Four win Southside Beautification Awards

The City of Southside received 33 nominations for its annual Southside Beautification Awards, and judges seemed to have a tough time weeding out the four winners.

The awards were given to the winners of each of the four categories: business, church, neighborhood entrance and residential.

Sandra Patterson, a contest judge, said the winners were chosen based on several criteria and were given a score of one to 10 in each, with 10 being excellent.

“We had a three-panel group and we judged them on criteria like landscape design, symmetry of blooming and overall compatible landscaping (in regard to) the structure,” she said.

Patterson said none of the judges are Southside residents but they all are Master Gardeners. With gardening being their areas of expertise, one might assume choosing the best landscape would be a simple task for them. Wrong!

“When we were finished, one of the judges said, ‘That was harder than I thought it would be,’” Patterson said. “And it was!”

She said it took almost eight straight hours to judge all the nominees. Sometimes the homeowners were there, sometimes not, but Patterson said the judges had the opportunity to meet almost all of the nominees.

“Each of these owners is to be commended for their hard work,” she said. “Some of them were new at gardening, but the (nominees) show the quality of the residents of Southside.”

Homeowners, churches, businesses and neighborhoods were judged for the event, and 16 nominations came in for just one category.

“We were three different judges,  Hillside Landscaping  but we all have a trained eye and know what to look for,” Patterson said. “And out of the top four nominees, Hillside Landscaping   they were all six points from one another. It was really close.”

Judy Christian, chairwoman of the committee, reactivated the event four years ago as a way to reward local people for their hard work keeping Southside beautiful as well as to motivate others to take more pride in their surroundings.

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Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

??Gcc Landscaping Business Set To Double To Aed 60 Billion By 2010??

Spurred by the boom in the regional construction industry, landscaping projects in the region comprising commercial and residential landscaping design and maintenance are set to double in volume to exceed AED 60 billion by 2010 according to UK’s CMPi, organizers of Gulf Landscaping. The event is scheduled to take place at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre from 17th to 18th November 2008.

Landscaping in the GCC is a competitive business fraught with high competition, shrinking profits and high capital expense. “With the advent of international players, regional landscape designers and builders are realizing that there’s more to growth than sunshine, soil and water,” said CMPi Group Director, Chris Fountain.

Spurred by the boom in the regional construction industry, landscaping projects in the region comprising commercial and residential landscaping design and maintenance are set to double in volume to exceed AED 60 billion by 2010 according to UK’s CMPi, organizers of Gulf Landscaping. The event is scheduled to take place at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre from 17th to 18th November 2008.

Landscaping in the GCC is a competitive business fraught with high competition, shrinking profits and high capital expense. “With the advent of international players, regional landscape designers and builders are realizing that there’s more to growth than sunshine, soil and water,” said CMPi Group Director, Chris Fountain.

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Mr. Fountain noted that the GCC is beginning to value the outdoors and landscaping professionals are now in big demand. “Driven by the construction boom, many households have increasingly turned to landscaping services to design, develop and maintain their investments while landscaping contractors are learning how to grab their share of this high growth market,” he said.

Gulf Landscaping is an exhibition for the booming Middle East outdoor design and landscaping architecture industries. The event is designed to generate business leads for companies in the landscaping business.

The exhibition will serve as a sourcing platform and networking event for the regions landscape architects, developers, contractors and other key buyers, to enable them to select products, services and solutions for the huge number of major developments in the commercial, retail, leisure and residential sectors, as well as city parks and highways.

The event will be co-located with Working Buildings Middle East and Fit-Out Middle East to enable those involved in the development and delivery of this major growth industry to meet their landscaping and outdoor architecture needs in one visit.

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Thursday, June 5th, 2008

Oshkosh Man Retires To Start New Endeavor

He’ll dive into a second career as the boss of his own landscape design business that he’s planned to do for quite some time.

“I’ve been testing the water to do this for about three years. It’s either jump in or don’t go swimming,” said Stieg, who lives in the town of Algoma. “I’m going to enjoy the heck out of this. It’s such a change of pace from being inside a factory.”

Starting his own business, called Seven Oaks Custom Landscape Design, after more than 20 years with Bemis Specialty Films isn’t a short-term endeavor for the 53-year-old Stieg.

He has also worked for Copps Department Store, American Family Insurance and Marc’s Big Boy, where he specialized in cooking breakfast items.

“I would like to work at landscape design until I’m 68 or 69. It’s not out of the realm of possibility,” he said.

Stieg said shift work at Bemis was getting more difficult as he got older.

“I thought about doing my landscape and design business part-time, but it would be difficult to service my customers working every other day at Bemis,” he said. “The advice people told me was ‘Don’t do your landscape design business part-time because you’ll probably get too frustrated.’”

