Posts Tagged ‘yard’
Wednesday, June 9th, 2010
If you have a big yard, your yard trimmings will probably be too much for your regular compost bin. You see, grass, trees and shrubs tends to grow a lot during the spring and summer months so you end up with plenty of yard trimmings every now and then. Fortunately, you need not worry about how to compost such amount of yard trimmings. In fact, you need not even use a composting bin to recycle your grass clippings. After cutting your grass, just leave the grass cuttings on your lawn and let them dry out under the sun.
Basically leaving your grass clippings on your garden has become rather fashionable these days. Grasscycling, as specialists call this, is considered as an environmentally sound practice. You don’t will need to use a recycling bin when you recycle your grass clippings. To practice grasscycling at home, you basically spread the grass clippings on your lawn evenly. It won’t far more than a few days before the grass clippings dry out and decompose so your yard is not going to required look topsy-turvy for long.
Tags: home improvement, Landscaping, lawn care, yard
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Tuesday, April 13th, 2010
When seasons change, its time to get the garden ready for the coming season. The better you can prepare it for the coming season, the more luck you may have.
Summer is near
Rake away dead leaves. Go over the soil and examine it. Do you have any perennial plants around? Trim them back, so they can prepare themselves for the warm weather ahead. It is time to consider the soil content. Get fresh top soil and manure. If you have any compost, you may want to use that also.
It is also a good time to check the soil PH. If you have the equipment, then it is no problem. You can buy soil PH kits. They are inexpensive. Some even come as meters with probes. They may not be as accurate as the kits, but they can give you a general idea of your soil PH. A soil PH level of 7 is neutral. Lower numbers are alkaline. Higher numbers are acidic.
Tags: garden, gardening, home, house, plants, vegetables, yard
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Monday, March 29th, 2010
If you’re reading this article you’re probably looking online for your first birdhouse, are replacing one that’s been used for years and now needs replacing, or are looking for an additional birdhouse or two. You see so many one the web to choose from. Some are quite cute, some plain, some fancy. You’re probably looking in a specific price range and will pick one to meet your decorating tastes or your landscaping. Before you buy please do your feathered friends a favor and look a little deeper into how the birdhouse was constructed. It may just be that the home you’re buying for your birds may just be the last thing they ever live in.
In 1962 Rachel Carson wrote a book titled “Silent Spring”. It was a book that opened people’s eyes about the dangers of pesticides and chemicals in our environment. The book is credited with the banning of DDT in the US because of the impact it had on birds driving some species to near extinction. DDT had the effect of thinning the shells of the eggs and the parents actually crushed the eggs trying to incubate them. Some of the species affected severely were eagles, ospreys, and falcons. Since the elimination of DDT as a common pesticide in the US impacted bird populations have recovered. Well, this is a great history lesson and your happy for the birds but what does this have to do with your birdhouse? Plenty.
Tags: backyard birds, bird nests, Birdhouse, garden, gardening, landscape, natural birdhouses, nesting boxes, Wild birds, wood bird houses, wood birdhouses, yard
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Saturday, March 20th, 2010
Designing a landscape for the Denver/Boulder area involves specialconsiderations not found in most other areas. In the words of Tom Altgelt, a premier landscape architect on the Front Range of Colorado, “Every region for which I have designed landscapes has its own unique character, with special challenges, opportunities, and needs. In the Denver/Boulder front range area of Colorado, the biggest challenge is the climate.” We have to deal with winter weather, interspersed with mild days, for almost half the year.
Since we have such long winters, it is truly important for a garden to be designed with year-round beauty and interest. Unfortunately, most gardens are designed to be beautiful just in the spring and summer, but the very best landscape designs will be beautiful in the fall and winter, too. Altgelt remarks, “This winter interest that is so important here comes about in three ways.”
For Tom Altgelt, the first step is to sculpt the shapes and forms of the earth. “Ideally, the bare landscape will feel as though it has been sculpted by wind and water. We want the energetics of this sculpture to have a pleasing and dynamic flow and movement, so the eye will perceive forms that are beautiful, animated, moving, uplifting as it is animating us.” By artistically forming the bare land and rock formations, a beauty can emerge that will last through the seasons.
Tags: denver CO, denver colorado, denver garden design, denver landscape design, design, garden, gardening, home, home improvements, landscape, landscape architect, Landscaping, patio, yard
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Saturday, October 31st, 2009
Landscaping is a great way to improve the appearance of your yard, and landscape tools are essential for any landscaping project. There are many tools out there, some made for one specific job. The best thing you can do is to purchase a basic group of tools that you can multi-task with, and add specialized tools one at a time as you need them. The basic group of tools is listed below.
The first tool group is the shovel.
Group 2 is the rake
Group 3 is the lopper, shear or pruner.
The fourth tool group is the wheel barrel or garden cart.
The shovel is the first group of tools. It is a piece of metal that has been flattened and attached to a handle. These allow you to carry and move materials around. There are three main types of shovels. The flat shovel has a wide surface area, and is a relatively flat piece of metal. It is good for moving scoops from a rock or gravel pile. The second one is the rounded or pointed tip shovel. This is good for slicing and digging in the soil. It is the classic shovel that most people think of. The last is the narrow shovel. It works well for digging smaller holes and in tight spaces.
