Rock Landscaping Decoration Ideas Tips

You can even create waterfall landscapes by in graduated sizes around a pond and adding a pump to circulate the water over the . can be used alone or with plants, especially succulents, to create a desert . You might want to create a raised bed for using stones.

can be created from stone you find available at a local store or you can purchase stones of almost any size and shape from specialty landscaping companies. For pathways, river stone in small sizes are commonly used. A stone wall, on the other hand, would require much larger stones. make great materials for building berms, walls, and raised planting beds. (more…)

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Saturday, July 19th, 2008

Its Hot Again This Year Eco Chic Gardening

the average household spent more than $400 for garden-related items. Landscaping grew by 19 percent, water gardening by 49 percent, planting by 26 percent and by 1 percent. Experts watch sales and several other areas to distinguish trends.

Why are they important? Garden and landscape trends shape for the next year and years to come.

I mentioned last year after returning from the International Conference in Little Rock that green gardening was the undertone of many of the speakers. For 2008, the Garden Media Group identified going green as the No. 1 , professional trend-watchers for the gardening industry.

“Environmentally savvy homeowners know that it’s not just good enough to live an environmentally friendly lifestyle; you’ve got to be environmentally responsible ” said Garden Media’s Susan McCoy.

Gardeners want to find , use locally produced or recycled materials and use environmentally responsible .

Eco-chic is the for gardens designed and maintained in an ecology friendly manner. Gardeners are recycling plastic pots, composting and using to catch rainwater. To restore balance in nature, they are creating feeding spots for birds and so that bees, ladybugs and have fruit and nectar to eat.

Water gardening is still trendy. However, it is not necessary to have a huge . In fact, is out. New smaller scale fountains and ponds are . They use less water, require less maintenance and can be more interesting in a home . Pondless waterfalls are an option as are tabletop and recirculating fountains.

Many gardeners are opting for less grass in smart and easy landscapes. They are adding stamped concrete patios, walks and driveways. Turfless landscapes are showing up as gardeners install rocks, , trees and ground covers rather than traditional . More expensive initially, it will save time, money and energy in maintenance, especially if combined with a drip irrigation system. Natives show up frequently in gardens as well as ornamental grasses.

Half of this country’s consumers say that a lack of time is a bigger issue than a lack of . The service industry is exploding as homeowners who have purchased homes with large landscaped lawns just cannot find time to maintain the outdoor aspects. Full-grown plants and trees are hot sellers for homeowners too impatient to wait for smaller ones to naturally mature in the .

Outdoor rooms take center stage in gardening trends. For the past five years, outdoor living and decorating were cited as the top two mega trends. In 2007, $6.2 billion was spent on outdoor furniture, accessories and grills. More than a million outdoor kitchens were constructed, and upscale homeowners opted for construction of gazebos near their outdoor pools. Stylish table lamps, special submersible lighting for fountains and dramatic illumination options are now on the market as a result of interest in outdoor living projects.

Simplicity is in with a new twist on the monochromatic slant. One basic color theme dominates a bed or pot with foliage and succulents, many of them variegated, used as accents. Services A ratio of 60 percent of a primary color, 30 percent of a secondary color and 10 percent of accent color is attractive for a pot or bed. Big is beautiful these days. Big in big containers with big bold color are being used to create stylish pot scapes.

The “slo” food movement is growing, according to and Garden Consultant Adele Kleine.

“This philosophy reduces dependence on convenience and processed fast food. One of the purposes of gardening is to encourage adults and children to feel better emotionally and to inspire them to take more control over what they consume. That’s what slo food does,” Kleine said.

Farmers markets and organic food stands are part of this movement, as well as home . Garden sales via the Internet are increasing dramatically. This year, sales are expected to equal or exceed catalog sales, growing from $7 million in 2007 to more than $10 million.

Consumers jump on the bandwagon for products that are new and hot, so growers will continue to introduce hundreds of new each year to meet consumer demands. Organic pesticides, fertilizers, eco-friendly products and drought tolerant and/or pest-resistant , many of which are container suitable - plus more native options - are expected to be big sellers this year.

Hopefully, these eco-friendly trends are not merely fads that will fade with time Landscaping Services. We all can be responsible caretakers of the environment, but need readily accessible products to help us do so.

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Monday, May 26th, 2008

Kalamazoo College Volunteers Give Back, Help Neighborhoods

and clothes couldn’t dampen the spirits of volunteers , fixing and building Saturday on Adams Street.

The work was part of ’s first Day of Gracious Giving, a program to help mark the school’s .

Students, alumni and faculty volunteered to work on five community-service projects, from home repair to landscaping to preparing meals for the homeless.

On Adams Street, in the , there were some 150 students doing repairs on 15 homes.

“I really wanted to get involved in the community like I did back home,” said Allie Sachnoff, 19, a K-College freshman from Los Angeles, who was painting trim on a resident’s house.

“It gives students a chance to get out and do something (worthwhile) outside of the classroom.”

Another service project brought together volunteers to do , painting and in six different neighborhoods.

“It’s a really ,” said resident Cheryl , 42, who had a stone garden built in the backyard of her home on Adams.

She said she didn’t know if the project would be completed, but “Everybody really came out to support this project.

“People are congregating, going from house to house,” she said. “It’s the community, residents and students coming together to beautify the streets.”

