Garden Design
Thanks for the reply Liz!
There are alot of points there that I hadn't thought of. I will keep them in
mind. This is quite a step up for us with respect to garden size. We want to
encorporate all this into our garden without loosing the illusion of
size.....hence the lawn as in long stretches can make a garden look big.
"LizR" wrote in message
...
On Mon, 13 Oct 2003 20:02:17 +0100, "Chris"
wrote:
Hi, I haven't used newsgroups before so here goes....We are a growing
young
family about to move house. The garden is literaly a blank canvas! It is
a
70' X 50' north west (NW) facing lawn with three recently planted fruit
trees at the far end. It has a wall to the left dividing us from an open
field, a wall at the top dividing us from a horses paddock, and a broken
down fence to the right dividing us from our neighbours.With this in
mind,
we want a garden that can be divided into sections, ie. an area for the
children, a vegetable patch, and a quiet / ornate area. We want to keep a
large proportion of the lawn. Can anyone point me in the right direction
for
websites with free garden design ideas, or free garden design software?
Thanks in advance!
Chris, I'm fairly new here myself, so this is by no means advice - just
stuff I've
seen around, or thought over in my own feeble attempts at a garden.
First, you probably want the children within easy reach of the house,
especially if
they're very little. You might also want to plant stuff in that area
that's not too
poisonous. I have rosemary bushes, for example, which are almost
unkillable, somewhat
edible and reasonably easy to propagate. I always have one or two on the
go.... half
my street now has rosemary! LOL
Also, if you intend to buy a swing set / fort / climbing frame etc, the
kids' area
needs to be reasonably flat. And one house I saw had a brick path straight
down a
steeply sloping garden and a pair of french doors at the bottom. Just the
job for a 3
year old and a pedal car. Not!
My neighbour, in an act of great wisdom, laid her garden path round her
garden rather
than straight down the middle, because the kids could then run/trike etc
round and
round without running each other over.
Ornate area, grownups seating etc ... close to the house as you will often
just have
the strength left to grab /the chardonnay/a cuppa/ and stagger out
the-)
Lawns: just how much do you want to mow? Will the children be using it
constantly for
ball games, war games etc? (=big lawn) or can they use the field?
(=smaller lawn)
I personally don't find mowing the most fulfilling task in the garden.
In this plan veggies would go up by the fruit trees. Alternatively, you
might want
the veggies by the house and the grownups hideaway at the end of the
garden.
Also, pots of herbs by the back door, where they can find their way into
the
kitchen:-)
Oh and... if the ramshackle fence is not yours.... consider putting a
sturdy one up
on your side of the boundary. Good fences really do make good
neighbours:-)
hth
Liz (who has just been through a similar process:-)
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