Landscaping Services Tips

When the time has come for you to look for a landscaping service for your yard at home you need to consider some simple but often overlook facts. services are cropping up (excuse the pun) all over the place, more to the point; some companies are just not up to standard and couldn’t tell you a from a daffodil, while you take your garden and landscape seriously,

you wouldn’t want to let an untrained monkey loose on your grounds. When you decide to call up a service you must look at the basics such as, are they trained, how they trained, how long have they been in business, are there any references they can give you that are local to your area, drive round and check them out. Most of us want to save a bit of money when we can do, that said some of us prefer for the things around us to be attractive, especially in our homes and gardens. Using you can transform the green areas around your home into to enjoy day after day, not to mention the freshness it can bring into ones life. (more…)

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Monday, July 28th, 2008

Organic Landscaping

Ecoming more and more popular by the day are the benefits that can be felt from organic landscaping. This is wonderful as people are naturally turning to as they can save money and are not hazardous to your health like some chemical products and services.

It is no fun to have a garden that looks beautiful yet you cannot let your kids play in it as it has dangerous fertilizer all over the and grass.

As we have mentioned in other articles here, for the best results get that are native to your area. If you get that need to have special conditions created for them you will not be able to keep them alive without the use of some chemical or another, (more…)

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Friday, July 25th, 2008

Small Yard

If you only have a small yard or landscaping area to work with there are still many exciting you can create within your . You should chose that are not overpowering so they do not limit the usable space that you do have.

While you may miss out on huge , mazes and large ponds, you can still enjoy an attractive landscape that pleases the eye. You can shift thinking when looking at what you can plant in a small garden, how about building upwards instead of outwards. Read our page about , as there are many tips for creating small using containers that can save space.

How about a small rock garden as the focal point? These can be marvellous features of a garden, especially if other large do not out perform them. You can create a small rock garden in a small in your garden, in the corner or up against a wall, if you chose the carefully so they complement each other and pick that will not look overgrown, you can come up with a to look at. (more…)

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Thursday, July 24th, 2008

landscape insect protection

Most of us know the damage that insects can cause to our landscape gardens. Some damage caused can result in you having to completely replant your as they get damaged beyond repair. It is very important to take into consideration how you will mange the pests that try to attack your . You must know what you are dealing with before hand as if you are clueless you are likely to panic and not make a good decision. Like most other gardening methods there are natural ways and synthetic ways to get the job done.

Remember that not all insects are pests to your ; some insects such as provide essential treatment to your garden. If you are using a like a then you will most probably kill all the insects around, not just the ones doing actual harm. If you can identify the culprits and learn a little more about them, then you are able to eradicate the pests effectively without killing any other using other methods. (more…)

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Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008

Lettuce and Tomatoes in the Spring Garden

With the redbuds, daffodils, dogwoods and hellebores starting to bloom, Paul James knows that spring has sprung. That means there are some to be done in his :

When Paul started planting his lettuce crops about one month ago, he planned to maximize the harvest by planting the in succession. The first crop was planted four weeks and is now ready to harvest (figure A). The next stand was planted a week later (figure B). The last crop was planted just two weeks ago and has at least a couple more weeks of growing to do before it too is ready to go to the ().

This is a perfect example of succession sowing, or staggering the planting times of a crop (figure D). It’s an important growing technique that gives you the opportunity to enjoy fresh veggies, such as lettuce, over a longer period of time. “If I’d planted all this lettuce at once, I’d be inundated, and much of it would either go to waste or wind up on my neighbor’s , rather than mine,” says Paul. (more…)

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Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008

How to Avoid the Plant Ghetto

The first thing you have to do is clean out the . That means taking each plant or bag of unplanted and individually scrutinize the product. Put your plant on a table, one at a time, and ask yourself: where do you belong in my garden?

Follow through, right now. Take your and go plant that one plant. Help that little guy get off to a good start by amending the planting hole with some compost. Make sure you’ve read the tag and you’re planting it in a location with the appropriate and . The plant has probably been sitting around for a while, off the dead stuff and water him in. (more…)

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Thursday, July 17th, 2008

Urbandale Garden Part Of Tour

An resident’s interest in creating in landed his yard among the featured stops on the eighth annual Extraordinary Gardens by tour set for Saturday.

The event includes gardens in , West , and Clive. Each site was designed by a .

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

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

Krogulski’ boasts a garden filled with nearly 125 . Adding to the beauty is a rock- and a bed that creates a between the two gardens.

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

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

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Friday, June 20th, 2008

Arboretum style landscaping key to two suburban developments

Lush landscaping and other are considered vital to the success of both an 86-acre lifestyle and a 50-acre corporate in the suburbs.

On one site, The of , the developer said it is spending twice as much on as most similar centers, although no dollar amount was given.

“It very unusual to have this many species and going in any commercial project,” said , a landscape architect based in Atlanta. and Associates primarily designs for centers, mixed-use developments and across the country.

