concept for having similar outdoor living spaces may sound odd.

At first indeed, the biggest obstacle standing in most people’s way is that it just doesn’t occur to them to divide up a yard so as to maximize their enjoyment of it. The more conscious we become of outdoor living spaces, the more we can tailor them to suit our needs. Having separate outdoor spaces allows you to create mini landscape designs. Just as you can paint or wallpaper an indoor room using a colour scheme unique to that room, so also you can use colour to make individualised statements for each of your outdoor living spaces. But here, instead of paint or wallpaper, you determine your colour scheme when you select the plants you’ll be using for the area. Proper application of colour theory in landscape design can even influence mood and perception.

More the merrier

The materials which you can use for outdoor living spaces can be different from the indoor rooms. For floors, for eg, you could use grass, patios or decks. For the walls, you could use formal hedges, fences or informal hedges. For the ceiling pergolas, decorative canvas canopies, awnings or lawn umbrellas will be great. Keep both aesthetics and function in mind when constructing outdoor rooms. But in areas dedicated to physical activity, if you have to choose between the two, focus on function. Never compromise on safety. You can make up for compromises in aesthetics later, when you accessorize your outdoor rooms.

Below are examples of outdoor rooms and how to put them together.

Pool areas: Landscaping around swimming pools presents specific challenges regarding safety, maintenance and  privacy. You don’t want people slipping on anything, you don’t want to spend all your time cleaning the debris, and you don’t want the neighbours peering in at you. In selecting a ‘wall’ to enclose the area, all of these considerations come into play. ‘Floor‘ in pool areas must be slip-resistant.

Meditation areas: For meditation gardens, (which is a wonderful way to de stress from your busy schedule), privacy is very much an issue. Here reflection, not physical activity, takes centre stage. Aesthetic consideration, consequently, will carry greater weight. Most people find plants more relaxing than hardscape, so consider planting hedges to form the wall of such outdoor rooms. For a floor, consider a combination of natural materials.

In meditation gardens, a ceiling may come in quite handy. Here, you’ll choose between aesthetics and functionality. A vine covered arbour may be more inspiring to gaze up at, than a lawn umbrella, but the latter will keep you and the books you may be reading, dry. If you’d like something more solid than an umbrella, consider installing a pergola and covering it with fibreglass. But water shouldn’t be banned from contemplative outdoor rooms. If there’s any place in your yard for accessories such as garden fountains and waterfalls, surely its here. There is nothing like the soothing sound of bubbling water to put you into a reflective mood.

You could also create an living room outside. Deck it up with cozy furniture, speakers and ambient lighting, with plants of your choice, and you would love to use this place, all the year round.

Nowadays, most people want to live and entertain in a much more informal atmosphere. Guests also would love to gravitate towards the great room, which blends into the kitchen and outdoor living spaces.

These outdoor dining spaces should reflect the informal yet stylish design of the interior great rooms. Create an outdoor retreat that allows you and your guests to spill outside from the room. Don’t be afraid to mix chandeliers and old antiques outdoors, especially in outdoor dining areas. Utilise a touch of indoor style and unify the space by adding outdoor drapes, pillows and rugs to complete the look.

The use of colour, pattern and texture in fabrics is an excellent way to reflect the indoor space. Add colourful elements by choosing flowering plants to accent containers scattered throughout the outdoor living space.  Mix and match materials in these outdoor settings, juxtapose wrought iron with glass, steel with terracotta, wood against woven components. Outdoor living is at its best when nature dazzles the eye and nurtures the soul. Create your perfect casual environment out.

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Friday, May 9th, 2008

A succulent place for a garden

There are many reasons for growing succulents in containers. These undemanding, slow growing plants require only infrequent watering and occasional fertilization.

They rarely need deadheading or pruning. They can make a portable garden for residents of short-term accommodations. And they are attractive, like living sculptures.

Succulent container gardens are all different, but their creators are alike in one respect%26#8212;they love the way the plants look in pots.

The handsome specimens in front of Tika and Richard Phipps side-by-side art studios in Los Osos initially were selected for pragmatic reasons%26#8212; as portable subjects for their beginning art students to sketch.

Richard teaches art at Cuesta College. He previously taught college-level art in Santa Barbara. Tika was an art teacher at the Montessori Center School in Santa Barbara. After moving here, she conducted private classes for local children, ages 6 to 16. Now shes retired to devote more time to her own art.

Their original tiny plants grew, becoming complex subjects for more advanced students. When they became too large to transport, the pots were arranged in front of their studio.

