10 Do-It-Yourself Landscaping Tips

10 Do-It-Yourself Landscaping Tips

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    Year-Round Interest

    King's Gold (image) has golden foliage. It is a taller version of Gold Mops.
     

    Here’s a can’t-miss tip for beautifying your yard: make sure you’re providing something of interest in each of the four seasons. Do-it-yourself landscaping for four-season interest begins with a well-researched plant-selection plan. The goal is to have flowering trees and/or shrubs throughout spring and summer, fall foliage in autumn, and good structure in winter. This article describes how to achieve that goal.

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    Layer Your Flower Beds

    High Angle View Of Multi Colored Flower Bed In Back Yard
     

    Layer your flower borders in three rows: a back row (facing north, preferably) with the tallest plants, a middle row with the next tallest, and a front row composed of your shortest plants. Use repetition, both in the planting bed and elsewhere in your yard, to provide unity.

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    Creating Continuity

    Wood spurge (Euphorbia amygdaloides var. robbiae, syn. E. robbiae) with November frost
     

    Many DIY landscaping tips focus on deciduous trees and shrubs but don’t forget evergreens and other plants prized as much or more for their foliage as for their flowers. The deciduous specimens ​provide more color and variety, while the evergreens will provide continuity.

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    Annuals Supplement Perennial Color

    Mixed cornflowers (Centaurea cyanus)
     

    Perennial flowers are wonderful for your planting beds, but they bloom for only so long. You may have perennials blooming in your bed in May, then nothing until July. Incorporating annuals into a do-it-yourself landscaping plan will “plug the gaps,” giving you continuous color in the yard. Try using picture galleries to find ideas for your ​color schemes in landscape design.

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    Incorporate Hardscape

    Exterior of modern house
     

    Don’t restrict your do-it-yourself landscaping to plants. Include hardscape features, too. Like evergreens, they provide structure in winter and much more than that. Walls and ​fences make an essential design statement, as they frame your property. When you drive around the countryside, you might notice how much more “finished” the properties with fences look. Decks and arbors are other important hardscape features. Patios and decks provide transitions from indoors to outdoors.

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    Install Water Features: It’s Easier Than You Think

    Water fountain
     

    Good landscape designs are anchored by focal points. One of the hottest trends is to use water features as focal points. This is one trend with “sound” reasoning behind it: water features are not only visually appealing but emit soothing sounds. Using pre-formed rigid plastic liners, durable pumps, flexible tubing, and cheap fountains, they’re also a lot easier to install than you think. Once you’ve experimented with ponds, you may even decide to advance to the next level: simple waterfalls.

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    Using Form and Texture

    Curved Footpath In Formal Garden
     

    Flowers are great but don’t forget the characteristics of a plant’s branching pattern and foliage. In landscape design, varying form and texture is one way to spice up a yard with diversity. Evergreen conifers, while lacking flowers altogether, nonetheless have foliage that offers a myriad of different forms and textures. While browsing these do-it-yourself landscaping tips, you’ll discover many ways to enhance the beauty of your yard.

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    Make Your Life Easier With a Low-Maintenance Yard

    Professional Landscaping
     

    You can follow all the above do-it-yourself landscaping tips and still not be happy with your yard. For, besides giving your yard a pleasing appearance, you must also be sensible in planning for its maintenance. Beautiful or not, you’ll resent your yard if it causes you too much work. Unless you don’t mind spending hours each weekend on upkeep, plan your design for low maintenance.

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    Use Drought-Resistant Plants

    Close-Up Of Cactus Growing In Back Yard
     

    Many novices at do-it-yourself landscaping start with high hopes in spring, only to have them dashed in summer. Why? Because the summer heat wilts all of that promising spring perkiness out of their plants! The answer? Select drought-tolerant plants to grow, instead.

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    Types of Flowers

    Garden path
     

    Carefully matching the types of flowers you’ll be growing with the space where they’ll be growing is a fundamental policy to follow in do-it-yourself landscaping. Light and soil requirements should always be considered before deciding which types of flowers to buy for your yard.

10 Landscaping Secrets

Smart landscaping can add interest to your lawn and boost your curb appeal. But you don’t need to break the bank to make a big impression. Use these professional tips to add color, texture, functionality, and points of interest to your landscape.

