Designing your garden

From eagle-rock.org
Revision as of 07:45, 27 May 2012 by John (talk | contribs)
This is Section 2 of the Gardening Seminar:Start your own garden. Comments or questions are appreciated. You can also write to John Eagles.

250px|thumb|right|caption Create spheres Elements that you can introduce in your garden: paths, ponds, terraces, grading - The smaller the area the more pains must be taken with the grading; but in any plat that is one hundred feet or more square, very considerable undulations may be left in the surface with excellent effect. In lawns of this size, or even half this size, it is rarely advisable to have them perfectly flat and level. They should slope gradually away from the house; and when the lawn is seventy-five feet or more in width, it may be slightly crowning with good effect. A lawn should never be hollow,--that is, lower in the center than at the borders,--and broad lawns that are perfectly flat and level often appear to be hollow. A slope of one foot in twenty or thirty is none too much for a pleasant grade in lawns of some extent. bounding lines - A somewhat irregular line of grade will appear to be most natural, and lend itself best to effective planting. This is specially true in the grade to watercourses, which, as a rule, should be more or less devious or winding; and the adjacent land should, therefore, present various heights and contours. Fields or borders - Garden furniture -

-- Manual of gardening

Section title

Text

Back

Next section

References

External links

  • Sites about garden design

Comments

Coming soon