Planning Landscape - Avoid My 3
Mistakes
One year after hastily planting upwards of
50 shrubs, trees and assorted leafy green whatnots
in the barren yard of the house we just bought, I was
uprooting 25% of them
and
transplanting them elsewhere. The second year,
another 25% were moved to spots in the yard deemed
better. The third year, well, you guessed it. And you
know what? Transplanting got old after just the first few
fights with buried root balls. And after year 3, when
some of the bushes had grown to the size of Honda
Fits, the job had become back-breaking. All of which
leads to the first thing I should have
done in landscaping...
1) Have a plan.
I figured, nature doesn’t
have a plan. Why do I need one? Well, it turns out nature
does have a plan--survival of the fittest. The
strong overtake the weak. And the concept of
“aesthetically pleasing” is a concept unknown to nature.
We homeowners, on the other hand, want all of our plants
to survive and thrive–strong and weak, hand in hand
singing Kumbaya as the focal-point birch clump sways us
gently on hammocks, our lips stained with Kool-Aid. And
when we open our eyes from that August nap, we want to
see rolling, flowing waves of plant life and envious
neighbors. It’s not going to happen without a
plan.
In planning landscape, start with a paper and
pencil sketch. Outline your lot, home and driveway, and
begin doodling some ideas. Sketch out flowerbeds–do you
want curved, flowing boundaries or crisp, formal lines and
angles to the beds? Freestanding clusters of shrubs,
grasses and flowers–where? And trees–evergreen or
deciduous, standing alone or clustered or incorporated
into a bed? Need some ideas? Need to see how others have
made landscaping work for them?
Take a drive and pick out yards that
you find especially well landscaped–take notes or even
pictures. Hint: leave the telephoto lens at home to avoid
neighbors calling 911. Better yet, ask permission of the
homeowner first. You’ll likely get permission, a gleaming
smile, and a detailed dissertation of each plant. Find
more ideas in books and magazines. Since my early fiasco,
I’ve taken to clipping photos from magazines and have
amassed a collection of self-help landscaping books from
the likes of Home Depot and Lowes and Amazon.com,
providing not only relevant photographs and in-depth
planning guides, but critical help in identifying
individual plants for your climate zone and preferred
level of maintenance. Of these,
Complete Home Landscaping : Designing, Constructing,
Planting by Catriona Tudor Erler, is about the best
I've seen. 320 pages covering every conceivable aspect of
landscaping--from developing a plan to walls and fences,
ponds and pools, landscape lighting, and deck and
patio elements. Every gardener or would-be gardener should
have this book on their shelf.
If software is more your
thing, look into
Better Homes and Gardens Landscaping and Deck Designer 8.0
[Newest Version]. This is a powerful software package from the
trusted folks at Better Homes and Gardens that puts
every imaginable tool at your fingertips for designing
outdoor projects from landscaping to decks and patios,
sprinkler systems, water features, etc. You can
import your own photos, choose and arrange plants
from a catalog of over 3500, and estimate project costs.
This is great stuff for
experimenting with design ideas--see what a single or
multi-level deck would look like coming off your back
door; see what a brick or stone patio would look like
before you break your back; build fencing and
arrange outdoor furniture in 3D graphics.
But I digress. In sum,
have a plan, or have a shovel in your hand for the next
five years.
2) Don’t crowd those new
plants.
Every container plant from
your favorite nursery or garden center will have
attached a little plastic tag identifying the plant and
offering planting suggestions. Treat those suggestions as
gold. Especially the spacing suggestions. To wit, the
three Blue Pfitzer junipers purchased by yours truly and
spaced two feet apart in a front flower bed when the tags
said to space them 5-6 feet apart. My thinking was: but
they’re so tiny. And they looked
ridiculously tiny in that big old empty flower bed. So I
pushed them together and two years later I was digging up
the middle one and planting it further out and two years
after that I was digging up all three because they
had collectively outgrown the flower bed. I threw’em in
the ground along the back fence and now they’re trying to
push the fence down. No offense to you Blue Pfitzer
propagators, but your junipers are brutal.
I wish I could say that
the junipers were the only plants on which I ignored the
spacing requirements. Sadly, in my zeal to fill up a yard
I ignored tags left and right. Which accounts for 75% of
the subsequent transplanting that has taken place to
date.
So here are some words to
the wise: Plants grow. Some plants grow mightily. So
space plants accordingly from the start.
For good tips on planting,
as well as a source of hard-to-find container plants
suited for your climate zone and shipped worry-free to
your door, try
Nature Hills Nursery, Inc. Punch in your zip code
(upper right hand corner) to find your planting zone, then
browse or use their "Plant Finder" (left margin) to focus in on
your needs.
3) Planning Landscape - remember, you still
gotta mow.
Unless your plan calls for
a bush or flower on every square foot of your lot,
remember that the remaining lawn needs maintaining. One
of the early mistakes I made was not allowing for ease of
mowing. I positioned low-hanging trees in the middle of
the yard, created a few too many freestanding clumps of
this and that, and fashioned flower beds that made
following along with a mower especially difficult. Soft
green grass is a lovely thing and I’m a big fan. But
remember when planning landscape, you’ll be mowing
that grass every week. And the older you get the less
amused you’ll be while doing the limbo under low tree
branches.
© 2008 David Alan Carter /
All Rights Reserved
David Alan Carter is a
homeowner, budding landscaper and freelance writer who
lives each of his
articles–and has the aching back and purple thumb to prove
it.
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