“We are surrounded by some of the most expensive homes in ,” he said. “It’s only appropriate that our be lush and special. We are committed to honor the history of the nursery that operated here for many years by an unsurpassed plan that would be the talk of the suburbs.”

“The will really make the place stand out, with counts and mixes that are designed to give interest throughout the year. We are also trying to incorporate The ’s nursery history in the design of the entire site.”

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Friday, June 20th, 2008

Edgeworth Garden Shows A European Flair

After growing up among steel mills near Dusseldorf, Germany, Juergen felt very much at home when he moved to Pittsburgh in the 1970s. But he wasn’t as comfortable in the 1950s red-brick Colonial he and his wife, Renate, bought in Edgeworth in 1986. It was large enough for the couple and their four sons, but it had a small entrance and lacked character.

With the help of Gretchen of Design, the couple added a foyer and portico with six in front. Then, in 2006 and 2007, they had landscape architect Ed Werley of Werley Associates and contractor Eichenlaub transform the grounds around the house. Now Mr. feels at home.

Although the house separates the front and back areas, the garden is unified by repetition and contrast, both of naturally mounding like azalea, spirea and and of curving of sheared hornbeams and boxwood. The rows of tall hornbeams, in particular, give the front a formal, European feel. Recently, Hilbish McGee added low-voltage lighting that highlights the hornbeams, facade and other features at night.

In the front and back, large uplights catch the huge old and that form the backdrop for the new landscaping and, in one sense, inspired it. After large limbs nearly struck the house during a storm, Mr. decided it was time for a big change, starting with the elevations. Mr. Werley, who works with his son, John, said the was raised 3 feet and a series of installed around a central curving staircase of carved .

were added near the street to create a dropoff area and are repeated in the walkways and a landing. There, a sculpture of upright logs cast in bronze by Calaboyias is the center of a fountain. Originally on the side of the house, it was moved “for greater visual impact,” Mr. Werley said. At night, the hornbeams also pack a , each with its own uplight.

“There’s a lot going on there, but it’s not bright. It’s subtle,” said Halbane Hilbish, principal owner of Hilbish McGee and a member of the International Association of Lighting Designers.

In the back, Mr. Hilbish subtly lit Japanese , weeping Camperdown elms and low topped by loose hedges of and blue holly and rows of spirea and cranberry bush viburnum. Three weeping cherries and other specimen were salvaged from an earlier redesign and reused.

Other older elements play parts in the new design. A new arched gate leads to “the treehouse,” where the four boys held countless sleepovers. They’re now ages 30, 27, 25 and 18. The new curving stone walls bracket a new cedar garden house built by Vixen Hill, and new sheared boxwood hedges line the new conservatory. More ‘Winter Gem’ boxwood and a bay window frame a Japanese Stewartia that has been limbed up slightly to enhance the view of the garden. Around its base are Yak rhododendrons, fothergilla and ‘Goldflame’ spirea.

“The spirea has flowers and nice fall color — a yellowish red,” said Ryan Johnson, project administrator for Eichenlaub.

He said the hardest part of this project was access — a road had to be cut from front to back — and finding space to stockpile and materials. When it was finished, it won an Award for Excellence from the Pennsylvania and Nursery Association.

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Monday, June 16th, 2008

Northern Water Promotes Landscape Education

Surrounded by flowers and with a breathtaking view of , members of the community not only get to take in a beautiful landscape at ’s Conservation Garden; they also get to learn about water.

“Water conservation in our region is essential,” said Jill Boyd, communications specialist for Northern Water. “Visiting our gardens gives homeowners a very practical idea of what they can do to conserve water. Beyond the , it is very beautiful out there.”

Located behind the district at 220 . in Berthoud, the 2.5-acre garden — which Northern Water employees nicknamed “the backyard” — is broken into sectors to educate residents on landscaping and the best way to maintain yards with minimal .

, visitors have the opportunity to learn about different types of grass and what works well in the , and sprinkler technologies, soil revitalization, the conservation’s and new types of gardening tools.

A portion of the garden also is devoted to , or that uses a minimal amount of water. This area is broken into eight miniature units that show examples of how yards can be landscaped.

“The backyard helps to combat the notion that that doesn’t use a lot of water is not attractive,” Boyd said. “You can see that you can use less water and still have a very eye-catching .”

Northern Water maintains at least 250 species of plant life in its backyard area each year.

“Every year, we try to add about 67 ,” said , water management and for Northern Water. “The garden is designed so it can be changed out.”

Also included in the tour of the area is an featuring various ponds that represent Northern Water’s reservoirs. In two agricultural areas, irrigation technology and alfalfa species are tested.

The garden is open 24 hours a day, year-round. During the summer months, tours are available upon request from 2 to 4 p.m., and tours for larger groups can be arranged.

Community members who want to stroll through the garden on their own can bring a cell phone. By dialing numbers posted around the garden, they can listen to free descriptions of the processes and research taking place.

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Wednesday, June 11th, 2008