A Made To Measure Georgian Heritage Home

A newly built Georgian-style house with four bedrooms and seven bathrooms in Toronto’s Rosedale neighbourhood.

Royal LePage Real Estate Services Ltd., Johnson and Daniel Division (James Strathy Warren)

With 11-foot ceilings, the main floor features large principal rooms with dark-stained floors of quarter-sawn white oak. A library is panelled in mahogany, and has a coffered ceiling. A dramatic reverse staircase ascends from a centre hall.

At the rear is an open-concept space comprising the kitchen, family room and eating area, with doors opening to the garden. The countertops in the kitchen, wet bar and pantry are fashioned from Calacutta honed marble.

Some areas of the house feature heated stone floors.

A state-of-the-art system controls temperature, security and lighting. The house also contains Category 5 wiring and structured cable for high-speed internet, television and communication services.

Upstairs, mahogany doors lead into the master suite, where French doors open to a Juliet balcony overlooking the garden. A dressing room is lined with hand-crafted closets and includes a flat-screen TV. The ensuite bathroom has a separate water closet, cast-iron tub and honed marble flooring with in-floor radiant heating.

The two other bedrooms on the second floor have ensuite bathrooms. Located on the third floor are a bedroom and bathroom as well as a games room.

On the lower level, an “infinity” swimming pool is surrounded by limestone and enclosed in glass. A media room has built-in surround sound and a gas fireplace. Adjoining an exercise area is a bathroom with limestone floors and walls, as well as a steam shower.

A climate-controlled wine cellar is constructed of reclaimed brick and lined with Douglas fir wine caskets that accommodate 500 bottles.

Outside, the landscaped property includes a very private stone terrace in the rear garden. A more functional element is an in-ground irrigation system. The exterior features copper trim and a cedar roof.

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Monday, June 16th, 2008

June Landscaping Tips Butterflies And Gardens Special To The Online Edition

Celebrate summer by welcoming butterflies into your garden. Butterfly gardens are different from many other “theme” gardens. To be successful, the garden not only needs to have a pleasing design that works with the surrounding home and landscape, but it needs to perform a very specific task. Attracting butterflies may seem fairly straightforward, but you cannot assume all butterflies are attracted to all flowers.

Butterflies are beautiful, somewhat ethereal creatures whose colorful wings and graceful flight patterns add a sense of wonder to any garden planting

Butterflies have plant preferences: There are literally thousands of species of butterflies, and each species tends to have a distinct group of plants as preferred food source. When selecting plants for a butterfly garden, it is also important to remember that a butterfly goes through four life cycles, with one set of food requirements for the larval stage and another type of food once the butterfly emerges from the chrysalis.

The nectar sources for butterflies include annuals, perennials, wildflowers, herbs, shrubs and trees. Annuals and tender perennials known to attract many species of butterfly include zinnias, white alyssum, marigolds, lantana, cosmos, nicotiana, petunias, ageratum, fuchsia, snapdragons and sunflowers. Herbs and wildflowers that attract butterflies include chives and other alliums, bee balm, spearmint, Anaphalis, Lunaria, Verbena, dandelions, clover, Queen Anne’s Lace, butterfly weed, goldenrod and thistle.

Perennials for butterfly gardens include daisies, Phlox, Aster, Liatris, Rudbeckia, Echinacea, Eupatorium, Achillea, Aubretia, Helenium, Echinops, Limonium, Sedum, Phystostegia, Scabiosa, Coreopsis, Hemerocallis, Heuchera, Lilium, Lythrum, Lavandula, Myosotis and Penstemon. Shrubs, vines and trees for butterfly gardens include Abelia, Aesculus, Aruncus, Buddleia, Clethra, Crataegus, Lindera, Lonicera, Malus, Prunus, Ribes, Salix, Spirea, Syringa, Vaccinium and Wisteria.

