Showing posts with label garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label garden. Show all posts

Friday, March 7, 2014

More Creative Ideas for Garden Planters from Recycled Goods

Recently, we here at Warming Trends posted a blog on using recycled materials to create unique and creative garden planters. This was a fun blog and since then I have create a planter box made from cinder blocks on my own patio.



However, I have now come across some more great items that may be lying around your yard, shed or garage that would be perfect for creating garden planters:

The Metal Tote Box

An old metal tote box for carrying tools can now be used as a planter box. Make sure to clean the tote well as you do not want any oil or grease residue from former tools that may have been in there. Also, be sure to drill a few drainage holes:


A Cranium Garden

Im not exactly sure where to find vessels quite like this, perhaps a thrift store or online somewhere, but you are sure to turn some heads with these unique planters:


The Colander

An old Colander, Tea Pot or Kettle is a great way to marry the indoors and out. You can even plant flowers or herbs in these containers and place on a window sill indoors to marry the outside with the in. Again, make sure to drill drainage holes in the tea pot or kettle:


Wheelbarrow Planter

This is a classic idea and you may have seen this idea utilized before, but an old wheelbarrow makes for a great planter box because it holds a lot of space and depth for planting flowers and plants that require a bit of depth for their roots to take hold. Also, this is another example of a mobile planter of you wish to change up your garden placement after awhile:


Sew, Sew, Sew Your Garden...

Ok, bad title, and you may need to search around a flea market or craigslist for this one, but an old row-boat or dingy can make for an eye catching garden. Again, plenty of depth to include some foliage that requires a deeper rooting system:


Aluminum Chic White Trash

Ok, so I am not stating that if you use this idea you are white trash, rather the opposite. Shiny and new aluminum trash cans can add a modern industrialism flare in an urban environment while providing plenty of space for a cool garden space:


Time for Tea?

Using and old porcelain pitcher and tea cups can add a little class to your outdoor dining experience. I like how this example just uses a little plant and keeps a minimalist expereince rather than bright vibrant colorful flowers.


For more gardening and outdoor landscape ideas including custom fire pits, outdoor burning systems and more, please visit us online or call today! 1-877-556-5255

Source:

http://www.diynetwork.com/outdoors/12-unusual-and-upcycled-container-gardens/pictures/index.html

Thursday, March 6, 2014

THE VICTORY GARDEN


PBS has titled their very successful gardening show “The Victory Garden.” The show has been immensely popular for over thirty seasons, it is Americas oldest gardening program (circa 1975) - an offshoot of "This Old House"… but what is the derivation, the context for this name?

During World War I and World War II, the United States government a
sked its citizens to plant gardens in order to support the war effort. Millions of people planted gardens. In 1943, Americans planted over 20 million Victory Gardens, and the harvest accounted for nearly a third of all the vegetables consumed in the country that year. Emphasis was placed on making gardening a family or community effort -- not a drudgery, but a pastime, and a national duty.


This effort was echoed north of the USA in Canada, across “the pond” in England and even “down under” in Australia.


Examples in NYC…
Children gardening on the rooftops of Manhattan

Gardening on Central Park West
Gardening in housing developments
Today, with concern for our environment, (reducing the food miles associated with the average American meal) and the advocation of growing more food locally, and organically there is a movement toward reconsidering our “old school” ways.
Victory Gardens 2009





Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Best Landscape Designs to Have a Beautiful Garden

Everyone dreams of having a Beautiful home - their dream home! It usually comprises of a big house, a swimming pool and an amazing Garden. Well, its not possible if you dont plan it all before you begin. So, lets just take a look at a few of the Best Landscape design practices that you could employ when planning out the Landscape of your Garden: Do the right things at the right places One of the most important facts that you should know about when designing your Garden be it the front yard or the back yard is that of striking a balance. Your Garden is going to look good only if everything is done in a sort of proportion. You can plant beds of flowers and surround them by rocky borders on either side as these look really good and are quite popular. However, this looks good only when done along the pathway and not in the centre of your Garden. Symmetrical and Asymmetrical balance Most homes have Gardens wherein they have symmetrical balance. However, if you want your Garden to be unique you should try and plan it in such a way that your Garden isnt symmetrical; but at the same time looks great and strikes a balance. All that you need to strike a balance is the right plants, rocks and water bodies. In some cases you should even consider planting small trees as a combination of these elements adds beauty to your Garden. Colour combinations When it comes to Gardens flowering plants are always a part of the Landscape. However, apart from flowering plants you should also try and plant some fancy plants that have colourful leaves. One of the Best things to do is choose around two or three colours and repeat them all around the Garden as this offers a sense of continuity and your Garden looks great and at the same time not cluttered. Therefore, sticking to a few colours is one of the most important points to note when it comes to successful landscaping. Water bodies There are plenty of different kinds of water bodies that you could install in your Gardens. Take a look at the various options that would suit your Garden considering your budget and the space available. Once you decide what you need you could go ahead and buy yourself a kit and install it on your Garden within a few hours.

