Tag: Garden

Garden Paving

February 20, 2012

Garden Paving

A great way to pave your garden is with interlocking blocks. This will give you a lot of freedom to make unique designs. These blocks come in many different styles and colors which are great for complimenting the exterior of your home. Interlocking paving blocks also last for a long time. They can even be used to make steps in your garden.

When planning a garden paving project you will think of the end result first. Begin by drawing a plan of what you would like your garden to look like after you are done. This plan should be as detailed as possible and will have to include all the things you want so you can get all the materials you need for the job. This initial plan is also very helpful when calculating your budget. While getting a professional design done with the help of a landscape designer is the best way, a simple sketch will often be enough to get started.

Paving a garden is a job that will usually require at least some experience.

Having a professional do it for you is the best option. By contacting several professional installers you will be able to get an idea of the cost. Often the contractor will supply the paving materials and install them for you as well. If you want to do the paving yourself they will also be able to give you advice on how to do it. If you are serious about paving your own garden you can also get a stone laying machine to make the task easier.

For more information on paving services, paving equipment and other paving related topics, visit Paving.FreeDIYGuides.com

Garden Fences

February 15, 2012

Garden Fences

Appearance is only one of many aspects of garden fencing; sometimes a pretty looking fence isn’t enough and you need garden fencing for security reasons, you need something that will prevent unwanted guests from stepping onto your property. Two forms of garden fencing that are sure to do the job are the wrought iron fence and the wooden privacy fence. These two fences are two of the sturdiest and most secure kinds of garden fencing out there. If you are looking for strength and security, looking into these options would be a good start.

One of the best kinds of garden fencing for security purposes and keeping unwanted guests off of your yard is the wrought iron fence. In fact, the garden fencing that ensures the safety of the white house is actually a tall black wrought iron fence (although additionally enforced with armed guards, security cameras, and who knows what else).

When one of my close friends had a pool installed in his home, he was required by law to keep the yard enclosed. The garden fencing needed to be secure enough to prevent wandering children from getting near the pool and getting hurt. We ended up choosing a wrought iron garden fences, it was fairly tall, very sturdy, and difficult to climb or get past. Additionally we went with garden fencing panels which made it very easy to install. The wrought iron fence isn’t just a great security fence, but it also has a very nice appearance. Wrought iron fences are typically decorative and it is also a fairly neighborly fence in that your view isn’t obstructed by it.

Another type of garden fencing that is great for security is the wooden privacy fence. This fence is made out of large wooden panels placed next to each other with no gaps in between. You can not see in or out of the wooden privacy fence. The fence is also usually fairly large and over six feet tall. It is extremely difficult to climb over as it is mainly just a flat surface and sometimes the top ends of the vertical wooden boards are in the form of a pointy 90 degree angle. This is the type of garden fencing that you might see stereotypically depicted with a sigh warning you to beware of dogs. This kind of garden fencing is great for preventing pets from leaving the yard in addition to keeping unwanted guests from entering are even looking into your yard. This fence also does well visually because of the great look of the wood and in addition to being a secure and sturdy fence, it will also provide privacy.

Perhaps there has been a burglary in your neighborhood or maybe you don’t want kids trampling on your much worked on garden or maybe you simply want to keep your pets from wandering out into the street. Whatever your reasons, the wrought iron fence and the wooden privacy fence are both great garden fencing for security. They are both more secure than a chain linked fence and are probably the most secure garden fences available (short of maybe stone garden fencing).

Read more click link: Garden Fences

Japanese Garden

February 5, 2012

Japanese Garden

The term Japanese Garden is a Japanese style, can be found at private homes, in neighborhood or city parks, and at historical landmarks such as Buddhist temples, Shinto shrines and old castles. In Japanese culture, garden-making is a high art, intimately related to the linked arts of calligraphy and ink painting.

Japanese Gardens are very important to the Japanese. All of the gardens are representations of nature. The purpose of these gardens in to capture nature is the almost natural way, and do it with a touch of artistic feeling. The Japanese gardens, for the Japanese people, have an ancient history influenced by Shinto, Buddhist and Taoist philosophies. These philosophies are used in the creation of the Japanese Gardens so as to bring a spiritual sense to the gardens. The Buddhist influence makes the garden a quiet place, allowing people to look back and reflect upon themselves, or meditate.

The presentation of each garden will include a plant that will help the visitor locate the various positions from which photographs were taken, but one may also take the tour by simply clicking on Tour the Garden. Other buttons lead to a longer history of each garden, a general bibliography, a glossary, an overview of the history of early garden design, and a section on the basic elements of Japanese gardens. Instead, the site is designed simply to provide the visitor with an opportunity to visit each garden, to move through or around it, to experience it through the medium of high-quality color images, and to learn something of its history. Winter is as much a garden season in Japan as spring. The Japanese refer to snow piled on the branches of trees as Sekku, or snow blossoms, and there is a lantern known as Yukimi that is named the snow viewing lantern. Even this season that represents the death of the garden is a vital one for our Japanese gardener, while our western gardener sulks until spring. Perhaps it is the eastern acceptance of death as a necessary component of the life cycle that separates the two gardeners.

