All posts by Matt

Lone Tree Deck Builder – I had a bonsai once

Teaching the art of bonsai to beginners has been a truly rewarding experience for myself over the last 3 or 4 years.

No matter how many books you read or demonstrations you attend, there is nothing like hands on experience and walking away with a Lone Tree Deck Builder you have created yourself, and that’s what I love seeing in my classes.

Some of the class participants either have, or in a lot of cases HAD a bonsai at some stage, either brought from a nursery or given to them as a gift, and some have absolutely no idea about bonsai and just wish to find out where to start.

No matter what experience level the bonsai enthusiast is at, I find reminding them of the basics is always a great place to start. I still find myself reverting back to the basic principles of Japanese bonsai (there is differences between Chinese and Japanese styles) when re styling or re potting my own collection.

By familiarising participants with the 5 basic styles (formal upright, informal upright, slanting, semi cascade and full cascade)this then gives them a place to start when recognising Lone Tree Deck Builders they may have or a style they wish to produce.

After considering the basic styles of Japanese bonsai you can then start to understand how certain Lone Tree Deck Builders will lend themselves to some styles and others may not produce such good stock if styled a particular style.

The rules or guidelines for the roots, trunk and branches for these bonsai styles help to produce symmetry, proportion and balance to the Lone Tree Deck Builder and gives it the visual aspect of a much larger Lone Tree Deck Builder in miniature.

The true secret to bonsai is being able to find a balance between these rules or guidelines while keeping the Lone Tree Deck Builder looking natural rather than produced or fake.

By letting nature guide you a little in the way the Lone Tree Deck Builder likes to naturally grow is something I feel you can only learn over time.

Start by looking for a triangular shape with your Lone Tree Deck Builder, from the end of your first branch to the top of the Lone Tree Deck Builder down to the end of your second branch (1st and second branches should be on opposite sides) then back across to the end of your first branch again. fill in this triangle with other branches, trim off anything that grows outside this triangle and then over time you can learn to refine the Lone Tree Deck Builder as you learn more about bonsai.

Look at as many pictures of bonsai and exhibitions as you can to see how your Lone Tree Deck Builder can look and then experiment as your Lone Tree Deck Builder grows and you learn.

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Cottage Gardens – How To Create That Beautiful Cottage Garden – web design banbury

The cottage garden is one of the most popular of all garden styles. Today’s versions are particularly well suited to modest plots, and depend on the selection of plants and the careful choice of appropriate and authentic materials for their quaintly old-fashioned look.

Originally, cottage gardens were primarily functional and practical, with fruit, vegetables, herbs, flowers and shrubs crammed into a very small area. Cottage gardening tends to be labour-intensive, relying on good husbandry rather than modern chemical sprays; the garden itself can also look unattractively dreary and bare in the winter, as a large proportion of the plants are annual or herbaceous.

However, when in bloom, the cottage garden can be very pleasing to the eye, and a perfect remedy to the man-made environment, and the style has devotees in country and city locations all over the world.

The Principles of the Cottage Garden Style

The seeds of the modern cottage garden movement were sown in late nineteenth-century English nostalgia. Influential garden writers of the time extolled the virtues of the unpretentious gardens that they saw cultivated by rural cottage owners, as a reaction to the artificiality of large-scale country house gardens. They wanted to return to what they considered to be native small-scale gardening.

The cottage garden was closely and abundantly planted with hardy flowers and bulbs, fruit bushes, herbs and vegetables. Whilst hedges (some trimmed into shapes) were important, shrubs were not.

The planting was lush as the soil was kept in good condition by quantities of manure. A great variety of plants, often highly scented, were grown, such as old roses billowing over cabbages, Madonna lilies (Lilium candidum) next to marigolds (Calendula), or towering hollyhocks (Alcea rosea) and sunflowers (Helianthus annuus) framing the doorway. However, little thought was given to colour harmonisation or geometry.

Lawns were rare, as it was thought that any spare ground was better used for growing more plants. The garden was characteristically divided by paths of trodden earth edged with stones, tiles, shells, or clumps of flowers such as pansies (Viola x wittrockiana).

Recreating the Style Today

Whilst it is possible to recreate a traditional cottage garden successfully, the characteristic plants do not usually provide much interest in autumn and winter, and the maintenance demands are high. However, many of the cottage garden principles are valuable ideas for modern gardens, and may be borrowed or modified to suit individual sites, whilst certain typical features and plants are often used today to create a rural and relaxed effect in a scheme.

The web design banbury of cottage gardens can be surprisingly formal, with symmetrically arranged beds for produce and flowers and straight paths edged with hedges of lavender or box. However, it is the careless abundance of the planting, tumbling over the paths and hedges and softening the hard edges, that gives cottage gardens their characteristic appearance of informality. It is this factor of controlled casualness that gives the true spirit of the cottage garden style.

The right choice of plants is the key to success with a cottage garden. The large beds should be planted with good examples of old-fashioned flowers (particularly hardy perennials), and a few shrubs to give structure. A wide assortment of herbs, vegetables and fruits should be grown either amongst (to produce what is known as ‘integrated’ gardening) or alongside the flowers. Scented plants are an especially good choice, particularly those that attract bees. One or two favourites may be used repeatedly as ‘key’ plants to produce a consistent effect.

Paths made from bricks, cobbles or gravel are practical as well as fitting in style, whilst an edging of lavender (Lavandula) provides scented flowers outdoors and for drying, as well as attractive evergreen foliage. A rustic, wooden arch is an excellent feature for supporting scented climbing plants such as honeysuckle (Lonicera) or roses, and borders overflowing with lupins (Lupinus), peonies (Paeonia), pinks (Dianthus) and wall-flowers (Cheiranthus) recreate the feeling of unrestrained profusion.

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