Self-seeding lobelia and poppies grace some of the pots. Tika also added some pansies and ornamental cabbages to contribute color for her digitized photographs.

Meanwhile, Richard continues to propagate new specimens for his classes.

Whereas the Phipps container garden is orderly and spare, Ann Hodges garden in the next block is quite the opposite. It is filled with an eclectic collection of plants, accessories and art objects.

Art and children

Anns whimsical garden reflects her love of children including such touches as using toy dump trucks for containers. She shares her joy of gardening with her Los Osos Montessori School students, bringing them to see the peach blossoms, or just to eat lunch in her kid-friendly backyard, where antique plant racks mingle with angels, fairies, bird baths and much more.

With an artists sensibility, Hodges turned an eyesore into an asset by hanging plants and small artworks on the bare wooden fence that is viewed from her living room and kitchen windows. Although she declares shes not an artist, she also created most of the mosaics and stained glass pieces that enhance her home as well as her garden.

A home for succulents

The third garden is mine. Our home entry is a south-facing atrium 20 feet by 12 feet with planting beds flanking the walkway. A plexiglass roof over two-thirds of the atrium provides ideal conditions for succulents.

Before we moved to Los Osos, I had suffered from garden deprivation while living abroad, and this small space received my pent-up gardening impulses until our outdoor gardens could be renovated. With a low budget, I started with tiny specimens and propagated cuttings, displaying them in fanciful, bird-shaped baskets from thrift shops.

A four-shelf plant stand was soon filled, and larger pots were arrayed along the walkway and up the steps. The arrangement was unified by using neutral container colors but still lacked something.

That problem was solved recently by another thrift shop find, a three-tiered corner plant stand. It finally provided the missing ingredient%26#8212;a focal point at the front door.

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Saturday, March 8th, 2008

There are many interesting ideas that can help you save money on your planting and landscaping

There are many interesting ideas that can help you save money on your planting and landscaping. Most of these ideas involve a little creativity, but you end up with an attractive and distinctive yard. And some of the ideas look nice and can save you money in other areas of your life, like food. At any rate, there are quite a few easy ways to stretch your dollar and still make plants an attractive part of the landscape.

Use vegetables. Plant vegetable seeds in your flower garden. Seeds cost much less than plants, especially many flowering plants that have already started growing. Choose attractive varieties that mix well with flowers and are attractive in their own right. Peppers look nice among flowers, with their attractive leaves and colorful issue as they ripen. Pumpkins and bushy-plant squashes actually look very nice planted in the same way one would plant an island of flowers. Squashes and pumpkin’s flower so they are pretty when they bloom, and their leaves grow big and beautiful. Tomatoes make great accent plants on the edges of flower gardens, and peas can be set up to grow on small edge fences. Their curly vines are appealing, and they are among the least expensive of vegetable. Not only can vegetables save you money in enhancing the look of your landscape, but they also save you money when it comes to eat.

Herbs for ground cover. Instead of spending money to buy plants designed for ground cover, invest in an herb garden. Buy seeds for the herbs you commonly use in your cooking: parsley, rosemary, thyme, oregano, and sage are all very attractive plants. They grow close to the ground, and can grow thickly, creating ideal ground cover. Chives and green onions can be planted behind for an even more ornamental look. Herbs also grow fast, and you can use them in your cooking, saving you money at the grocery store. You can still have your flowers throughout your garden, as these herbs go with any color scheme. Additionally, they will add a pleasing aroma to your home environs, making it inviting in smell as well as in looks.

Container gardens. Container gardens are among the cutest and more inexpensive landscaping ideas. Rather than trying to treat your soil and dealing with the constant hassles of upkeep, make a container garden. Your garden can hold a variety of plants, although annuals are among the best for this type of garden, as you can easily replace them as they dies out. It is possible to use perennials in a container garden, however, as long as you use a larger container so that they have room to create their extra bulbs. Buy potting soil on sale (if you buy at the end of the season, you can get it for sometimes as little as one or two dollars a bag), and then you can plant seeds in the soil. By the time winter is over, you should have flowers fit to be set outside.

You can use almost anything for containers. Old washtubs and tin cans make quaint containers. Clay pots are a little more elegant and can also be very decorative and attractive. It is even possible to use milk cartons (with the tops cut off) as containers. Whatever strikes your fancy and is deep enough to let the roots grow (which really is not too terribly deep) can be used in container gardening. Large urns and hanging baskets can also add to the look of your home. Much of the time you can get these items on clearance at the end of the season for just a few dollars.

