Have You Consider Rock Gardens For Landscaping?

| Thursday, May 26, 2011
By Leon Steven Mieler


Not every single landscape is ideal and having a rock garden can help in many of those areas. You may have an area that is just too shaded and also you can't have plants since there just is not enough sun during the day to help them grow, or you may have an area that has become too dry because you are either going through a drought or rain just won't reach it.

Or, perhaps you have an excessive amount of rain and your land is just too soggy to produce good vegetation and has now become quite swampy. Rock gardens can help in all of these problem areas and most are really low maintenance.

Great planning can help any novice to rock gardens, but often a professional's opinion can be the difference between ordinary and magnificent.

If your land is too rocky, then you can just clear up some of the rock and attempt to arrange what is left in an aesthetically pleasing pattern.

Adding some shallow rooted plants can aid break up a huge, rocky area with some green. Or, if the area is too dense with rock, then you could create a border around the area with an artificial border, for example railroad ties - or use tiny plants to trace around it.

A hilly area in your land will cause your soil to erode. Placing your garden in a strategic location of your land will prevent the erosion and whilst adding a fantastic lawn decoration. Bringing in rocks indigenous to your area will give the illusion that the garden is much more natural.

An area that's just too dry or perhaps has non-fertile soil is yet another appropriate place for a rock garden, and maybe you should even contemplate a Japanese rock garden.

This type of a garden makes use of sand and rocks to put patterns into the ground and if you have an extremely dry climate, this will look intentional despite having a bad spot within your yard.

Shady regions can have a rock garden with plants that thrive in the shade. As an alternative to having plants which are found naturally around rock, you'd take plants that do well in the shade and populate your garden with those. It's an excellent way to expand on the rock garden concept and have a more personalized decoration.




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