Behind The Scenes Coastal Dune Garden

Creating gardens on the coast is always a challenge. There are all kinds of things to consider, like salt air, strong winds and sandy soil. Added to these natural limits, is the fact that the garden is often just the foreground to the real view - the ocean. So it needs to compliment rather than try to steal the show.


This garden is actually the second garden Ive done for these particular clients - they moved from their previous home in Morningside when they found this odd 1970s house in the La Lucia area of Durban with potentially amazing views of the ocean.
They kept the general layout of the house and completely gutted it, but essentially started again. The garden itself was a neglected, overgrown mix of plants that sloped down to the neighbours house below.

This was a really great project for a number of reasons. I have the benefits of having a good relationship with both the client and the architect, and that, coupled with being involved right from the start, I was able to add my 2 cents worth to the project as it evolved. Also, having the advantage of being part of the project from the start - almost 3 years in total, it gave me the time to really digest the site and the design. These are definitely key ingredients in making a successful garden.

Too often in landscape design, everybody involved is in a rush. We designers, are usually brought in at the last minute, and are usually the last on site, and so we often bear the brunt of the clients lack of patience because of the usual contractors delays. Being last in the chain also has other disadvantages. In most cases, projects run over budget, and the easiest place to save money is by cutting back on the luxury areas like landscaping. But its not all frustration. You also get the best look at the finished product, and share in some of the excitement that the client is beginning to feel as they see the project nearing completion. This really makes for great job satisfaction.

My clients previous garden, with roses and lavender
My clients were wanting the garden to be quite different to their previous garden, which was full of roses, and quite formal. I was relieved to hear this, because the property was quite exposed on the top of a dune, which meant we would be using a fairly limited range of plants. Roses or similar exotic plants would need an inordinate amount of attention to keep them alive - let alone looking good. The words Aloe and stone were mentioned during our preliminary discussion about the garden, and I could feel my excitement levels rising...
Although they did have one request, coming from a relatively small garden they would want it to be as open as possible, with as big a lawn area as possible.

The "Blank Slate" - you can see the unusable lawn, and the house below, that needs screening.
We removed almost all of the plants while the builder began the demolition of the existing house. The only plant that had any real value to the garden was a huge milkwood in the driveway. The driveway and boundary wall was laid out to make sure that it was kept safe.

One of the first steps, as in most landscape designs, was to sort out levels. As Ive mentioned before, creating level areas makes the garden much more user-friendly. Keeping the garden on the same level as the house means that people are more likely to spill out into the lawn.
The retaining wall below the garden had a height restriction which was well below the homes ground floor level - this would mean I would have to do some lateral thinking to try to find a way of getting the lawn level right.

Due to height restrictions, the top of the retaining wall was still well below the level we needed it to be
The second challenge in the design of the garden, was the proximity of the house in front. From the ground level of the house it not only partially blocks the view of the ocean, but is the last thing you want to be looking at when youre sitting in your lounge or dining area.
The solution would be to raise the garden to the groundfloor level. This meant that we would be able to keep the planting relatively low, and still screen the neighbours house.

Making use of the attractive vistas, and hiding the less attractive can be one of the hardest balancing acts in a garden design. It needs to be done subtly, but effectively.
This garden was one of the trickiest Ive worked on, because of the multiple levels and views in the house. Also, having the beautiful sea views and the big house both dominating the front view, made it particularly difficult.

Oehme & Van Sweden - Chicago Botanic Gardens
I began the design of the garden with a picture in my mind of flowing grasses, and mass planting along the lines of an Oehme and Van Sweden garden. They use a more naturalistic style, which would suit the site, and the use of indigenous plants. The challenge would be to create this feel in the narrow space available for the planting.


I also had a picture of the way sand forms ripples on the beach, and thought Id like to capture something of that feel in the design. This would translate into building up berms of sand, which would make a great platform on which to plant. Slowly, the design was beginning to take shape.

I took some photos of the garden, and used these to trace and sketch the picture that was beginning to form in my head.

After all the planning comes the hard slog. To begin with, we had to move about 80m3 of soil into the garden, and shape and level, and re-shape and re-level, and then do it all over again. Finally, the structure was all there just waiting to be dressed up with plants. Were almost there now, but Ill post a follow-up on the planting once weve completed it.

Monday, March 3, 2014

Humboldt Botanical Gardens Dedekam Ornamental Terrace Garden

Rosa Knockout

Geum chiloense Mrs. Bradshaw

Dwarf Mouse-Eared Tickseed Coreopsis auriculata Nana

Alstormeria

Euphorbia griffithii Fireglow

Rose Glow Japanese Barberry Berberis thunbergii Rose Glow in Foreground

Opal Coral Bells Heuchera Opal in Bloom

Cordyline Electric Pink at Center

Charming Mounds of Dianthus gratianopoitanus Firewitch Approaching the Corner of the Bed


Eryngium tripartitum in Flower


Geranium Rozanne





Walkers Low Catmint Nepeta faasseneii in Foreground





Visit Humboldt Botanical Gardens