|
Welcome to our Cat Forums! | ||||
Welcome to our CatForums! You are seeing this message because you are viewing our cat forums as a guest. You can continue to browse our many cat related areas as a guest but you are more than welcome to register and join our friendly community of Cat Lovers! ... And for free! Doing so will also remove this message and some of the ads, such as the one on the left. Please click here to register. |
|
|||||
|
|||||
I am not sure about paving....I want I have no idea what I want really........I put the paving down. And the slabs with gravel in between and made the beds, I cannot have lawn...for soem reason it is terrible by me...everyones is Useless at the front. I want plants, I think I may get a couple of quotes to replace were the gravel and slabs are including where the path is to be replaced with either new paving (yet to be decided) or block paving or the concrete print thing....pattern put into concrete.... But it is functional and tidy if not pretty...but there again given the time of year is anyone's.....while I was out taking the pictures two of my neighbours (from where not sure but they pass often) stopped and said planning more changes I do love your garden. Always worth coming past. |
|||||
|
|
|||||
|
|||||
I found this quite difficult to do - I wanted to ask loads of questions as I don't really know your likes and dislikes. I think the idea of paving and gravel is ideal in a front garden. I also love containers. Other problem is - I like your garden the way it is!! Anyway here are a few ideas. 1 - Add two arches on the diagonal path. The lightweight black metal ones from B&Q or similar. I'd place them at a third from the gate and a third again. Depending on your taste but I'd plant some of the big flowering clematis to cover them. If you do a bit of research you can have flowers spring to autumn. I'd also plant some annual sweet peas to climb up through them and give you glorious summer scent. 2. Plant up more containers all different sizes/heights and group them together on the area that you have the two square pots at the fence. I wouldn't try and centre them as I think it'd be hard to get it right and would drive me mad. 3. If you don't want lots of pots then try a couple of feature pots. Stack three pots one on top of the other (should be ones that are wider at the top than the bottom) plant trailing plants in the bottom, flowers and foliage interest in the middle and a structured one in the top. 4. Group of three pots with different coloured grasses can be really effective. 5. A spiral ivy is really easy to do. Just plant two coloured ivies in a large pot. Add a wire spiral and train them round as they grow. This can be as tall or wide as suits the area. 6. In the area the cordyline is in I'd consider a sculpture. I love the colour of the slabs you have so I'd try and get some more of the small ones and just pile them up in a random manner. 7. In the perennial border I'd leave it for lots of summer flowers etc. But I'd maybe add a bit of trellis at the back and have some climbers with lots of flowers. 8. If you don't want to keep the perennial border then I'd turn it over to bamboos and grasses and put more gravel as a mulch. I'd also add a sculpture here of different heights of bamboo posts hammered into the ground in a group of 5 or 7. So there you go. That's my ideas. |
|||||
|
|
|||||
|
|||||
Will read and digest thank you will get back to you.....I need to print your ideas then sit in the garden with them..... I am about to have dinner so will be back shortly. |
|||||
|
|
|||||
|
|||||
Great ideas from CM! She's given that a lot of thought. I personally love containers, there are so many interesting shapes and colors available. |
|||||
|