bookmark.com
Home About Us Privacy Terms of Service Add Your Link Submit Article
Search:   
Add Url
 

Drink & Food

Jobs & Employment

Computers & Networking

Policies & Law

Property & Estate

Children

Research & Science

Adventure & Sports

Society & Issues

Recreation & Entertainment

Banking & Finance

Malls & Shopping

Healthcare & Medicine

Online & Board Games

Automobile & Automotive

Hotels & Travel

Art & Culture

Home & Garden

News & Events

Education & Reference

Hygiene & Health

Fashion & Relationships

Self Help

Business & Services


 

Home –› Home & Garden –› Horticulture & Gardening
 

Designing Your Flower Garden

 

Author: Ted Roberson

Spring is the perfect time of year for setting up a new garden space. Everything is alive, growing and happy, so it's no wonder you'd want your yard to get in on the action.

To set up a basic bed for flowers, all you need to do is remove the sod and plant small plants or seeds in the soil. Getting rid of the sod can be a lot of work. An easy way to get rid of sod, which unfortunately takes a long time, is to cover the area you want to make into a bed with five to seven layers of newspaper. Cover the paper with mulch and allow it to sit undisturbed for at least six months. A year is ideal.

When you remove the mulch, the newspaper and the sod will be gone. Then all you have to do is plant, put the mulch back around the plants, and enjoy.

Assuming you already have a flower garden spot prepared, what should you plant? The answer depends on whether your area gets sun, shade, or a mixture, and what part of the country you live in. There are beautiful plants, such as impatiens, hostas, ferns and vinca, that thrive in shade, just as there are a multitude of flowering plants that glory in the sun, including all sorts of wildflowers, coreopsis, lilies and more.

To find the best plants for your yard, go to a local garden center and find the plants designed for the amount of light your garden spot gets. The plants you can buy locally will be well-suited to the environment where you live.

When designing your new garden space, remember that nature loves odd numbers. Buy three, five, seven or more of the same kind of plant or flower, and your garden design will look much more natural. Also, don't line your plants up in rows. Nature doesn't subscribe to straight lines. Go for a walk by a stream or in a field of wildflowers to see how nature designs, then go for a similar look in your yard.

Your garden can be formal or informal, stick with one color in all its shades or offer a multitude of bright, pastel or muted colors. The decisions all rely on your personal taste. Once you have picked the flowers and planted them according to the directions on the tags, then you can have fun filling the garden with cute accessories.

When a garden is new it can look a little bare because the plants are small and not fully established. You shouldn't over plant your garden space if you are using perennial plants (those that come back year after year) because they will grow larger each year and eventually fill in the space provided.

Instead, fill the empty space with cute birdbaths, birdfeeders or birdhouses. Add decorative stepping stones or sculptures, gazing balls, even plant stands that will allow you to add height by placing a potted plant in your garden. If there is a tree in your garden space, you can hang a birdfeeder or wind chime for an extra touch of whimsy.

And when the color fades from your flowers, add a multi-colored fabric pinwheel that will leave a rainbow in your garden all year long.

Author Bio:
TMGallery has been actively marketing on the internet sharing advice on home decor and family gift giving ideas. Visit our online store TMGallery were you will find a full range of home decor items and garden accessories http://www.tmgallery.com/
You can also reach this article by using: horticulture jobs, horticulture therapy, horticulture supplies, gardening, container gardening
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Therapy Dog Training - Working With Your Dog
 
Flower Delivery Through the Internet
 
Becomning A Step Parent
 
Wood Floors - What You Need To Know
 
Hosepipes- will you face a ban this summer?
 
Steps for a Beautiful Fish Garden Pond - Before Building, Read This
 
Saving Family Keepsakes for Scrapbooking
 
6 Easy Ways To Find A Good Dog Training Professional
 
Home Building Plans
 
Take Your Dog To Niagara Falls
 
 
 
 
 

Cats, People, and the Black Plague: Those Who Kept Cats Survived

In the long history of human-animals relationships, a few episodes stand out in which one species ha ... - Lisa J. Lehr
 

Design Your Childs After School Activities Yourself

Giving the best to ones child is the most pressing desire of each and every parent. At times, howeve ... - K Snow
 

Being the Sandwich Generation

A great many of us who comprise the boomer generation are now reaching that stage in life where our ... - Rick Hamrick
 
 

Snipping Dangling Threads

Your home needn?t look like it fell out of a Ralph Lauren scrapbook or a page in the Orvis fall cata ... - Carolina Fernandez
 

Power Tools

Take a look at the top few power tools out in the market today. Here, we list down some of the most ... - Dakota Caudilla
 
 
Home -> Privacy -> Terms of Service
© 2006-2008 www.bookmarkedcontent.com All Rights Reserved Worldwide.