Stieg, who has teamed up for his services through McKay Nursery Company based in Waterloo, is no novice at landscape design.

For years, he’s landscaped the three-acre yard at his house.

“My neighbors said I was pretty good at landscaping,” Stieg said.

He decided to take horticulture classes at Fox Valley Technical College in Appleton.
His first class was landscape design.

“The instructors saw some of my work and thought I was good at it,” Stieg said. “It’s one thing to have your neighbors tell you about your landscape talents, but when my instructors told me that I was good at it, that made me think about doing it as a job.”

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Thursday, June 5th, 2008

Landscape Design Poised To Grow Rapidly In Uae

Abu Dhabi, June 2 (IANS) Driven by a construction boom, the market for landscape designing in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) is expected to grow to well over 60 billion UAE dirhams (about $16 billion) in the next two years, WAM news agency reported Monday. The commercial and residential designing projects in the Arab federation are set to exceed 60 billion UAE dirhams by 2010, the news agency quoted Britain’s CMPi, a leading landscaping firm, as saying.

“With the advent of international players in the sector, the local landscape designers and builders realise that there’s more to growth than sunshine, soil and water,” CMPi group director, Chris Fountain, said.

He said the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) is beginning to value the outdoors, and landscaping professionals are now in big demand.

“Many households have turned to landscaping services to design, develop and maintain their investments, while landscaping contractors are learning how to grab their share of this high growth market,” he said.

CMPi will organise an exhibition Nov 17-18 on outdoor design and architecture in the Middle East. The event is being organised to generate business ideas for the landscape designing companies.

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Thursday, June 5th, 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

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

Garden Tours Provide Opportunity To See New Ideas

Meet with landscape designers at 10 private gardens and landscapes they designed and installed from Southern Marin to San Rafael, Terra Linda and Novato. These gorgeous, well-established gardens may feature a stone fountain, pond, waterfall or beehive.

Whether your garden has shaded or sunny areas you will get great ideas for successful plant combinations. Tour gardens are diverse, but all are pesticide-free.

Gardens may feature a creek with stabilization project, steep terraced hillsides with oaks, redwood and fern bordered rock creeks, succulents and ornamental grasses, fruit trees, lawns, herbs and medicinal plants or flat meadow areas. Some are Asian or English garden-influenced with a California twist. See ways to better use rain and irrigation water on your property.

Learn how the right plants and planting can reduce fire danger around your home. Garden includes natives and other Mediterranean summer-dry climate plants.

Discounts to visitors are offered on landscaping services. Refreshments provided and free resource booklets and other garden experts are available at each site to answer questions.

Marin’s Eco-Friendly Garden Tour Sat., May 17 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Featured designers include PlannedLand, Jeannine White; Edger Landscape Design; EcoScapes, Leslie Patton; Quinn’s California Landscapes; Blume & Dean Landscape; Equinox Landscape; California Native Landscapes; EcoLogic Landscaping, Leith Carstarphen; Reilly Designs and Art Gardens Landscape Company.

Registration required, directions provided at time of registration: Call Gina Purin of MCSTOPPP at 499-3202. Cost: $15 per adult.

Support Community Gardens with City Council

The cost of fresh fruit and vegetables is going through the roof. Many children have lost their connection to the earth and its seasons. Seniors have become increasingly isolated. People from all walks of life have little or no access to garden space, whether apartment renters or folks who own condos, townhomes or McMansions. Community gardens bring people together, provide opportunities for socialization and education on healthy gardening and eating.

Please contact the Novato City Council and let them know you support community gardens. The Garden Committee has identified two good potential locations. Novato covers a large geographic area and one garden would be a great start, whichever location they choose.

For little cost to the city, it will bring great benefit to Novato residents. Individuals including seniors and families with children will be able to experience the pleasure of gardening, the health benefits of garden exercise and fresh, pesticide-free food.

The Novato Community Garden Committee has been working with the city and other groups to find a permanent location. They received grant funding through the Kaiser Foundation and Supervisor Judy Arnold that will help the gardens get off the ground. Ongoing funding for insurance and water management will be provided by nominal annual garden plot rental fees.

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Thursday, May 15th, 2008

New Landscape Plan To Make History Bloom

The Town of Windsor Museum area in Boardwalk Park is coming together, but the town wanted a better landscaping design around it Landscaping Contractor.

“We wanted a historical landscaping design for the area, with plants common to the area in the 1920s,” said Windsor Director of Parks and Recreation Melissa Chew.

The Town of Windsor Museum area in Boardwalk Park is coming together, but the town wanted a better landscaping design around it.

