Tag Archives: garden

Your Own Japanese Garden: Part 1

Ever walked past someone’s garden and been so enraptured by the front yard that you hardly registered what the house looked like? In these days of the difficult-to-shift property market, that is the kind of garden you want.

Front yards that have appeal may draw a buyer into your home. If they like the way you have finished your yard – they may think that they will like the way you have finished your home.

At this time of the year a yard is more about evergreens and accessories than flowers, as there are very few blooms available. Also – and for this reason – it is at this time of year that the Japanese garden stands out. A Japanese garden can lend itself to almost any climate, from snowy to humid, from rainy to desert.

To get an idea of the look of a Japanese garden, first look in a few magazines or books at the library, or check out some illustrations on the Internet. Pick illustrations that look similar to the same size and shape as the layout of your garden. Depending on your preference you may wish to copy some layout plans or ideas.

Japanese gardens are traditionally ruled by Zen philosophy. Each feature has a deeper representation which you can ponder on, once you are aware of them. As you walk through your Japanese Zen area each day, you may even absorb some of the peace embedded in the Zen philosophy. These ideas for your own Japanese front yard will be discussed in two parts.

Firstly, in “Your Own Japanese Garden: Part 1”, the focus is on ambience, focal points, rocks and lanterns; then a follow up in “Your Own Japanese Garden: Part 2” explores plants, water, bridges, vessels and aged items. These combined features help to form the Japanese Zen garden.

There are several factors of this look that can be touched on to create an unusual garden. In an abstract way, the qualities that the gardens are representing are peace and tranquility, and in Zen philosophy, this is created by simplicity.

The relaxing ambience that encourages meditation can be achieved by placing a bamboo or rattan chair plus a small table near a wall, or in front of a lattice fence. If your garden is in a hot part of the country, group the seats under a tree or parasol. Stillness is the key word here.

Two other abstract notions suggested in a Zen garden are represented physically by a focal point that is not placed centrally, and secondly, a ‘window’ to a hidden part in your garden.

This can be represented by a piece of tall, latticed fence work, or a tree with shrubs around, or a pagoda, or even simply a bench that is partly concealed. This ‘hide and reveal’ theme is suggestive of the quest for human enlightenment and it also offers privacy. You may wish to incorporate your seating here for that reason.

The introduction of something tall lends itself to the look of the Japanese garden. Western gardens tend to be larger and boast a flat expanse of lawn; Japanese homes usually have tiny gardens. They tend to be more vertical, and tall shrubs will often be placed to hide the house from the street.

For an inexpensive focal point, you can dig a bed and put a bamboo or a red Japanese maple (miniature or full size) plus other plants in it. The bamboo bushes and trees will live in most mild North American areas, though you may have to ‘cover it’ in severe frosts. A very large cactus or groupings of cacti will also make an interesting focal point.

Smaller beds can be dug in across the yard. The center of the yard is deliberately left empty, and a lack of symmetry is desired. This reflects the lack of perfection in the world!

For some authentic Japanese atmosphere, one tall and one shorter black lantern can be well placed along your winding (never straight!) pathway, or sometimes peeking out from amongst a selection of shrubs and plants.

A small pathway can lead to nowhere, and Zen gardens will always have at least one pathway of either white round gravel or gray flattened gravel wending its way through your shrubs; several glimpses of this pathway will satisfy the unity and harmony requirement of Zen gardens.

Whilst lanterns are more of a Buddhist tradition, they have come to represent the essence of the Japanese garden, so they are also included in Zen designs.

One very large Japanese lantern and one smaller one elsewhere can look effective. These usually come in two traditional styles, one more fat-bellied and squat than the other. They are most commonly found in black or pale gray.

Some of the most inexpensive modern lighting will lend itself to the Japanese mode. The ‘push-in’ mushroom type lamps are very easily assimilated into the Zen garden design.

Rocks and stone are a big feature of the Japanese garden, with different sized rocks grouped seemingly at random. Smaller rocks will look good grouped with your focal point, or added to a bush or plant grouping.

