HomeWise.ie
Ireland's Home & Garden Search Engine
   


Seller Signup...

Quality Service, Seller or Tradesperson? Sign Up Now!




Home & Garden Articles


Making the Most of Your Garden Service

Tue 17 Feb 2009 - 15:45

Making the Most of Your Garden Service
By [http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Frances_Van_Den_Berg]Frances Van Den Berg

A garden service is invaluable to the 21st century couple. Once you've worked a five- day week, cooked, gone shopping, cleaned, taken care of the kids and tried to squeeze in time with your friends, there is very little time left over for gardening. However, spending time outside planting roses can be time well spent and will help you to get away from it all and relax. If you spend your time weeding, sawing off branches and mowing you overgrown lawn, you'll find your time spent in the garden more of a chore than anything else. The trick is to get a reasonably priced garden service to do the heavy-duty work and lay the foundations for you to add your personal touch.

Get in a garden service at least once every two weeks to keep the lawn short, bushes trimmed and the weeds at bay. If you are able to afford a service more often, that's even better, because you can enlist help in replanting, building a trellis for your creepers and sweeping up autumn leaves. If your lawn needs frequent watering, investing in a sprinkler and only put it on when it's cooler, as this will be more time-effective than asking the garden service to do it for you. The important thing to remember is to keep the good stuff to yourself. Once you don't have to worry about the time-consuming jobs like mowing the lawn, you can concentrate on planting flowers and ferns, creating a vegetable patch and even building your own water feature if you like.

When you decide on what tree to plant, you must remember it will be with you as long as you are living in that house, and it's going to grow a lot more than your children. Before planting just any old tree that may become a nuisance in later years, decide what you want from the tree. If you want something that flowers, something like a cherry blossom will work well. For shade, in a large garden, oaks, camphor trees and stink woods work well.

For fragrance, bushes such as jasmine work well, and for style, planting a bush that you can trim into topiary is always a winner. If you love your time in the kitchen almost as much as in your garden, a lemon tree always works. A herb and vegetable garden never fails to be useful to cooks either. Keep these close to your kitchen, and if you don't have a lot of land, plant your mint and basil in large terracotta pots that you keep just outside the kitchen door.

Planting too many different coloured flowers in one space will look messy and overdone. Rather choose a theme of two or three colours and stick to it throughout your garden. For example if you choose cream and a buttery yellow, stick to cream and yellow roses, daisies and may flowers, then your garden will look far neater and more together. Just remember to deadhead all your flowering bushes. Deadheading doesn't take long, and keeps your garden tidy.

A water feature or statue goes a long way in creating a focal point and tying the garden together. If you have a garden service taking care of the big things, you can even consider installing an outdoor fish pond that will take time maintaining. Your garden is your own blank canvass; enjoy being creative with it.

Frances wrote this article for the online marketers Assist 247 [http://www.assist247.co.za]business directory services a one-stop online business directory of South African Business Listings.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Frances_Van_Den_Berg http://EzineArticles.com/?Making-the-Most-of-Your-Garden-Service&id=1977021


Looking for information on Outdoors, Find a supplier at HomeWise.ie

back to Outdoors articles
back to all home & garden articles