Re: Where to start with a new shade garden


A friend of mine recommended taking B&W photos of your garden as a great way
to examine the structure of it. (I tried this but the lighting was bad so
they weren't helpful.)

Does anyone use Sierra Complete LandDesigner when designing a garden?  If
so, what do you think of it?

Diann

-----Original Message-----
From: PRIMROSES [s*@MAELSTROM.STJOHNS.EDU]On Behalf Of
George Africa
Sent: Tuesday, March 13, 2001 7:26 PM
To: shadegardens@MAELSTROM.STJOHNS.EDU
Subject: [SG] Where to start with a new shade garden


Gardeners often take pictures of their gardens after they are "finished". I
take a bunch of pictures with a digital camera before I start doing
anything. The pictures allow me to see things more effectively and they
don't cost anything but time. Then I use surveyors tape to mark what I think
I might remove and take some more pictures. The old "measure twice, cut
once" rule is one I follow when constructing shade gardens.

When you take lots of pictures I think you can do a much better job.  Last
fall I took a number of pictures of what will be an extension of a garden
I'm building in an old barn foundation. Currently hostas, heucheras,
tiarellas, ferns, hellebores, ..a work in progress. As I looked at many
pictures I noticed something I didn't even see when taking the shots--a
coyote camouflaged in poplar saplings looking right at me. No survey tape
for that one-- removed itself .

This method works well for me.

Best wishes to all gardeners!

George Africa
Marshfield Vermont
Zone 4,  30 degrees and flurries..and yes, snow still up to the windows!



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