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Posts Tagged ‘Home Garden’

Garden Ponds

19 Apr

When it comes to adding water features to your backyard garden or patio, you may want to consider either a fountain or pond.

With everyone having a busy schedule these days, most people, when opting for the pond, choose the prefab ponds. You can still build your own and form the base of your pond if you want, but if you want to speed the process along, there are tons of stores that sell prefab ponds. Once you decide on the one you want, simply install it, then begin decorating it with the look and feel that you want.

Below are several photos of ponds people have installed themselves.

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Hardscape: Decorative Retaining Walls

06 Apr

You see them ll the time, people use them to line their driveways or accent their patios – retaining walls.

They can be built out of almost anything. For centuries people have used stones and bricks. Now they use railroad ties and formed concrete. When done correctly, they can look absolutely beautiful and add space and value to the place you love most; your home and garden.

As you can see from the photos, some retaining walls can be as tall as you want, while others will be only inches off the ground. It all depends on the look and purpose you need your wall to provide. It can also be either straight, curved, circular, or boxed. Retaining walls are also easy to build. See the schematic below for more information on how they work and should be constructed.

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Low Maintenance Shrubs

16 Mar

Picking the right shrub for your garden is everything when you take into account the amount of time, money, and water you have to dedicate to your garden. Most people prefer to find shrubs that offer them beauty, long lasting, and don’t require a lot of maintenance on the part of the owner. With that said, the list below contains a few of those shrubs that will add value to your landscape and free up your time from all the work and care other shrubs might require.

Sweet Pepperbush

This shrub adapts easily to most soil conditions, making it one of the best choices for a variety of soils. The sweet pepperbush prefers moist soil, but tolerates wet soils with poor drainage. It grows in both sunny and slightly shady areas, and produces fragrant blossoms in the middle of the summer. The foliage turns golden yellow in the autumn. It reaches a mature height between of between 3 and 8 feet.

Common Pearlbush

The common pearlbush grows to a height and width of between 6 and 10 feet. It produces upright, arching branches. Once established, this shrub tolerates droughts and arid conditions. This tough shrub adapts to a variety of soil conditions and thrives in a shrub border. The common pearlbush produces white blossoms in late April, adding floral beauty to a spring landscape.

Northern Bayberry

This shrub produces suckers and forms colonies, making it one of the best selections for mass plantings in many yards and parks. This semi-evergreen produces clusters of gray berries in the fall and thrives in poor soils. At a mature height and width of 5 to 12 feet, the northern bayberry forms a bushy, rounded shape in areas with full sun or light shade. This shrub tolerates soil compositions high in salt, and withstands periods of drought.

Flameleaf Sumac

The flameleaf sumac requires little care and thrives in neglected areas. It reaches a height and width of between 20 and 30 feet at maturity. Although it prefers well-drained soils, it tolerates infertile, dry and rocky soil compositions, making it an excellent choice for areas resistant to other types of plant growth.

Keep in mind, if you don’t trim your shrubs, they will turn into trees.

Garden Guides

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First-Time Vegetable Garden – Consider This

18 Feb

If this is your first year gardening, you should probably look at plants that require little maintenance on your part.

Great choices would be the pepper and tomato plants. They thrive in vegetable gardens. Both require plenty of heat, which makes them a great choice for raised beds.

Beans also grow easily from seed. They love the sunlight and provide large crops throughout the summer, you’ll find yourself picking them over and over.

Now is a good time to plant lettuce and spinach, since they do best in cooler weather. You’ll want to harvest them in the spring months and then reseed later in the summer. Late August is a good time for a second harvest.

Wise 4 Living

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