Design help: If a butterfly garden is to be created as part of an older, established landscape, look for a site that offers shelter—an overgrown fence, a clump of trees, the base of a sloping lot, or a rocky outcropping with a flat, grassy spot nearby. Water features and several hours of sun would complete the picture—minus only the butterfly-attracting plants.

Call it serendipity, but the preferred style of planting for design purposes—starting with low edging plants and gradually working up, level by level, to the tallest plants—is also one of the best arrangements for a butterfly garden. This is not only because it makes it easier for the butterflies to identify their favorite nectar-producing plants when they are clearly visible, but the taller plants offer shelter from both wind and predators.

The popular concept of a mixed border, combining annuals, perennials, herbs, roses, shrubs, vines and ornamental trees, all underplanted with bulbs, will provide a long bloom season as well as a variety of food sources and forms of shelter that will attract a large assortment of butterflies over a long period.

Other design guidelines: Although some theme gardens need meticulous care and a neat, sometimes formal appearance to create the intended ambience, butterflies like their surroundings to be a little messy. Rocky paths muddied by a sprinkler or parts of the garden where water pools on flat rocks will attract many species of butterfly like a luxury spa attracts movie stars. Research indicates that minerals released through the water’s evaporation process, primarily sodium, may play a vital part in the mating habits of butterflies. For this reason, some experts recommend putting small salt licks in a butterfly garden.

Areas in or around the garden where grass is allowed to grow long can act as a shelter and, for some species, a place to lay their eggs. If you can live with a section of your garden that is somewhat overgrown with grass, wildflowers, trees and shrubs, you will probably find more butterflies in this little wilderness than among carefully tended flower beds

Like plants, there are woodland butterfly species and those that prefer a sunny spot. Even sun-loving butterflies will appreciate the presence of a shaded shelter.

Butterflies have a powerful sense of smell. Much like dogs, the scents that they find attractive aren’t always scents the human population likes to encourage. Rotting fruits and vegetables are gourmet treats for some butterflies, while others are drawn to the more pleasant aromas of clover or wild violets.

Pesticides and herbicides should be avoided, whenever possible, because in almost every stage of life butterflies are extremely vulnerable to such toxins.

Some butterflies stay around for winter: Not many butterflies overwinter in the extreme climates of the Midwest, but those that do ( sometimes called “hibernators” ) will also benefit from winter shelter—mounds of ivy growing over old tree stumps, piles of logs or large, dead tree branches, a stack of old bricks or chunks of concrete.

Some butterflies will hibernate in old trees, while others will welcome the presence of specially designed “butterfly houses” as winter shelter. Winter or summer, butterflies need protection from the wind and a place where the sun will be reflected, somewhere safe from predators—including the trampling feet of children.

Types of butterflies: Monarch butterflies are usually a common sight in Illinois. Other likely candidates include Cabbage White butterflies, Clouded Sulphur, Orange Sulphur, Eastern-Tailed Blue, Meadow Fritillary, Pearl Crescent, Viceroy, Great Spangled Fritillary, Summer Azure, Question Mark, Least Skipper, European Skipper, and the Dion Skipper.

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Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

Six Unusual Gardens Lined Up For Tour Event In Nichols Hills

Each garden on the tour has a distinctive design plan and outdoor living features that will offer tour participants a great variety of landscaping and outdoor decorating ideas.

One of the gardens has been completely redesigned by Randy McDaniel, owner of Backyard Solutions. The home at 1604 Wilshire, owned by Gerald and Linda Barnett, is a 1970s vintage home. The couple had thought about renovating their front and back lawns when part of a tree fell into their pool and damaged a fence.

It was perfect timing for a landscape makeover. The oversize pool will be dressed on the bottom with crystals that shine like jewels when the sun hits them. A hexagonal guest house, a pergola and an outdoor kitchen and entertaining area are special features of this back lawn. Patrons of the Nichols Hills Garden Tour will be guests at a party in the Barnetts’ garden at 7 tonight.

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Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

Experts Give Tips On What To Consider Before Buying A Pool

Jeff Erkfritz, owner of Clearwater Pools and Service of Ann Arbor, says he likes to talk to his customers about their expectations before he begins work.