Tags: garden, garden cart, gardening, home, home improvement, landscape, landscape supplies, landscape tools, Landscaping, lawn, wheel barrel, yard
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Tuesday, August 4th, 2009
by Rkinc Douglas Wayne
U_Suski
There are lots of ways that we can make a garden look beautiful no matter what the size of the garden is. The best way to make the best out of your garden is by using some landscape designing ideas. Before you go all and buy tons of landscape magazines you may want to see what parts of your garden you want to change and the type of look you are aiming for.
While the various magazines can be of help you will find more use for landscape designing looks and ideas if you roughly know what you want your garden to look like. One of the main methods for getting the best landscape designing looks is to see about utilizing the whole of your garden in a manner which highlights each part of it.
The best way to go about this is to see how your garden looks before you start the transformation process. You can section out the garden so that you have a more manageable area to work with. Decide in the beginning where you will have grass growing, this should help you to work out just how much lawn mowing you will be doing.
Tags: design, designs, garden, gardening, home, home and garden, house, landscape, Landscaping, lawn, yard
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Thursday, June 25th, 2009
by Rita S. Snow
Soil is one of the most important parts of a successful, fruitful garden. If your soil is rocky, full of clay, or depleted of enough nutrients, you will not have healthy plants. Think about it, if a newborn baby was fed no nutrients from birth, would you expect it to be healthy? The same goes for plants. A seed will sprout with just water, but it wont get much bigger as time goes on if there are no nutrients.
If you are going to plant the seeds first in planter trays, use regular potting soil. It doesn’t need to be incredibly nutrient risk because it won’t be in that soil alone very long. Just make sure the soil is packed in well to help the roots.
When you are preparing your garden in your yard, you need to first break up your soil. Your garden plot cant be full of rocks and clumps. Use the proper tools to cultivate and till your soil. When you are just starting to break of the grass and tough topsoil, use a shovel and pickax if necessary.
Tags: garden, gardening, home, life, outdoors, recreation, vegetables, yard
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Tuesday, June 16th, 2009
by Chris P. Rodstein
As you start a garden, you must first till the soil, fertilize it, and then plant your flowers, trees, bushes, vegetable plants, etc. There are different ways you can do this, either by planting seedlings, transplanting entire plants, or sowing seeds. If you want to save some money, you can sow seeds. This way, all you have to buy is seeds which will probably only cost you a couple dollars for a large pack.
The first way to sow seeds is by first sowing them in small trays and letting them grow for a few weeks. Once they are bigger and growing, you can transplant them into the garden. Start with some planter trays. Fill the trays will soil, pat it down,and get the soil a little moist. Spread a few seeds over the top of the soil and then cover them with a small layer of additional soil.
After a few weeks the seeds will have grown into seedlings. When there is no longer danger of frost in your garden, you can transplant only the strongest seedlings into the garden. You get the advantage of only using the strong plants and having them already grown some.
Tags: garden, gardening, home, life, outdoors, recreation, vegetables, yard
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Saturday, February 28th, 2009
by Thomas Fryd
You can bring out the best in your yard with a solar spotlight, because it will highlight any part of your landscape. Solar spotlights can personalize your yard with beautiful landscape lighting. It is the safest and easiest way to decorate your outdoor environment. Whichever types of improvements you desire, solar spotlights are ideal. Whether you desire to create a mood of tranquility in your garden, or simply light up your garage, there is a light that will fit the bill. Using these rich and soothing lights can turn your yard into a brilliant display, showcase pristine lawns and spectacular decking and woodwork. Make your vision come to life and show off your yard as a reflection of yourself. Allow yourself and your landscaping a treat.
There is a wide array of different solar lighting equipment available. You can use solar lighting to bring out small shrubs, add character, highlight your deck, or for security on the nights you get home in the dark.
A post solar light will be a great way to accent and brighten up your landscape or highlight your pool pathway. You may be looking to increase the beauty or simply illuminate. It need not matter why, because solar equipment is the way to go.
Tags: gardening, landscape, landscaping lights, outdoor lights, yard
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Wednesday, February 25th, 2009
by Ronald Sam
Many hundreds of years ago Wind Chimes were used around shrines and temples to scare away animals. They have been around since the 2nd century C.E. They were also made for the purpose of scaring away bad spirits. There is a belief in China and parts of Asia, that Wind Chimes brought good luck to the families whenever they were placed on the corners of the people’s homes.
Of the 2 types of wind chimes made, one type is called Harmonic Wind Chimes, which were made for bringing luck. This type was made to produce specific notes that were pleasing to the ears. The other type was made for just making some kind of harmonic noise. These were the one’s that were made for frightening away animals.
Wind Chimes can be made out of almost any type of material, such as wood, glass, different types of metal, shells, bamboo, porcelain, and stones and other things. The center plate, which is called a ball, is centered exactly half way down the chimes length. This would help achieve hitting certain soft sounding notes. The tubes are cut to a certain length, depending on what note the maker wanted to hit. So a little knowledge of music would be a great help in producing a Great Wind Chime.
Tags: back yards, gardening, home garde, Lawn decor, Outdoor decor, yard, yard decor
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