Landscaping.What would be the most important feature to add to a small front yard to make it most appealing?
September 27th, 2008 by admin
desta asked:
I have a small front yard with two large oaks. Other than those two trees, everything else is drab, scraggly and/or eroded away. The yard is mostly on a slope and the soil is washing away down to the sidewalk. Other homes in this neighborhood are attractive and well manicured. I purchased this home a few months ago and am now ready to put about $3,000 dollars into professional landscaping. What makes a house attractive and appealing to you?
I live near Fort Worth, Texas. Our summers are very hot and dry. I will be adding an irrigation system, however, we are always rationed on water usage in the summer.
I have a small front yard with two large oaks. Other than those two trees, everything else is drab, scraggly and/or eroded away. The yard is mostly on a slope and the soil is washing away down to the sidewalk. Other homes in this neighborhood are attractive and well manicured. I purchased this home a few months ago and am now ready to put about $3,000 dollars into professional landscaping. What makes a house attractive and appealing to you?
I live near Fort Worth, Texas. Our summers are very hot and dry. I will be adding an irrigation system, however, we are always rationed on water usage in the summer.
- Posted in Garden & Landscape
September 29th, 2008 at 8:58 am
Water features, perennial plants and evergreens.
October 1st, 2008 at 8:27 am
Definitely check out the “Outdoor Decor” section on Shopallstoresonline.com - you can get lots of good ideas there! Good luck.
October 1st, 2008 at 2:42 pm
I would try out a few Crepe Mrytles, along with a small variety of colorful plants, or perhaps shrubs, depending on your preference. Juniper works weel in sloped areas, and maintains a green foliage year round. Not sure of your exact area, but check with your local Lowe’s or Home Depot. They would offer a variety of plants that are suitable in your area. Just be sure once you choose and plant, to take EXTRA care of them in their first year! After that point, they will provide you with appreciation!
October 1st, 2008 at 9:56 pm
top soil, level land, add grass, flowers are nice. shrubs, benches, bricks, your options are only as limited as your ideas
October 4th, 2008 at 6:49 am
i would try the eroded area with fast flowering vines….something green that flowers in shade…..i like the natural look….seems that so many landscapers now a days will make your yard look like the entrance to a strip mall……ps, you dessribed my yard..
October 6th, 2008 at 8:26 pm
Where are you lolocated is the first question to answer. Assuming that you are living along the upper west coastal areas like Seattle and Vancouver:
Buy yourself some shrubs and plants that can withstand both acidic soil and dry weather conditions. I recommend acidic soil loving plant life because the rain leaches the soil here; furthermore, because you’re on a sloping area, the rain may not penetrate as much as a flat yard.
Get yourself some bark mulch and shrubs that do well in acidic dry soil like Junipers, Hydrangeas, Heathers, Evergreen Trees, Cedar type shrubs and trees, roses, etc…
October 7th, 2008 at 9:58 pm
regardless of where you live i would suggest you plant shrubs, vines, small trees, and of course plant some flowering plants which you think are attractive to you and to your neighbors
October 10th, 2008 at 12:37 am
Area sloped down towards sidewalk.To help what dirt you have from washing away put flower beds along sidewalk on your side.I use those lawn timbers for mine.Get a load of sod and lay thay down.It wont wash away as if you put dirt and seed.Thats a waste of money on sloped land.Put flowers not needing alot of water,cacti family. Dont annuals they dont come back another waste of money.Get dacor grasses and butterfly bushes,thats for the monarch comeing thru.Ask at garden center wahts best.
October 12th, 2008 at 7:45 pm
I would add a hammock between the two oak trees, purchase a barbque, and pocket the rest for steaks.
October 14th, 2008 at 5:13 am
First of all a good rule of thumb is that landscaping will cost (to do it right and professionally) 20% of the cost of your home. This includes an irrigation system. Speaking of which you’d do well to have your shrub beds on a different zone than your lawn! Depending on what you refurbish first, you’ll be using more water at different times of the year in the two different areas.
As for landscape materials, consider a retaining wall border to both hold the soil and level out your shrub area. This will also prevent further erosion and add some interesting texture to your “streetscape.” A small yard does better with a mass planting of the same material. If your lawn is divided, consider balance on either side of your front door. If one side has a larger window, consider one specimen plant or tree. Also, never stop at the exact corners of your home. Rather, wrap around the corner to both soften the sharp edge of the house and add the illusion that your home and lot are larger than they are.
October 16th, 2008 at 4:39 pm
It sounds to me you are going to take pride in your yard.
A good stand of grass, once started will be the key, make sure you keep it up, fertilizer, weed killers, etc. The oak trees are the problem, hard to start normal grass in shade, make sure you purchase the type of seed meant for shade.
Make sure you have good down spouts.
A nice small fountain, would set you apart from the neighbors.
October 19th, 2008 at 4:23 am
You could put in some retaining walls, but this can be very expensive. Most important thing would be to stop the soil erosion.
Increase the value by making the garden look like a cool place to relax on a hot day (this is always inviting in a hot climate).
Draw up bed areas, and use shrubs, preferably in two or three layers. Shrubs are hardier in drought (deeper roots). Put high shrubs at the back, medium in the middle and low or ground covering ones at the front.
Use dense plantings, nothing looks more ‘cheap and nasty’ than an odd plant and then soil or gravel. Also use different leaf sizes, shapes and shades of green or variegation.
If you don’t want to go to the trouble of building retaining walls definitely use the junipers as a ground cover they are neat evergreen and drought tolerant when established.
If you want a neat expensive look use different levels of hedging or use a well shaped pruned plant mixed amoung the plantings. Don’t go overboard on lots of colours unless you decide on a cottage garden look, this can look very old fashioned. Go for just a few colours if you want a sophisticated look eg white, pink and blue. An all white flowering can look very nice particularly if your garden is very shaded by the oaks.
Hope this helps, a lot depends on personal taste. Why not go around your neighbourhood and take notes on what you like about different gardens. When you sit down and look at your notes later you will probably find a pattern and you can then implement this in you own garden.
October 22nd, 2008 at 9:46 am
I would look into different types of ornamental grasses. They have them from a few inches tall to six or more feet tall. Most of them don’t call for a lot of water. They come in colors like reds, purples, greens, yellows and even black. With oaks, you should have quite a bit of shade under them. That is where you should plant your flowers. Try planting whatever is indigenous to your area. It will take a lot less watering.
October 25th, 2008 at 9:17 am
One important thing is to not damamge the root system of the oaks.
If the oaks are important to you, get an arborist to help you plan the project.