Tag Archives: Plans

Garden Design Plans

Garden design plans are best developed with the help of a professional landscaping contractor with formal training in botany and landscape architecture. Gardens are key components to any yard and contribute much more than color and greenery to the aesthetic of your home and your landscape. When designed in accordance with a master landscaping plan that reflects the entirety of your living experience, gardens accomplish a number of things for your property that add vitality and dimension to your outdoor living experience.

One of the many ways we help our clients is to develop garden design plans that directly reflect the architecture of the home. Our experience has taught us that this is often a much neglected ingredient of garden design. When people view your property, they view it as an entirety. They notice the home first because it is the largest and tallest structure on the lot. Whatever unique structural features characterize its architecture set a pattern that the mind expects to see continue as they eye travels down the slope of the roof into the surrounding greenery. A garden design planned around the same basic geometric patterns and linear movement of the house itself brings an immediate sense of harmony and connotes a unity of Nature and structure that makes for superior landscaping design.

Garden design also adds a sense of life and growth throughout the property-even making inorganic structures appear more “alive” in certain respects. Outdoor areas have to be set aside for specific purposes, and outdoor structures such as swimming pools, play areas, sports courts, outdoor kitchens, and patio seating areas have to be constructed by experienced specialists. Many of these structures are extremely complex and lack any semblance of an organic sensibility. This is where a professionally developed garden design can play a determining role in establishing the aesthetic of your property. Adding a sense of vibrancy, color, and life around exterior architecture and outdoor décor will go a long ways toward making your entire property appear to have a life of its own.

Garden design plans can also be developed that convey a sense of progression through the yard. We often plant gardens near motor courts and front walkways that run parallel to concrete and brick work. Plant material can be selected whose natural growth patterns help move the eye along toward an intended destination. Traditional French and Italian gardens are two good examples of garden designs whose forms connote symmetry and linear progression. Other garden designs, such as the parterre garden, are built around pathways that are developed for people to walk through. Of course, one is not limited to the pure historical form of such a style. Landscaping professionals typically customize these forms to the specifics of a home and surrounding property to give it a much more personal look and feel.

One of the things we have noticed in recent years is an increasing demand for garden designs that reflect a peaceful state of mind. Japanese gardens, traditional Zen gardens, and morning gardens are very popular forms to plant around fountains and patios. Most of our clients that request these designs are looking for a private place set apart from the rest of the yard where they can read the paper, enjoy coffee and conversation at sunrise, or simply meditate to the sound of a water fountain. Gardens planted for these purposes have to be carefully developed with the right soil nutrients and plant material to provide the sense of an ideal environment separated from the rest of the world.

Again, this is where a professional landscaping architect can prove invaluable in developing something truly unique that will last and continue to satisfy you for many years to come.

Jeff Halper is passionate for Landscaping and wants to share information about that passion. At Exterior Worlds you can read more about Garden design plans or Landscaping Design

Plants for Your Butterfly Gardening Plans

Gardening is a wonderful pastime that creates beauty outside our homes as well as enchanting flowers and plants to decorate inside our homes. If we add the extra element of butterflies, those flying jewels, to our gardening efforts, all the better. This article will give you a couple of basic butterfly gardening plans and some tips to get you started attracting and adding butterflies to your garden.

You probably have heard it before but perhaps the easiest way to begin your butterfly gardening plans is to simply check out what type of plants and flowers attract butterflies in your local area. Take a walk about your neighborhood and see where the butterflies alight. What flowers and plants in your neighbors’ yards have butterflies flitting around them? Where nature still rules with wild plantings, what plants have butterfly caterpillars crawling on them? Which ones do the butterflies draw nectar from?

Do you see females laying eggs on certain types of plants? Those are host plants for the butterfly caterpillar to eat and grow up on till they are ready to become butterflies. To keep butterflies in your own butterfly garden, you will want to include some of these.

Next keep a sharp eye open for the nectar plants the adult butterflies use. If you are lucky enough to find they enjoy your favorite flowers, rejoice.

More than likely you will find your butterfly gardening plans should include an area where you allow the local native plants a chance to grow. Perhaps you can tuck it away in a corner where the neighbors just won’t see if you are unfortunate enough to live where your yard must comply with certain rules. Just be sure the area has a sunny spot as butterflies like lots of sunshine to warm and get them flying every day.

Now if a wild bit of native plants just won’t fly, then you can still provide some plants that will attract butterflies and add them to your butterfly gardening plans. Be sure your garden also includes a water source, sunshine, shelter, nectar plants and host plants for the caterpillar.

One basic plan could include such plants as lilacs, butterfly bush, Sweet William, zinnias, marigolds, phlox and aster. Or you might want to try the combination of sedum, Rudbeckia, some different mints and, of course, butterfly bush again. If you can grow it, butterfly bush is the standard plant to be included in any butterfly gardening plan.

Copyright, 2006 Sandra Dinkins-Wilson

Looking for info on a
Butterfly Garden? Find all kinds of Flower Gardens at flowergardenlovers.com. Read about water, shade, wildflower and rose gardens and gardening tips.