“We wanted a historical landscaping design for the area, with plants common to the area in the 1920s,” said Windsor Director of Parks and Recreation Melissa Chew.

The town contacted Colorado State University’s Design and Horticulture Program and offered a competition for the landscape design. A plan designed by two students, CSU seniors Celsey Svenson and Lydia Young, was selected by town staff.

“We were given a concept of what this area is and did research to find out what sort of plant life would have existed here,” Svenson said. “We designed a plan with natural grass seeding, such as buffalo grass.”

In the design, poppies and an orchard of peach, cherry and apple trees will be planted. A vegetable garden will be located near the school house, featuring cabbage and carrots. Other plant life will include yucca plants and goldenrod.

“We’re also going to incorporate lots of wildflower patches,” Young said.

Windsor Town Manager Kelly Arnold asked about irrigation.

“Because the plant life is native to the area, we’ve designed it to be almost xeriscaped,” Young said. “Of course, there will need to be some watering with the initial planting.”

Chew explained that less intense watering would help keep the historical buildings in good shape by eliminating water spray on the buildings.

“This design will need to be approved by the landscape architect we have on retainer,” Chew said. “Then we can look at the cost of implementing the plan and decide when we can get to work.”

Windsor Mayor John Vazquez asked about the hard surface being planned for the trails through the village.

“We’re looking at using a fine crusher gravel, which is pretty low maintenance,” Svenson said.

The museum is coming along well, and the train depot Landscaping Contractor, schoolhouse, church and beet shanty will be open to receive visitors this summer.

“The house and kitchen area are not finished, and the church hasn’t been given much renovation since we accepted it from the Historical Society,” Chew said. “We also don’t have much of a plan for the Eaton House yet, but we’ll get there.”

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Friday, May 9th, 2008

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

Going Native In Your Garden

Gardening with native plants - that is, with species that grew here before the first settlers arrived from Europe - has always had its supporters, Landscaping Services but it’s a trend that’s getting stronger as part of the eco-friendly movement. Advocates argue that because native species have adapted to local conditions, they’re easier to grow, less likely to invade other parts of the garden, and require less water, pesticides and fertilizers. They also maintain that native plants are the best choice to attract birds, butterflies and other wildlife.

Does this mean we should dig up our non-native perennials and shrubs and replace them with ferns, trilliums, and maples? Not according to two Ottawa garden experts. They say that while native plants do offer advantages, the most practical approach — and sometimes the most eco-friendly — is to integrate them with non-native species, finding the best location for each plant.

“There are a lot of generalizations about native plants, but these aren’t always true,” says Eva Schmitz, owner of Artistic Landscape Design. Take the statement that native plants are hardier. “A species from a country like Russia may be just as hardy as a Canadian native, perhaps hardier,” she says. Nor are native plants necessarily less invasive.

“Some natives spread very quickly,” says Adele Courville, design centre manager at Rockcliffe Landscaping. “An aggressive, self-seeding native may be fine for a woodland area, but not for an urban garden. You can try to stop a plant from spreading by creating a barrier below the soil surface, but in time, it will over-root and won’t survive.” While she believes that native plants are the best for wildlife,

Ms. Schmitz considers this to be a generalization, too. “Birds and bees are attracted by colour and shape. They don’t avoid a plant because it’s originally from Europe or Asia.”

Rather than focusing on whether it’s native or not, both women stress the importance of picking plants that will suit their location in the garden. How well any plant does, they say, depends on whether you have the light, moisture, soil and other conditions it needs. Native white spruce, for example, flourishes

in the forest, but can’t take city pollution; red lobelia thrives in water, but will die in a dry location. “Many native Ontario plants grow in woodlands with rich,

organic soil and plenty of water and shade,” Ms. Courville notes. “They won’t succeed in dry, full sun environment.You must provide similar conditions or a native species can wind up being high maintenance.”

In the wrong space, natives may be as susceptible to disease as other plants. “If you have a native, upright phlox in an area with poor circulation, it will get mildew,” Eva Schmitz says. “Again, it’s about putting the right plant in the right location and keeping it healthy. That’s also the best way to eliminate the use of toxins such as pesticides. I don’t spray any plant.”

Besides being a practical solution for many gardens, integrating native plants with other species boosts can boost variety and visual appeal. Natives can be straggly and inconspicous-looking, and depending on the plant, may take as long as five years to bloom. “Natives that have been hybridized often provide bigger blooms,” Ms. Schmitz observes. “They may also be taller, more compact, and have stronger stems and healthier leaves. In fact, native plants can be made richer with hybridized versions.”

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Friday, May 9th, 2008