1Plan for Year-Round Appeal

Plan for Year-Round Appeal

Evergreen shrubs retain their leaves or needles all year long, so they’re constantly providing cover and color. “This gives you some interest even in the winter,” Evergreen plants advantageously placed near the house, such as in front of corners, can help soften the vertical lines of the house, giving it a more inviting appearance.

“For 12 months out of the year, you soften those vertical lines,” Cording says. “With evergreen material, you’re always going to have curb appeal.”

2Connect Points of Interest With a Walkway

Connect Points of Interest With a Walkway

Instead of trampling down the lawn, resulting in a makeshift path of dead grass between your patio, fire pit, and garden, create an attractive walkway using concrete stepping stones, natural flagstone, decorative brick, or crushed stone. “It’s all about connecting elements in your landscaping to pull those elements together,” .
Trenary advises constructing a pathway, walkway, or any other landscaping feature from material that’s the same or similar to what’s used on the exterior of the house, such as a brick or stone, because it will tie the path aesthetically to the home. Or use the material to provide a striking edging along the walkway.
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3Break up a Monotonous Yard With a Big Rock

Break up a Monotonous Yard With a Big Rock

A simple way to make a statement with your lawn is to plunk down a giant rock or two. We’re talking about the kind of rocks that are too big to fit in your truck bed. “Having a certain type of boulder in the landscape will break up the monotony with a different material,”

4Bring a Corner to Life with a Berm

Bring a Corner to Life with a Berm

One way to add pizzazz to the landscape is to build a berm, a mound that you can cover with a rock or flower garden. Berms add color and texture to an otherwise flat, plain lawn with colored stone, flowers, or foliage. They can also add height by being built as a mound. You can place them anywhere, although they’re especially effective in corners of the lawn.

“I find that the corners are often unused areas of the landscape,” . “A berm can let you arrange flowers in the lawn on an unused space.

5Make a Water Feature Look Natural

Make a Water Feature Look Natural

A water feature, even a small, self-contained unit that stands alone on a patio, should look like it belongs in its surroundings, Trenary notes. “You can use natural stone to build it up,” he adds. “You can use the same stone or material that you find on the house.”

However, Trenary advises not to use too many materials or the effort may backfire. “A good rule is to use no more than three elements in one area, or the area can get too busy and work the opposite way for you.”

6Add an Outdoor Seating Area

Add an Outdoor Seating Area

Installing a patio near the edge of your lawn, away from the house, provides an outdoor escape. Concrete will do, or you can use stones or pavers. Building it near trees or tall flowers gives the area some privacy, while chairs or benches let you sit or lie down to read or nap.

“You want to keep it 6 to 8 feet from your property line,” . “You can maximize it because it is usable space. You can leave the house and have flowers around you on a patio.”

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7Combine a Variety of Plants

Combine a Variety of Plants

Cording encourages homeowners to choose a diverse range of plants that bloom at different times so ornamental leaves will be visible all season long. Otherwise, if all the flowers bloom at the same time, they’ll look attractive during that time frame but will lack color the rest of the year. Cording, for example, likes to use the perennial Rozanne geranium because it blooms from June through October.

8Give the Landscape a Rustic Look

Give the Landscape a Rustic Look

Local lawn and garden centers typically sell old-fashioned wagon wheels, split-rail wood fencing, and other materials that deliver a rustic appearance. “Depending on the look you want, you can get it in different elements,” .”You can creatively incorporate these elements into the landscape to achieve the look you want.”

9Create Curved Lines Instead of Straight Ones

Create Serpentine Lines Instead of Straight Ones

Landscapers often add edging around flower gardens, the house foundation, and sometimes sidewalks and driveways. Installing the edging in creative curves instead of perfectly straight lines adds appeal and character. “I really enjoy creating those long, serpentine edges,” . “You really just improved the edge of the [garden] bed.”

The edging is permanent, so it enhances the landscape all year long. “The edging is there 12 months out of the year, so it is always adding a subtle, very attractive feature,” Cording notes. “This is an easy way to go from boring to beautiful.”

10Illuminate Focal Points and Walkways

Illuminate Focal Points and Walkways

Attractive landscaping deserves to be seen after hours, which is where landscape lights come into play. The lights play many roles, from adding to the home’s attractiveness to illuminating steps and sidewalks for safety to showcasing points of interest in the landscape. Placing lights alongside paths and walkways is one of their most common uses, although that doesn’t mean they have to be set in straight lines at prescribed intervals. “Don’t feel like you have to follow the straight lines,” . “You can place them on alternate sides of a sidewalk to break up a line.”