“We ask what the needs are for the pool and we design the pool to fit those needs,” says Erkfritz, whose company specializes in in-ground pools.

A well-designed pool should also flow with the backyard’s landscaping and home’s architectural style, he adds.

Pointing to the slow economy, Erkfritz says he’s been doing a lot more high-end work, and there have been fewer inquiries about in-ground pools from middle-class homeowners.

Whatever style of pool you choose, Erkfritz says, keep in mind it’ll require an investment of time as well as money. But it’s worth it, he says, because you’ll get instant entertainment without leaving your home.

“With the rising gas prices, they can create something in their backyards that they can actually enjoy,” Erkfritz says. “You get what you put into it. If you put time in testing the water, you’ll get a lot out of it.”

Chemicals to keep the water clean usually range from $200 to $500 annually, depending on the pool’s size.

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Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

Turning Inside Out Pool Landscaping

Experts say more and more locals head onto large patios and decks, into pools and onto intricately landscaped lawns.

Last summer, Christine and Joseph DeLeo added an in-ground pool to the yard of their Hollidaysburg home. It was an addition that they had wanted since moving into their home four years ago.

According to local experts, the DeLeos have hit two of the big three elements of outdoor spaces — pools, patios and decks and landscaping.

Pools are a key component of many outdoor spaces, says Bob Sutton, co-owner of Holiday Pools & Spas in Duncansville.

“(Some) people will do their whole yard over when they put in an in-ground pool — landscaping and a little shed or something to store things in,” he says. “Above-grounds are usually not as elaborate, but they’re still building a shed or doing some landscaping. The pool becomes the centerpiece of their backyard.”

‘‘What we do is kind of the backyard/outdoor room concept,’’ says Steve Martin, owner of Tussey Mountain Landscaping in Hollidaysburg. ‘‘That varies from small to grand.’’

Martin, who has been doing landscaping for 18 years, says he’s seen the business boom.

‘‘I think you’re seeing growth in it every year,’’ Martin says. ‘‘But in that last five years there seems to be more emphasis (on landscaping).’’

Tussey Mountain also does more traditional landscaping, with elaborate lighting, stone paths, concrete walkways and pads and plants and trees.

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Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

Get Your Landscaping Off The Ground

So the pool is finally installed, and for all intents and purposes it’s swimming time. But that’s not to say your pool project is done: far from it, in fact. Just plopping a concrete box in the ground and filling it with water is hardly a noteworthy swimming pool design. If you don’t mind jeers and scorns from your upper-crust neighbors, feel free to enjoy the cool water and call it good. If you want your pool to look as good as it feels, however, your job isn’t finished.

There are many things to consider when planning your pool’s landscaping. How much room do you have to work with?

Are you considering an allinclusive design that dominates your entire back yard, or are you just thinking of a patio or deck around the pool itself? For an above-ground pool, a deck may be your quickest and least-costly option. If you have an inground pool that already has a scarred concrete patio, however, finishing the project is going to require a little bit more in-the-dirt work.

There are literally hundreds of elements that you could incorporate into a landscaping design. You’ll want to start your design out with the basics, however. Work from the inside out by deciding how you want your walkways to lay out. Is there simply going to be one that leads from your backdoor to the pool, or are you planning on having some more scenic detours?

Multiple walkways could lead one to the pool and another to a scenic area with a rock garden, some shrubs, a flower garden, a natural landscape and a gazebo. The options are literally limitless.

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Saturday, May 31st, 2008

New Construction: A South Bellmore Colonial On A Canal

The asking price for the three-bedroom, 2 1/2-bathroom house is $769,000. The exterior of the 2,800-square-foot home is stone and vinyl. It is on a 60-by-80-foot plot on a dead-end street.

The home has an open floor plan and offers an eat-in kitchen with maple cabinets, granite countertops and high-end stainless-steel appliances; a living room with a wood-burning fireplace; a dining room; a two-car driveway (no garage); an alarm system; a master bathroom with a whirlpool tub, a double granite vanity and a separate shower.