Try to find at least one big rock. If you have one big one, you can group smaller ones beside it and finish off with a fern or two. Stones represent life’s immovable mountains.

If that really resonates with you, beware; just one rock will suffice; you do not need a rock for each immovable mountain in your life! If you feel that you have numerous immovable mountains in your life, then move into “Your Own Japanese Garden: Part 2” where the de-stressing values of water-sounds are discussed!

This article was written on behalf of Alice and Stephen Proski. If you’re looking for help with Cave Creek AZ real estate, look no further than Az-Homes4u.com. These agents have the experience and professionalism that you deserve as you buy or sell property in the Scottsdale real estate market.

How to Create a Beautiful Butterfly Garden

The sizable maturity of people, as far as I know, find handsome flora to have a certain aesthetic cost. I find it very enjoyable to just sit and examine the flora grow in a stunning backyard. The only unexciting thing about scrutiny a patch, which is perhaps what may be the very allocate which I find so relaxing, is the sameness of the intact thing. There is very no action; but then again, when you are tiresome to relax, who needs action? The standard plot would be a scenic backyard with just enough action on which to focus, but lacking enough action to eliminate the relaxing quantity of this non-activity. This is where the butterfly plot comes into play.

I would speculate that anybody who enjoys looking at a backyard also enjoys study butterflies go about their tasks in a backyard just as much, if not more. Butterflies are scenic, innocent, and add a certain joyful and lively look to just about any backyard. The only thing stopping anyone from turning his or her plot into a butterfly plot is probably the detail that he or she does not know how to do it. Well, my contacts, it is easier than you probably would have thought.

The first thing to respect is where to found your plot if you do not already have an vacant plot. It is best to fright your butterfly plot in a place that already has flora, since the other plants will help the butterflies find your butterfly port. If, however, your butterfly patch is the most gorgeous plot in the world, but it is in the inner of a vast green return, there will be no cause for any butterflies to be in the neighborhood, and will hence not be able to find your plot. Therefore, it is forever best to initiate your butterfly backyard in a place where there are plants already.

A butterfly patch should consist of a number of plants and flora that draw butterflies. These plants and flora should be a selection of colors and sizes. Lilacs and the like are good for attracting butterflies. The plants should be quaint, sharp, and odorous and should, if probable, include some separate of food for the butterflies. These kinds of flora will help draw the butterflies and give them a logic to call your patch home. Butterfly Milkweed is great for attracting butterflies, since it has bright orange flowers, but more importantly, since it will supply food for the caterpillars. If there are no caterpillars, there will be no butterflies, so trust the caterpillars blissful is a good thing. You can ask a district gardener or ensure out seek online which flowers that draw butterflies will thrive in your particular climate.

Ideally, your butterfly backyard will have the ability to flourish all flavor long. There are many flowers and plants which will give food for the butterflies and caterpillars throughout the spiral, summer, and descend. For these too, you should each research or check with a home landscaper to see which flowers will thrive in the different seasons in your particular climate.

Your butterfly plot will basic some person of butterfly shelter and resting place for your winged links. This should be a place where the butterflies and caterpillars will be able to support and vacation safe when the rainfall and cold come. There should be some tedious rocks in your backyard also where the butterflies can steep up the sun. It would very be perfection if the rocks had small indentations or craters in them where water could pleat, thereby bountiful the butterflies a place to swig. You should also have a small log mass where the butterflies could go for shelter.

There are butterfly shelters that you could buy from a gather, but I would suggest against these butterfly shelters. The persuade is easily that the butterfly shelter will probably become a wasp shelter before long, which will only give the butterflies object to defer away. Nobody wants to disaster with a wasp.

The last and most important thing you will require to concluded your butterfly backyard is a good comfortable place for you to sit down and stalk your butterfly garden “in action.” After all the hard work that you put into it, you surely want the butterflies to like the shelter that you have shaped for them, but you clearly also want to be able to enjoy it yourself. After all, let’s be candid about it, you may adore butterflies, but the dispute for your butterfly garden is for you to be able to enjoy it.

Visit the Butterfly Facts website to learn about butterfly habitat and butterfly identification.