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Posts with tag trees

Avant Yard: 20 front yard Don'ts

Stock Exchange image of two garden gnomes on a swing surrounded by lawnYour front yard doesn't have to be perfectly manicured or professionally landscaped to look good. It is, however, your public face -- of sorts. Plus, your neighbors are forced to look at whatever you put out there!

Be a good neighbor: banish the following items from your front yard.

1. Plastic foliage. I'm talking anything you got from a craft store. Like this, for example. Plastic ivy. Faux dried sunflowers. Silk chrysanthemums. Plastic wreaths. Fake autumn leaves strung into streamers. Shudder.

Plastic flowers are tacky in the garden. They're unnecessary. After all, you have Mother Nature at your disposal! Why choose fake flowers? Finally, they evoke the cemetery. Enough said.

Avant Yard: 75 tricks to get your kids outdoors

Two-year-old girl wearing floral halter-neck dress crouches in a garden to examine plants
Summer vacation keeps rolling along. How long until your kids go back to school? Are they spending too much time lounging on the couch? Here are a bunch of summer projects to trick your kids away from their air-conditioned sanctuary and out into the great outdoors of, er, your backyard.

Okay, okay. So the backyard is not the great outdoors. True. But the main thing is to get the kiddos out in the fresh air, learning about nature, and learning about the noble pursuit of maintaining a garden.

Getting their hands dirty
1. Ask them to help with the weeding. Pay them a small amount of pocket money for their time.

Continue reading Avant Yard: 75 tricks to get your kids outdoors

Avant Yard: Your lawn, simplified

Closeup photo of St. Augustine grass blades in early summer, by Diane Rixon
Mowers, edgers, leaf-blowers. Sod, plug, aerate, de-thatch. Irrigate, seed, fertilize, weed.

Phew! Makes my head spin just thinking about the stuff you're supposed to do to maintain a lawn, at least according to certain yard-care experts. If you follow the recommendations of lawn-care service companies, you can spend hundreds of dollars each year on your lawn. Many people do exactly that, just because they think it's necessary for a nice lawn.

Well, guess what? It's not necessary. Okay, if you must have a picture perfect lawn that's smooth, flat and green year-round like a golf course... well, that's going to require some work. However, if you're like me and just want some nice, healthy grass, then the trick is to work... less. Yes, less!

In fact, everything you really need to know can be simplified down into three tips: 1. Mow less. 2. Lay off the chemicals and 3. Opt for low-maintenance landscaping. Need more detail? Read on!

Continue reading Avant Yard: Your lawn, simplified

Design your garden virtually

Virtual gardenI have a huge perennial garden in my backyard. Being somewhat persnickety, I have a grid diagram of my garden showing where each plant is and when its flowers are due to bloom. But this year I'm going to have to make some major changes.

Several of my plants have grown to enormous proportions so they need to be split and relocated. Others just aren't performing well, so I need to put out feelers and see if any family or friends are interested in them. Because so much work needs to be done anyway, I've decided this is a perfect year for a garden redesign.

BBC Lifestyle has a virtual garden design tool -- an easy way to envision how your garden may look. The tool is simple to use. You'll enter the dimensions of your garden and select the plants. The selection of plants is somewhat limited, so you may have to choose some that are roughly comparable to what you really want. Next is the fun part -- the tool will render a 3D image of your virtual garden. Enjoy!

Inspire Valentine's Day passion with willows and roses

Inspire passion in your beloved gardener! Give him/her a living plant this Valentine's Day. When planted and tended with care, it's a gift that keeps on giving, beautifying the landscape for years to come. Here are two Valentine's Day-appropriate suggestions: the willow tree and the rose bush.

The Willow tree: an unexpected Valentine's Day surprise
For a dramatic gesture, how about a willow tree? Willows were traditionally associated with fertility and reproduction. The ancient Greeks, for example, believed willows increased a woman's chances of becoming pregnant and would lay branches from those trees in the beds of infertile women. (Sounds really uncomfortable!) Some Native American tribes also associated willow trees with fertility, laying willow branches in the beds of newly married couples. (Ditto!) Read more here about the willow tree's symbolic value.

Continue reading Inspire Valentine's Day passion with willows and roses

Broke Homeowners sing the DIY blues

Just yesterday I was moaning and groaning over HGTV's 2008 Dream Home. Yes, I was singing a song of envy that goes something like this (and you can let your dog howl along with me): Why, oh why, does my house need so much stuff done to it? Why, oh why, do these beautiful dream homes have to be out there taunting me? Etc. etc. Today, however, I discovered a site that shows I'm in good company: Broke Homeowners.

Who are Broke Homeowners? Well, seems they are a couple somewhere out there with a house they've been working on a lot. Hence that "broke" feeling. Check out pics of their indoor and outdoor renovations, including putting in a stone patio, landscaping with trees, renovating the basement, and building a folding staircase for attic access. The Broke Homeowners are selling gear with their logo on it, too. (T-shirts say "Broke Homeowners. You're not alone. We understand.) They even have a blog. Er, a blog that hasn't been updated for quite a while. C'mon guys! I need moral support!

Tree felling: read up first and avoid DIY devastation


I witnessed firsthand how a tree felling can go awry. The tree in question belonged to my neighbor, and her friend accidentally felled it right into my yard! What a mess. The tree crashed into the branches of a favorite oak tree of mine and broke a few planks out of the fence. I'd stop short of calling the botched felling a disaster because, thankfully, no one was hurt. That, in itself, was incredibly lucky since the guy wielding the chainsaw showed no awareness of basic safety precautions: he had no safety gloves, no safety boots and no helmet. In addition, someone's little girl frolicked all around the yard the entire time, blissfully unaware of the danger. I could go on but, well, you get the picture. My strongly-worded advice to them was: next time, hire an expert!

Think you're up to the task of felling a tree yourself? It takes a bit of forward planning to make sure you avoid the type of scenario I've just described. Start with a look at safety guidelines courtesy of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, aka OSHA. Using a chainsaw? Click here to read some good general use and safety tips for chainsaws. One top resource is ExpertVillage's Tools Needed to Fell a Tree. This feature is a bit of a goldmine for the DIY-tree-feller. It boasts 15 short videos of the host demonstrating proper tools and techniques for tree felling in safety. Each video is accompanied by a helpful written transcript so you can check back and make sure you're on track.

All-in-all, there's a ton of helpful info available on the Web. Having said that, tree felling is one DIY job you should pass over to the experts if you're at all unsure you can do the job safely. Trust me: your neighbors will love you for it!

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