Other amenities include a master bedroom with a walk-in closet, cathedral ceilings and crown moldings, a pull-down attic, a crawl space, a front porch, decks off the kitchen and master bedroom, in-ground sprinklers and landscaping, two-zone central air-conditioning and two-zone gas heat.

In addition, the house features a flat-screen television above the fireplace and a stereo system and speakers throughout, Cates says.

The home does not have a basement.

“This new home is for someone who wants to have a boat right at his fingertips and also live in a family-friendly neighborhood,” Cates says.

The house is in the Bellmore school district and is three blocks from shopping, a half mile to the Bellmore stop of the Long Island Rail Road and next door to a private yacht club. Several parks are nearby.

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Monday, May 26th, 2008

Meet The Tree Nurse Of South Burlington

When she noticed a number of newly planted trees seemed to be languishing on city streets Pool Landscaping, including those in her neighborhood, she searched for the root of the problem. In the city’s fast-growing residential areas, the landscaping, installed for instant aesthetic effect, is often neglected.

“We have so many new neighborhoods in the city, and one of the first things developers do is plant the trees; and no one is there to care for them,” Ambusk said.

Associate city planner and interim planning director Cathyann LaRose said developers want to install landscaping as quickly as possible in order to sell property — which isn’t good for the trees.

“They’ve been grown in a pot, and the roots can continue to take over and strangle the tree if it’s not properly planted,” Ambusk said. Some of the trees are planted while still encased in wire baskets that contain their roots.

So Ambusk has taken the stewardship of South Burlington’s saplings into her own hands — along with a pair of pruning shears. Every Monday evening, from workday’s end until sundown, she and a team of volunteers known as “TREEage” hit the streets of South Burlington to care for the young trees.

The work isn’t difficult, Ambusk said: It really comes down to planting the tree properly and giving it daily care. Following an initial investment of time and watering in the early years, it will do quite well on its own for 100 more, she says.

TREEage evolved from Ambusk’s experience in the Master Gardener and Stewardship of the Urban Landscape programs offered by the University of Vermont Extension. The group has grown in number and knowledge in its second year, thanks to city arborist Craig Lambert’s pruning and maintenance clinics, Ambusk said. TREEage volunteers cared for 250 trees last year.

“We have literally been going tree-to-tree. It’s pretty slow work,” she said. She estimates South Burlington has 6,000 trees, Pool Landscaping and says Lambert has his hands full just dealing with day-to-day hazard maintenance.

Lambert offers public workshops on proper tree maintenance practices as part of the project. With his instruction, volunteers have undertaken root collar excavations and pruning on some of the more recently planted trees in South Burlington’s residential neighborhoods.

Lambert said Ambusk’s project is proving to be quite a benefit to the city: Her efforts have raised public awareness of the need to maintain the city’s tree resource, and her latest project will increase the number of trees the city will be able to plant.

This month, Ambusk planted 30 Princeton elm trees in a new community nursery with a $1,000 grant she received from GE Healthcare, where she works in finance Pool Landscaping. The city gave her permission to use land located at the National Gardening Association on Dorset Street for the nursery.

The elms are 2 years old and cost about $15 each. In another three to four years, they will be worth more than $200 each and will be ready to transplant to public land in South Burlington. Ambusk plans to add 30 new trees, in a variety of species, to the TREEage nursery each year.

LaRose says the nursery will also give the city credibility toward its goal of becoming a designated “Tree City, U.S.A.”

The Tree City U.S.A. program aims to encourage better care of community forests and advance urban forestry practices while providing cleaner air, shadier streets and aesthetic beauty in populated areas. The designation will also open additional avenues for grant funding: With a tree budget of $1,000 per year (enough to purchase about three trees), the city can use all the help it can get, LaRose said.

