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Garden Design
You are so right. Our gardens have taken over 20 years to come to a position
whereby we can open to the public on Charity Fund raising days. Mike "sacha" wrote in message ... On 2013-08-24 09:44:33 +0000, Charlie Pridham said: "Derek" wrote in message ... After many years with a small garden I now have a very large blank canvas to keep me occupied. At the moment, its featureless. Can anyone suggest a good book on Garden Design. Leave the books on the shelves, unless you are planning to enter it for competitions, its your garden, make it how you think it looks good, its common sense to organize things so you can get about. People would think a lot less of designed gardens if they were allowed to see them over a 12 month period instead of a few days at a show. I now get irritated to the point I just can not watch garden programs at all, I have lost track of the number of truly daft designs I have seen of late, uncuttable grass, beautiful mirror ponds and shiny surfaces (for the gardens that never have leaves fall, dust or rain) Gardens that only would look good in June, wonderful cloud pruned hedges with no means of getting at them to cut them, this list is endless. I am sure yours will be lovely and betters still you will have enjoyed doing it Charlie, it's definitely time you and Liz came over! I cannot count the times I've heard Ray look at garden 'designs' and make these comments. Plants so close together that he knows that particular type will get mildew plants looking fabulous for two weeks then - bang, over and not a bloom in sight. Mirrors in the garden to make it look bigger - delightful - covered in bird poop, mildew and slime - great idea! So to Derek, I suppose the answer is, choose the plants you like in the shape you want and take it slowly. Above all, take it slowly. 'Instant' gardens really do not happen in real life! -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon |
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