Landscaping For Dummies. Lance Walheim

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elements while at this address. Live in and love your landscape. You take care of it, and it will take care of you. As the great poet William Blake once remarked, wisely, “Kiss the joy as it flies.”

      Unity is what keeps all those separate parts of your landscape tied together, so that the eyes and feet of visitors flow from one part of the yard to another. To achieve unity in your landscape, do the following:

       Clearly define pathways. Pathways are a first step (no pun intended!) to unifying your landscape. Chapter 7 gives more details how you can add paths and walkways to your design.

       Link greenery. A couple of shade trees and a flowering shrub stuck here and there in your lawn don’t create a unified landscape design. Plant a bed of pachysandra, lirope, or other groundcover or even lay down a thick layer of wood chips at the feet of these to visually link them together, continue the same groundcover along the fence and around the corner to the patio, stick in a couple more of the same sort of flowering shrub at the corner, and presto! Unity.

       Have a style. Be clear about what you want the garden to say about you. Consider the following:If your tastes run to formal precision, for instance, you probably want clipped hedges, classic statuary, brick or stone pathways, and symmetrical plantings that provide calming mirror images.A cottage garden jumble of exuberant flowers with a rustic fence, bent-twig benches, and a concrete frog along the path tells visitors that you’re more of a free-spirit type.A combination of the two styles looks disjointed and has a disquieting effect on your landscape. But having unity in your landscape doesn’t mean that you can’t have your formal rose garden and your wildflower meadow — just don’t put them side-by-side. Separated by a hedge, on opposite sides of the house, or linked by a transition zone that gradually makes the shift from control to wilder, your gardens can be as fickle as your little heart desires. Look at the color insert for a way to add unity to your yard.

      Repetition of hardscape materials — including brick, wood, stone, concrete, wood chips, and fencing — is a simple way to make your garden look like it’s all one piece, even if the areas are distinctly different. The following can make your landscaping design cohesive:

       Select your hardscape materials to match your garden style and repeat them throughout the landscape. Manmade materials — basically, anything other than plants — carry great weight in the landscape, because they draw viewers’ eyes like a magnet.For example, you can use a single section of diagonal, framed lattice to support a climbing rose along the wall of your house; an L-shaped couple of sections to shield the compost pile from view; or three or four linked sections to serve as a privacy screen along the patio. Depending on how large your yard is, you can repeat the lattice theme in variation by installing solid, vertical-board privacy fence topped by a narrow strip of lattice. (Want a rustic look? Substitute bent-wood or plain lumber. Want a more formal look? Use cast iron and similar-looking materials. You get the idea … .)

       Stick in the same plants here and there. (Think, “Here a shrub, there a shrub.”) Repeat backbone plants that perform well most of the year, like evergreens (see Chapter 11), groundcovers (refer to Chapter 16), and shrubs (check out Chapter 12), to tie your garden areas to each other.

       Repeat shapes to pull things together. Consider curved outlines of beds, undulating paths, shapely urns, and mounds of plants. At the other end of the spectrum, try no-nonsense point A to point B paths, yardstick-straight bed edges, spiky plant forms, clipped hedges, and vertical board fences.

       Use colors again and again. By repeating colors throughout the landscape, you make it look like it’s all one piece — the unity thing again. For example, put in clumps of yellow flowers here and there in various beds, pots, or plantings across your back yard, and you’ll find your eye travels from one patch of yellow to the next in a seamless, satisfying way. But if the most eye-catching plant in one bed is red, the next one yellow, the next one white, your poor eyes get confused.Combine colors of plants with colors of your house or hardscape, too, for unity’s sake. For instance, paint a lattice cobalt blue and match it with big folk-art blue-and-yellow flower pots, and you can use that two-tone color scheme to run through the garden.

      Warning Don’t overdo or become overzealous with repetition, however. A little goes a long way!

      Color in your home landscape, just like color indoors, creates moods and impressions. Because your canvas is a living canvas, you can experiment, make discoveries, change your mind, tweak and tinker, and … honestly … have fun. Refer to the color insert to spark your imagination on how you can use color in your design.

      Tip Hot colors — bright pink, yellow, orange, and orange-red — jump out at you, making distances seem shorter. Cool colors — blues, purples, deep reds, and pastels — recede, making spaces seem longer. If you want to make a small yard seem bigger, plant hot colors at the entryway and cool colors across the garden at the far end where they’ll look like a misty watercolor painting.

      To make wide-open spaces seem smaller, plant bright, hot colors across the way, where they’ll seem to jump forward. Just be sure to choose colors in the same palette. You can use vivid orange and golden yellow dahlias at a gate, for instance, and then soften the hue into apricot and pale lemon yellow as the plantings recede.

      This principle also applies to nonplant items, of course. We discuss garden decor and accessories in the section “Adding Décor to Your Design: How Many Pink Flamingos Are Enough?” later in this chapter, but we want to mention that if you want something like a compost pile, tool closet, or storage shed to recede from attention, choose or paint it a darker color.

      Here’s a garden-color overview with a few brief notes on combinations to jump-start some ideas for you:

       Purple: Majestic and dramatic, purple has a lot of power. What you may not realize is that it can play the role of garden peacemaker; it has the ability to marry colors that otherwise don’t get along. However, purple can get lost in shade, unless you pair it with a light-color companion.

       Blue: In any hue, blue looks great with its opposite, orange. It also mixes well with yellow and pink. Blue brings a cooling, calming influence to garden displays.

       Yellow: Radiant yellow is wonderful for brightening dim areas, and it’s always so cheerful in the sunshine, on its own, or mixed with other bright colors. Don’t overlook pale creamy yellow, which is lovely and calming among pastels.

       Orange: Often fiery and fun, orange also gains sophistication in the company of purple. Combining it with lime green brings out the yellow values in both hues. Orange and white together is also refreshing. Paler versions of orange are beautiful with silver-leaved plants.

       Red:

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