Kitchens & Bathrooms Home Interior Home Exterior Yard & Garden All Categories
Find a contractor for swimming pools, hot tubs, deck building, basement remodeling, kitchen remodeling, home improvement, bathroom remodeling, home remodeling, custom home building, home improvement Build :: Connect :: Grow
About Us | Contact Us | Login | Affiliates  
Homeowners

 
 • Services
 • Project Tools
 • Advice & Resources
Message Boards
FAQs
Project Planning Guide
Articles/Libraries
Home Center
Resource Center
Energy Center
Newsletter Archives
 • Design & Product Ideas
 • Bathroom Remodeling
 • Kitchen Remodeling
 • Pool Center
 • Hot Tub and Spa Center
 • Custom Home Building
 • Lighting Center
 • Roofing Center
 • Renewable Energy
 • Window Fashions
 • Loan Center
FAQ

Landscaping and Gardening



I want to landscape my yard. Where do I start?
First, look at your yard, and sit out there for an hour or two and think about what you would like it to be. Look at what is already there and see how you can incorporate the natural aspects. If it's rocky, maybe some large rocks would add a focal point or give the effect of a small Zen garden. If it's sloped, think about terracing it. Regardless, think about what you really want from your yard and what you want to give to your yard. How much time and effort will you realistically provide?

Next, go to the library or a home supply center and look at the wide variety of landscaping books available. Choose some that seem relevant to your needs. If, after all this, you are not satisfied, go to a landscape architect, who can save you a lot of time and anguish. Even if you couldn't come up with the design yourself, you are now better informed and can work with the architect to achieve what you desire.

We would like more privacy for our yard without giving up the view. Is there any solution?
For a low barrier, one idea is to plant dwarf trees, including the fruit-bearing varieties that will give you great spring blossoms and summer fruit. But they will lose their leaves in the winter, reducing the privacy aspect. If you plant such trees, keep them trimmed to the height you want rather than waiting until too late and then just chopping off the tops.

Another solution is a hedge, again trimmed to the height you wish to maintain. There are a great number of hedge varieties out there, so look around. You can also make a great hedge with dwarf lemon trees planted close to each other. There are also numerous flowering hedges.

If you plant taller trees, the view will be obstructed, but by spacing them, you will still retain some view between the trees. At the same time, people looking at your house from a distance will focus on the trees, not the house or property behind the trees.

If you want real privacy, then fast-growing trees will do the job. One good choice is the hybrid Austree, which grows 10 feet or more the first year. Also look at flowering

We live near a busy street. Is there any way to reduce the noise?
The most effective way is a high masonry wall that uses its mass to deflect the sound waves. Thick hedges or solid wooden fences will help only a little. One method that will help a great deal is to install double-pane windows in the house. That will significantly cut outside noise.

I got rid of this ugly old tree and now I have an ugly old stump in the yard. How can I get rid of it?
Cut it as close to ground level as you can, then rent a stump grinder. This machine will chew the stump down as far as your strength holds out. You can also drill several large holes in the stump, then pour in a chemical you can purchase at large home centers. In a couple of months it will make the stump soft enough to readily burn out or chop out.

Water pools in my yard and around the house every winter. How can I get rid of it?
You need to keep standing water away from your house because it will soften the earth and allow your foundation to settle irregularly. Water can also damage your foundation. To keep water out of the yard and away from the house, dig drainage ditches—or better yet, have them dug. If there is a slope on one side of the house that carries water toward your house, put the ditch near the top of the slope. Make it about 4 feet deep and backfill with 6 inches of gravel, then put in a perforated 4-inch diameter drain pipe and cover it with gravel. Slope the ditches so the water will keep running through the pipe. Put ditches around your house in the same manner to keep water away from the foundation.

If extensive ditching is beyond you, dig a hole down 2 feet or so and a couple feet across in the lowest spot and put in a sump pump. Pump the water to the storm drains or a natural drainage system away from the house. You can disguise the sump hole with plants and put the piping underground.

 Email this page to a friend  

Service Professionals Join Membership Today
Partner Sites: Home Improvement at ServiceMagic | Contractor Leads at SMPros | Find Contractors at 1800Contractor
Privacy Policy | Site Map | Terms & Conditions | SM Affiliates | Copyright 1999 - 2007, ServiceMagic, Inc. All Rights Reserved.