After arranging your plants in their containers, you can then set your urns, pots, and old washtubs wherever you wish to in your yard. Hanging baskets need not hang only above your porch. If you have large enough trees that can support them, you can hang them from the branches. When planting your baskets, use starts or seeds. They cost less than more mature plants. It is even possible to start a herb garden and you can even grow most vegetables in containers.

With a little creativity, it is possible for you to turn a commonplace landscape into something really attractive without a lot of back breaking work and without having to spend a great deal of money to make improvements to the soil.

If you are looking for more great ideas then you will find plenty at Landscaping Ideas

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Wednesday, January 9th, 2008

Tons of events planned for this weekend

By MICHELLE WILLARD Post staff writer
This weekend is full of events for one and all. The highlights of the weekend of June 8 through 10 are the Parade of Homes and Discovery Center’s Secret Garden Party. Educational opportunities abound at Oaklands Mansion and Stones River National Battlefield.Parade of HomesOn Friday and Saturday, June 8 and 9, the 2007 “Homes Today” Parade of Homes exhibits some of Murfreesboro’s newest housing choices.”The Parade of Homes is an event for both our members and the community at large for home builders to showcase the best of what they do %26hellip; to showcase the newest floor plans and window shop if you are in the market for a new home,” said Karen Batey with the Rutherford County Home Builders Association.”This year’s Parade is the biggest we’ve had. We have 40 homes. All are decorated and furnished,” Batey said. So, even if visitors are not in the market for a home, they can come out and see the latest decorating techniques, paint colors and landscape designs, Batey explained.The Parade begins with a preview party from 5 to 8 in the evening Thursday, June 7 at the Cloister, one of two showcase sites displayed for the public. Slick Pig barbeque caters and Midnight Special performs at the event. The mouthing-watering barbeque will be accompanied by a mouth-watering antique car show.Judge’s awards will be presented to builders in traditional categories such as best kitchen, master suite, overall home, landscaping, best in show and people’s choice award. This year other awards include best outdoor living space, best home entertainment room, and best techno-house. Tickets for the preview party are $20 per person and are available through the Rutherford County Home Builders Association at 890-8224. The tickets also allow unlimited access to the other properties displayed by the Parade.The Cloister and Winslow Park showcase sites provide viewers with contrasting architectural styles and the newest floor plans and decorating techniques. Tickets are $10 per adult with children 12 and under free. They can be purchased at all Rutherford County MAPCO’s and Pinnacle Banks.The Parade also displays other houses spread throughout Rutherford County. Admission is free to these sties. More information and maps can be found at www.homestodayexpo.com. Discovery center2007 Secret Garden Party celebrates the 20th anniversary of the Discovery Center Friday, June 8, in the garden of Pat and Kathy Ryan. “We are a hands-on children’s museum specializing in interactive activities for children and their families. We are in the midst of an expansion project that will be completed in January 2008,” said Ann Mapp of the Discovery Center.The “An Evening on the Orient Express” themed event is a major fundraising event for the center, which plans on adding 7,500 square feet of new exhibits for local children featuring a transportation gallery exhibit. The party features a silent auction, including a Gibson Guitar. An international meal provided by A Catered Affair with wines from Charlie Patel of Stones River Liquors. It will also honor the volunteer efforts of Joyce Benedict and the Optimistic Gardeners Club. Tickets are $75 per person and can be purchased online at www.discoverycenteronline.org or by calling Rachel Anderson at 890-2300.The garden theme continues at the Discovery Center from 10 to 4 p.m. June 9, with “All Things Green.”Family friendly activities include presentations by master gardeners with topics from growing herbs and container gardens to composting. Children will enjoy T-shirt tie-dying, terra cotta pot and face painting, and free tree seedlings.Admission is $10 for everyone two and over. For more information visit the Discovery Center website or call 890-2300.Educational Events at Oaklands and Stones River National BattlefieldHistory buffs will enjoy a variety of activities from the Victorian Fair and Reenactment at Oaklands Historic House Museum to several tours and presentations at the Stones River National Battlefield. On Saturday, June 9, volunteers will bring the Victorian and Civil War era to life at Oaklands with activities, games and crafts for children and adults. Tours of the home are offered along with period music and storytelling.

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Thursday, December 20th, 2007

Exotic offerings Garden Landscaping

They and other succulent euphorbias are splendid additions to xeriscapes Garden Landscaping , container gardens and Southwestern landscapes.Succulent euphorbias require bright, indirect light Garden Landscaping , whereas spurges benefit from direct exposure to morning sunlight. (more…)

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Sunday, November 11th, 2007