The Japanese garden is not truly a singular type despite the fact that certain rules apply to every garden. The gardens differ by setting and by use. A garden that seeks to re-create nature on a small-garden sized scale. Through its maker’s choice and placement of plants, it is meant to suggest the wildness of nature, a sense of motion, and the passage of time. Japanese gardens usually incorporate Shinto or Zen elements as well. Typical Japanese garden have at their center home from which the garden is viewed. In additional to residential architecture, depending on the archetype.

persona

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Garden Styles

January 25, 2012

Garden Styles

 

Sculpture Garden Style

Just as the name suggests, this garden uses the outdoor garden setting as a platform to love sculpture. A sculpture garden can take on either formal or informal style by including traditional or abstract sculptures. Occassionally hiding a sculpture in a garden setting can add interest and mystery to a garden setting

Woodland Garden Style

Sometimes with an existing canopy, this style has a soft fragile pallet of under story, shade and partial sun loving plants, dispersed randomly in groupings that mimic nature’s distribution in colonies with subtle meandering paths that blanket the forest floor. Typical materials used in the woodland garden are natural like wood and natural stone.

The design of a woodland garden should be nearly undetectable as it is design is to mimic nature’s way of placing plant materials and the use of hardscaping elements such as the foot bridge shown above. The use of a natural appearing contemporary outdoor water feature or stream, complete with rocks and boulders, can enhance the feeling of nature and add to the authentic feel of the woodland garden space.

English Garden Style

English landscape gardening in it is early form was mainly utility in function. Vast deer parks surrounded large estate homes and tiny knot gardens filled with lilies and tulips may be near the house itself. Orchards and kitchen gardens would be planted further away from the home and paths with walls or hedges flanking them.

Later, as the middle class implemented their English garden influence, the style became a more relaxed form of garden craftmanship the removal of some of the boundaries and hedges and working the garden into the natural landscape became the foundation of the English Garden we know today. Other influences in the English Style are the of the Palladian architectural style, the Italian use of Sculptures in the garden setting along with the formal French garden style the uses long lawn vistas. Long lawn views bordered by natural plantings of trees and lush border plantings along natural appearing, but planted trees and shrubs.

Wildflower Garden Style

The random pattern of a meadow of wildflowers can be one of the most breathtaking sites created by mother nature. it is also very attractive to birds and butterfly alike. Planting flowers that attract butterflies and birds is a challenging and rewarding garden type to be enjoyed by the young and young at heart.

Japanese Garden Style

A japanese garden includes what would appear to be elements of an informal garden, but in reality is a rather purposeful spatial arrangement, with its clipped shrubs and trees, meticulously placed rocks and garden elements. Incorporating constantly changing views as one walks from space to space, coupled with thoughtfully placed outdoor water fountains, plants and rocks to convey visual serenity. Oriental gardens are full of deep meanings and symbolism. There are many different variants of Japanese or Oriental gardens, but most use similar elements. Instead of colorful flowers and shrubs, like you may see in a Western garden, most Asian gardeners concentrate on the use of rocks, stones, trees, plants, bridges, water and waterfalls. You’ll sometimes see rocks that surround a pond or stream that are then encased with plants or shrubs. In Japanese ponds or streams, you’ll often find koi a common fish. The gardens purpose is to capture nature and become a quiet place for refection or meditation.

Cottage Garden Style

The cottage garden can be one of the most charming of all the styles because of the unassuming nature and humble origin. It is marked by informal plantings and style. Low picket fences or walls and little walks to the porch setting are some of the elements that the cottage garden employs. A Cottage Garden is just as it sounds, a smaller cozy garden. Because of the limited space, gardeners play up patches of plants, instead of grass or trees. Since these areas are the focus of the yard, gardeners use colorful plants and ground cover. This is the area to be creative; pick a wide selection of plants you like, that compliment each other in the space. Gardeners often surround these colorful spaces with borders of brick or stone walkways. These borders can be in any geometric design if you have the space try some patterns to accentuate the area.

Romantic Garden Style

Who doesn’t love to have fresh flowers on display in your home? It is one of the advantages of a cutting garden, when you fill it with flowers you really like. Roses are a favorite, but you might consider planting other variants of flowers, so you’ll have a longer blossoming season. Roses also need special care and space, so be definitely sure you know roses before you choose them. While the garden will be definitely stunning during the peak season, it won’t last too long, so pick an area of the yard that isn’t the focal point year-round. The results will be well worth it when you have beautiful flowers to display and share with colleagues. Nurture love in a romantic garden and a refreshing sound of outdoor garden fountains. Scented plants, love seats for two or create privacy in a secluded part of the garden. Build a romantic paradise for entertaining your lover. Put plants that have engrossing meanings to you and your love.

A very simple person who really loves designing the garden.