Other projects volunteers tackled Saturday were:

Renovating two houses on Phelps Street in the . Tutoring, mentoring, conflict-resolution and after- will be offered at the homes once the work is done. Volunteers also cleared an area of debris for a playground for youths.

Removing trash and growth from a local creek between Academy and streets.

Preparing food, serving it and then cleaning up after lunch at Ministry with Community.

Cleaning up yards on .

Janice Lakers, 63, who lives on Adams, said she appreciated the did in building a new front porch at her home.

“Wow, it’s great,” she said.

Lakers moved back to Kalamazoo in 2005 after teaching singing in the Netherlands for 22 years.

“It great to get to know my neighbors and that the students came out to help,” she said.

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Monday, May 19th, 2008

The AlzheimerS Garden

One speciality of St Equipment Landscaping. Anthony Park resident Erik Jorgensen, whose business is called Wandering Designs, is creating Alzheimer’s gardens, which often include a structure such as a .

Unless you know someone with Alzheimer’s disease, you may never have heard of an Alzheimer’s garden. The concept is popular on both coasts but isn’t well-known in Minnesota.

That’s changing, however, through the efforts of St. Anthony Park resident Erik Jorgensen and his business, Wandering Designs, which specializes in therapeutic gardens.

An Alzheimer’s garden is usually constructed as part of a nursing home or retirement home in an area protected from the elements. There must be a solid fence at least eight feet high — so residents don’t try to leave or become distressed by what happens outside the garden — and a locked gate. Pathways should be easy to follow.

The garden should be calm and peaceful but have many sources of stimulation: brightly colored flowers with pleasant scents, plants and pathways with varied textures  Equipment Landscaping. Often Jorgensen includes or wind chimes, as well as feeders that attract birds and other wildlife.

At the farthest point of the garden is a major —Equipment a table with a brightly colored umbrella, wishing well, , porch — to coax people along the paths, and there are frequent rest stops with benches that have backs and arm rests. Benches are angled rather than facing each other because most Alzheimer’s patients don’t like to look at other people straight on.

Jorgensen tries to evoke childhood memories by using old-fashioned such as hollyhocks, clotheslines, picket fences, wishing wells and arbors. He adds an open area for activities: having a barbecue, or vegetables, meeting with therapy animals.

“The garden must be an active rather than a passive place,” he says.

Jorgensen grew up in Como Park and attended North Dakota State University and the University of Minnesota, where he got a bachelor’s degree in environmental design. He worked for Bachman’s in Eden Prairie, where he ran the garden center, and later joined McCarron Designs, where he did interior landscape design. He did “The Mighty Axe” at the Mall of America and the landscaping design for the Episcopal Home on University Avenue.

In 1999 the American Society of Landscape Architects began “One Hundred Years, One Hundred Gardens,” a pro bono project on the occasion of its 100th anniversary. McCarron Designs worked with other artists to plan the Tabitha Garden, specifically for Alzheimer’s patients, at the Regina Medical Center in Hastings.

Jorgensen looked for others with more experience to help him but wasn’t able to find anyone. So he began educating himself about Alzheimer’s patients and the general principles guiding their care.

The project was a success and Jorgensen became the resident expert on Alzheimer’s gardens at McCarron Designs. After being laid off there, he received a commission to plan a therapy garden in the courtyard at the HealthEast Marion Center in St. Paul. That lead to other jobs, and he started his own company, Wandering Designs, in 2003, with Alzheimer’s gardens as his specialty. About 85 percent of his business is therapy gardens.

“This feels so much better to me than doing corporate ,” Jorgensen says. “That is often just to feed someone’s ego by constructing a fabulous interior space. This is an ‘egoless’ endeavor — to design a place that feels more like home than an institution for people who are at the end of their lives. It feels right.”

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Monday, April 7th, 2008

Landscaping Designs for the Yard and Garden

Landscaping Designs for the Yard and Garden

You are in need of some landscaping ideas. Previously, it was enough to just mow the lawn. However, now that you have retired, you are in need of a hobby, and you have decided that the hobby is going to be . That being said, you need to think about landscaping designs for your yard, as well as for the garden.

About Designs

The first thing that you should do is look at the designs of the other houses in the neighborhood. This is not to say that you should emulate the designs of your neighbors, but at the same time you can get ideas from them that you might not have considered otherwise.

A popular design that many people like to incorporate in their yard is flowers under trees in a circular border manner. However, something that you need to think about if you like this idea is the issue of how much shade various kinds of flowers need. For example, if you want flowers that require a significant amount of sunlight, you should not plant them under a tree that is thick with leaves.

Something else that you need to think about when it comes to design is whether or not you want to use mulch. Cedar is a popular kind of that people like to use, but unfortunately, the nice redness of the gets lightened over time with sun and rain. However, if you want a kind of that keeps its color longer, there is a new kind of rubber available.

Many people like to incorporate bushes into their design. This is usually for privacy reasons. If you think that you want to have as well, be aware that they need to be pruned at certain times during the year. If you do not have this done, the can get too large and cumbersome.

The main thing that you need to think about when it comes to planning prior to figuring out definitive designs is the climate that you have. If you live in a climate that is temperate throughout the year, you have more of an advantage in terms of that will last more than one season.

For more information on designs, go to your local garden center and ask customer service representatives. You can also ask various companies to come visit your yard and give estimates/ideas. You are sure to find the right design ideas for your yard with the proper research.

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Tuesday, January 8th, 2008