The young elms are destined for a future lining South Burlington’s streets, especially in older neighborhoods that haven’t been getting much landscaping attention, LaRose said. They’ll be useful as the city’s recreation path extends through new neighborhoods, and there’s a potential the nursery project will be used for educational outreach in the schools. While the project hasn’t officially been linked to the development of the City Center downtown district, LaRose said the timing will be perfect.

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Monday, May 26th, 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, fruit tree planting by 26 percent and vegetable gardening by 1 percent. Experts watch sales and several other areas to distinguish trends.

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

I mentioned last year after returning from the International Master Gardeners 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 global trend, 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 ways to conserve water, use locally produced or recycled materials and use environmentally responsible maintenance procedures.

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

Water gardening is still trendy. However, it is not necessary to have a huge water feature. In fact, wasting water is out. New smaller scale fountains and ponds are en vogue. They use less water, require less maintenance and can be more interesting in a home landscape. 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, shrubs, trees and ground covers rather than traditional grass lawns. 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 low maintenance 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 money. The landscape 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 landscape.

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 plants and succulents, many of them variegated, used as accents. Landscaping 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 plants in big containers with big bold color are being used to create stylish pot scapes.

The “slo” food movement is growing, according to Landscape 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 vegetable gardening. 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 plants each year to meet consumer demands. Organic pesticides, fertilizers, eco-friendly products and drought tolerant and/or pest-resistant plants, 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

Build Your Own Backyard Oasis

For the DiCarlo family in LaGrangeville, staying at home is the next best thing to vacation - thanks to their backyard pool and entertainment area.

Dan DiCarlo said the family had Verbank-based NeJame Pool Specialist Inc. install a pool and expansive deck soon after buying the house, about three years ago.

DiCarlo said the pool is central to his family’s summer recreation.

“Although we do vacation and take trips, it’s like having a vacation spot right in the backyard,” he said. “It’s a family-oriented healthy activity our family uses on a virtually daily basis. We open the pool (in May) and don’t close it until after the kids go back to school.”

Building a pool is a major construction project, a commitment in terms of time and expense. There are often multiple phases, so long-term planning is very important.

“People should be thinking about the whole landscape picture … have a plan for the whole future,” of the property, said Jack Kind, owner-president of Poughkeepsie-based Kind Pools, a family business since 1972.

Kind said when he meets with prospective clients, the initial consultation is often like an interview. He asks about expectations, how the customer expects to use the pool and the overall budget.
Discuss costs

Chris NeJame, president of NeJame Pool Specialist, a family-run business since 1958, said homeowners must prepare themselves for these discussions and costs.

“The pool is just a part of the expense. You still need fencing, electrical, water, landscaping, hardscapes, softscapes, etc., to make that overall backyard scene what you are visualizing in your head,” NeJame said

NeJame said his approach to building a backyard oasis is to start with the homeowner’s project budget and working backward to determine what the contractor and homeowner can best do with that number.

First, the homeowner must be sure there is enough property, including setback space, for the pool and construction equipment.

Although a reputable contractor will likely apply directly for the required permits, homeowners may want to call their town government and get a sense of the applicable zoning and setback laws very early in the process to be sure it’s permissible.

NeJame drew a distinction between being in-formed and trying to coordinate such a large project yourself, saying it’s much better to find a single builder who can handle several aspects of the project.

“Most homeowners should not be general contractors,” NeJame said. “It’s too involved and they wind up costing themselves too much money. They try to save money by having Tom do the deck and Paul do the pool and John do the landscaping and then you have one contractor stumbling over another and it can become a problem.”

Kind said to allow at least 40 feet by 60 feet or more for the pool area itself and suggests this is best in a backyard of at least a half-acre.

The shape, style and size of the pool is obviously a fundamental decision. Included with this choice is the material. Common choices for pools include fiberglass and polymer prefabricated pools, gunite (sprayed and shaped cement forms) and steel-wall pools. The finishing surfaces for each type vary.

Contractors may specialize in one or all of these forms, and opinions vary on suitability for the local climate and soil conditions.

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Monday, May 19th, 2008