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Garden Design Help, Advice and Tips Wolverhampton

The how-to landscaping books were as fascinating as calculus classes. Hiring a landscaper or designer was well out of my meagre budget. I had to do it myself.

Stowheath Garden Centre
01902 553346
Stowheath Lane
Wolverhampton
Old Tree Nursery
01902 786042
Pendeford Hall Lane
Wolverhampton
Perton Pets & Garden Supplies
01902 743888
Unit 3 Anders Square
Wolverhampton
Beacon Nurseries & Garden Centre
01902 882933
Bath Street
Dudley
E Lewis & Sons Gardens Ltd
01902 790434
Paradise Lane
Wolverhampton
Midlandscapes
01902 334242
13 Birches Barn Road
Wolverhampton
R Spencer & Son
01902 842346
Yew Tree Cottage
Wolverhampton
Codsall & Wergs Garden Centre Ltd
01902 842461
Wergs Hall Road
Wolverhampton
Codsall Outbuildings
01902 895353
White Cross Garden Centre
Wolverhampton
D R Hardware & Garden Centre
01902 307666
5 Wolverhampton Road
Wolverhampton
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Garden Design Help, Advice and Tips

Basics of Garden Design

Garden Design DrawingWhy I had to Design My Own Garden

There it was, a new house, well, new to us, a blank yard, and I was stumped how to start designing the gardens. I wanted beauty, but I didn't want to make mistakes.

The how-to landscaping books were as fascinating as calculus classes. Hiring a landscaper or designer was well out of my meagre budget. I had to do it myself.

5 Year Garden Room Plan

To start, I chose the first (easiest) area in a 5 year plan of garden rooms. True, it's a lengthy wait, but the gardening season here is short, I am the work force and have limited time. I also needed to study my travel patterns in the garden, where I walked most, how much grass did I want to leave (aka cut), shading from trees, soil, local pests, drainage, etc. Mostly, I wanted to see where logical sections would present themselves and what shapes they'd best suit.

Add to those, my problem areas with tree roots and stumps, the weather and wind patterns, snowloads, handiest locations for utility shed, firewood storage, compost bins and so on. These all take time to decide wisely.

And I'm glad I took my time. Designs I'd have implemented in year one, if money and time were available, are quite different now in year three. The easiest routes are worn in the grass now, unlike original ideas. Drainage areas for rain have changed. A new well location is elsewhere. Even shade grass won't grow well under the maple (acer) trees which suck the soil dry. An otherwise ideal veg garden extension has too many old tree roots intact. One mature maple tree died this year and must be taken down, happily before I planted the shrub garden by that spot. The clothesline had to go where I didn't really want it. The list goes on.

Choosing The Plants

Next, I pored through plant books, selecting and studying plants which would suit the chosen area: part shade, poor, dry soil, wind protection. Fortunately my knowledge of plants is adequate, but I searched for unfamiliar yet suitable ones which were also affordable. Sadly, water-loving plants can't join. But drought tolerant ones with varying textures, colours and height can.

Then, choosing path material and colour. The house is mostly brown brick so anything ornate or red is very out of place. Grey is too drab. But the new amber-grey shades in concrete paver bricks and pea gravel were perfect. And because I couldn't afford the pavers until this year, the price had also come down a bit. I chose square and rectangular hardscaping to mimic existing house lines.

Drawing the Garden Design

Finally, the design was laid out to scale on paper with pencil. I avoided bland rectangular bed shapes. Instead, I tried basic design flow shapes of C, S, O, U, and teardrop. Once decided, I drew out likely shapes within the area and fitted in plants. Then I had to shift many due to similar colour, height or texture to their adjacent neighbours. On paper, it's far easier.

I also had to consider viewpoints. Looking fr...

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