My Home - Planning The Last Phase of the Garden

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This is progressing to be the year of the garden. I've allowed it's high time it was finished. We've been chipping away at the hard landscaping for three summers now and what with one pulling (hell, we bought and renovated a cottage in the meantime), and another (the house needed decorating too, damn it!) it's miserroneous longer than anticipated. But my patience is now wearing thin. Another winter with the dog traipsing in mud every time he spends a penny, has convinced me to bring in the professionals. But inhabit the control freak that I am, I can't slice the design up to anyone else. I may not be a garden buyer but I know from bitter experience that if you don't sweat the dinky stuff you won't be happy with the results. So for the past few days I've been teaching myself garden develop with a nifty online tool.

Wanna See?

Before I allege the master plan, I'd better explain where we're at. For reasons of peril we've started at both ends, leaving the middle exquisite much untouched. And that's the bit that we now need to tackle. I'm too ashamed to even show you a photograph of our sorry looking lawn. I did show some of it last summer when I community 'my garden style', but I have to confess, that lawn was a tad retouched. Correction. It was heavily retouched.

My garden last summer

Phase 1

Phase one was what we now call the dining deck. It's slack the garage and originally we were going to obtain a large kennel there for the dog. That was by we met our dog and found out that he ain't no kennel dog! So now it's where we have the barbecue, table and two benches. It's very sunny and quite soldier so it works pretty well when there's no more than four land and we're not experiencing a heatwave. When there's a crowd the detesdespicable has to move to the centre of the garden, as above. Same when it's a heatwave because there's not the room for a big enough parasol on the deck and it would be so discontinuance to the barbecue it might actually catch fire.

The 'Dining Deck' as seen from 'The Pergola'

Phase 2

Phase two was the interpretation of the pergola, which actually took two summers as we blocked to renovate the cottage. We desperately needed some dismal in the garden which previously had none. Have you ever tried to get eight land under a normal sized parasol? The garden was just lawn, evade, and a tiny bit of paving when we accompanied in, so a fairly large structure was needed not just for dismal, but for something other than fence to look at.

The newly used pergola in 2016

Phase 3

Phase three I snuck in at the end of last summer and alive to enlarging the patio immediately outside the house. The builders had left us with a postage-stamp-sized patio that wasn't big enough for anything. The outside tap which is on the outside wall of the house was over a petite patch of turf and as you can imagine that turned to mud very hastily. And the patio chairs took up the remainder of the status. I need room for pots! With no flower beds we desperately obliged some green growing things.

The bigger report showing what's existing and what's needed.

Phase 4

Well, phase four hasn't happened yet. Yet.  And I don't necessarily jabber tackling a garden in this way. In fact I don't. We're now left with a lot of compromises. We don't want to undo anything that's already been done so we just have to work with the status that's left.

Wishlist

1) Raised beds for plants. Green things just don't do that well in containers and the soil we have is poor to non-existent. I'm looking at a lot of very sorry looking specimens out of the window and I know that it could look so much better. I imagined that the pergola would be rampant with climbers by now but it's just not the case. I know the existing ones will look better by the height of the summer but I want them to look good all year erroneous. The BF even bought a grapevine which was probably our biggest concern to date. I also like the look of raised beds if I'm honest.

2) An artificial lawn. Fellow dog owners will know that dogs and lawns do not go together, but I can't imagine having a garden that consists only of hard paving. I need to see green even if it's not real. Getting it to look good is one of our next challenges.

3) Some more paving to bring all these elements together. And here's the crux. Our garden is not big enough for lots of sinuous curves and hidden surprises. So it's going to be a more formal garden. Luckily I rather like symmetry. But there's a garage door to powerful so it's not going to be 100% symmetrical unfortunately.

I level-headed have to make decisions about what kind of raised beds? How high? What will the lawn be edged with? Actually I'm thinking red brick for that – like the house and garage. How much is it going to cost to fill those beds with stunning plants? What happens (eeek) when the professionals question all my decisions? My measurements? My expectations?

This is the bit that maintains attention in isolation.

So now I'm bracing myself for the raised eyebrows when I show this to a garden landscaper. And then I'll show him the cardboard templates for the raised beds. They powerful get a few laughs. And it may get tweaked a few times afore the final plan but I'm pretty happy with it.

You Might Also Like to Go Back and See

THE NEW GARDEN DINING DECK

MY VERY OWN PERFECT PERGOLA – REVEAL

TURNING A NEW-BUILD GARDEN PLOT INTO A WELCOMING OASIS


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