Contact Chris on Mobile 07989 644883, leave message on 01634 389677, or Email Chris Garnons-Williams
Ivydene Gardens Case Studies:
Introduction
When designing a garden, it is vital to know who and for how long the resulting designed and landscaped garden is going to be maintained by. I have too much garden for too little maintainance time as shown by Case 2. The book 'The One Hour Garden' describes what maintenance work can be done in the time that you have allotted; and therefore what besides a lawn, you can have in your garden. My redesign and construction work to be done on my 3 gardens must be to reduce the maintenance time required to the time I have available. If the gardens are first weeded, pruned, mulched, mown and bare earth converted to lawns using grass seed, then construction can take place in the future - as free time allows during a week or fortnight after the maintenance has been done.
In Case 4, the combination of the Structural and Planting Designs would create a garden that I would be able to maintain in one day a fortnight. I would install a 3" deep mulch in the spring on the beds, so that I can prune the shrubs/trees and hoe the odd weed; whilst the father mows the lawns, the mother tends the vegetable garden and their teenage daughters play football!!
The children in Case 5 loved to look at creepy-crawlies and wildlife, so that together with low-cost the design for different areas in a terrace house garden was created.
Case 3 is building a drive on clay and it is important to get the part you will not see - the foundations - done correctly.
Case 8 is creating a pond with its pitfalls for foundations.
If you are asking someone to maintain your garden, then do provide the complete picture. If as in Case 1, you intend to sell the property, then look at this - as not a maintenance but as a selling job - and get that job done instead.
Case 6 is creating a vegetable garden in a back garden during the maintenance program of one day a fortnight to maintain it and the remainder of the back and front gardens. This was done over 7 years using a crop rotation system
Concrete ponds are likely to crack open due to movement in the ground levels due to being in clay or vibration caused by road traffic if it is fairly close. Case 7 shows no planting shelves for the pond plants.
Site Map Links
Case Studies*
Companion Planting
Garden Construction
Garden Design
Garden Maintenance
Glossary
Home
Library
Offbeat Glossary
Plants
Soil
Tool Shed
Useful Data
Site Map Links of Plant Photographic Galleries
Aquatic
Bamboo
Bedding
Bulb
Climber
Colour Wheel
Conifer
Deciduous Shrub
Deciduous Tree
Evergreen Perennial
Evergreen Shrub
Evergreen Tree
Fern
Grass
Hedging
Herbaceous Perennial
Herb
Odds and Sods
Rhododendron
Rose
Soft Fruit
Top Fruit
Vegetable
Introduction Page Links of Wildlife on Plant Photographic Galleries
Ant
Beetle
Bird
Butterfly
Dragonfly, DamselFly
Earwig, Cockroach
Grasshopper, Cricket
Harvestmen
Minibeasts
More 2-Winged Fly
More 4-Winged Fly
Moth
Pest
Plant Galls
Pond Animal
Soil Animal
True Bug
Two-Winged Fly
Wasp, Bee
Webless Spiders
Web-Making Spiders


Ivydene
Horticultural
Services
As an Organic Gardener, I design, construct and maintain private gardens. I can also advise and teach you in your own garden.
01634 389 677
chris@ivydenegardens.co.uk
Site design and content copyright ©December 2006 Chris Garnons-Williams.
DISCLAIMER: Links to external sites are provided as a courtesy to visitors. Ivydene Horticultural Services are not responsible for the content and/or quality of external web sites linked from this site.