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  Landscaping > Landscape - Resources for Planning Your Own

Landscaping

Landscape - Resources for Planning Your Own

Recently I listed several great landscape planning tips contributed by Master Gardeners who are also garden designers. We learned the importance of making a sketch of the existing yard, planning different areas according to use and identifying “borrowed” views. We also learned to plant in odd-numbered groups, to select plants for year-round interest and to flow together the edges of beds and borders.

This week let’s take a look at free and inexpensive resources you can use to make your landscape a more beautiful reality.

Initial cost and eventual expenses are certainly issues in landscaping. Once you make a plan and have a plant list you may find that the cost is a bit beyond your budget. One way to deal with this is to prioritize your landscape. Beautify the high visibility areas by your front door and in front of your house and cover future beds with pine straw.

Another way to stretch dollars is to buy smaller plants initially. A one-gallon azalea will eventually grow to the same size as a shrub that started as a three-gallon plant. Realize though that this method will result in a landscape that looks a bit threadbare for a couple of years.

BE RESOURCEFUL Sharon Entin-Roth says it’s important to correctly identify the existing plants in your yard. The best time to go to a garden center for advice is on a rainy day or a
weekday, not Friday through Sunday when everyone is too busy to spend time with you. She recommends taking a small tape recorder with you as well.

Post Properties has raised the landscaping bar for commercial residential properties across metro Atlanta. Don’t hesitate to take pictures of their landscapes and those of their competitors to learn which plants combine well and succeed in our climate. Walk around your neighborhood and talk to people whose yards you admire - it's a great way to meet people and gardeners LOVE to talk and share information.

FREE LANDSCAPE MATERIALS

DeKalb Compost

Wood chips - call local tree care companies and ask if they are working in your area. Clearly mark where the chips should be dumped if they have some for you.

FREE GARDENING CLASSES

Extension Service - call your local office and those in surrounding counties (404-897-6261) and ask for their schedule

Pike Family Nursery - call your local store or 770-921-1022

Hastings Garden Center - 404-869-7447

Habersham Garden Center - 404-873-2484

FREE GARDENING PUBLICATIONS

Landscape Plants for Georgia

Georgia Extension Service Horticulture Web Site

Extension Service pamphlets - visit your local office (404-897-6261) and look over their vast selection

Florida Extension Service Basic Landscape Design

RECOMMENDED BOOKS Mary Kay Woodworth says she recommends the following basic landscaping books:

“Easy Garden Design” by Janet Macunovich, Storey Communications
“Southern Living Landscape Book”, edited by Steve Bender, Oxmoor House
“Southern Living Garden Book”, edited by Steve Bender, Oxmoor House
“The Low-Maintenance Garden” by Susan Berry and Steve Bradley, Firefly Books
“The Landscaping Revolution” by Andy Wasowski, McGraw Hill

LOW COST LANDSCAPE DESIGN ALTERNATIVES

Landscape Design Classes:

Spruill Center for the Arts - 770-394-3447
Callanwolde Fine Arts Center - 404-872-5338
Atlanta Botanical Garden - 404-876-5859

Consider having a professional garden/landscape designer plan your landscape. You can then purchase the plants and install the landscape yourself .

FINALLY - THE WORK Once you have a budget, a plan and a schedule, follow these basic steps contributed by Theresa Schrum.

1. Fix any erosion or drainage problems.
2. Amend the soil with soil conditioner to make it internally well-drained and water holding.
3. Go slowly. Take time to properly install all landscape plants.
4. Maintain the landscape until it's established. Even though you plan it to be drought tolerant, it will still need watering until established.

Planning your own landscape is gratifying and educational. You probably approached your first stint behind the wheel of an automobile with equal trepidation. Now though, you tool around town without a second thought. Landscaping is much the same - you run over a few curbs at first but soon you become reasonably competent and confident of your skills. With the knowledge I’ve gleaned from my Master Gardener colleagues you can plan your landscape with confidence too.




 



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