ArticlesReader.com

 

ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::Home & Garden

Plan for Winter Plantings

Author : Dean Novosat

Part four in a series

It’s hard to think about winter when our gardens are in full bloom and the vegetables are ripening on the vine! But we must keep winter in mind when we are planning our landscape. Afterall, we have to look at our landscape all year long, including winter. (Unless, of course, you are fortunate enough to be able to move to warmer climates in the winter or live in a climate that is tropical all year long!) But for most of us, we have to contend with four seasons and the life cycle of our landscape.

So when you are planning your landscape, keep in mind this life cycle of the plants you choose to add to your landscape design. Some plants, like flowering trees and shrubs look their best in Spring, others reach their full beauty in Summer, others still attain stunning and vibrant color in the Autumn, and yet, some evergreens look beautiful in the Winter, offset by a striking snow-covered landscape.

Add plants to your landscape that offer a variety of looks in different seasons. Don’t plan your landscape with plants that all reach their peak of beauty at the same time. For example, a bed of perennials will provide a rainbow of color all summer long, but in the fall and winter, you will have to contend with a big empty space in your landscape. The same holds true for evergreens. While evergreens look beautiful in the winter-white of the colder months, they don’t offer much in the summer.

So, try to choose plants for your landscape that have different focal points for different parts of the year. Look for plants that may keep red or orange berries through the winter months, or that keep a beautiful bud head through the winter for a variety of shapes. You can also postpone dead-heading some of your flowering plants until the end of winter so you have some visual interest all winter long.

Just don’t be afraid to experiment. Remember, this is your landscape. Use your creativity! And if something you’ve tried doesn’t work, try something else! You can always move a planting somewhere else and try something new.





About The Author


Dean Novosat is an avid gardener and landscaper. He has transformed many boring yards into beautiful landscapes. He has several websites including http://www.the-garden-doctor.com" target=new>http://www.the-garden-doctor.com and http://www.dr-landscape.com" target=new>http://www.dr-landscape.com.

Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. How To Save Your Fruit Tree Blossoms From A Spring Freeze.
  2. Planting Roses - Tips And Ideas To Ensure Beautiful Results
  3. Helpful Ideas For Designing A Flower Garden
  4. Fertilizing Your Flowers And The Importance Of Choosing The Right Flower Food
  5. Choosing The Perfect Flowers For Summer
  6. The Best Flowers For Spring
  7. The Great History Of Roses
  8. How to choose your garden furniture and make it last
  9. Garden Leaf Blower Maintenance
  10. Garden Composting Tips- The Art of Composting
  11. Types Of Lawn Mower Batteries
  12. Mulching Benefits / Organic And Inorganic Mulch Types
  13. Soil Basics - Creating Fertile, Healthy Soil
  14. Everyone Needs A Spaghetti Garden
  15. Fall Planting
  16. Soil PH And Its Effect On Your Garden
  17. Caring For Christmas Trees
  18. It's Time To Select Your Snow Blower
  19. How to make your landscape look good.
  20. Introduction to bonsai tree growing: an overview
  21. How to Grow Wildflowers
  22. Make Your Fresh Cut Roses Last Longer!
  23. Bonsai Soil And Additives
  24. Tips For Buying Lawn Tractors
  25. Gifts for the Gardener
More related feeds
Human Flower Project
Trees out of leaf feature more, the plan of the beds, the work in progress, the plantings that fit this season, the areas that once had purpose and now survive on the margins, the beds that aren’t working. The gardeners have more time ...

Winter is the perfect time to play your vegetable garden - The Sun ...
Create a simple garden plan listing vegetable varieties, planting dates and other pertinent information. You can plant a few vegetables now. Planting early can be a little risky. Severe winter weather may kill or stunt some vegetables. ...

Granholm pressured to stop new coal plants - Jelantah.Com
The law, however, also is based on a 2007 energy plan that estimated at least one new baseload plant capable of running 24 hours a day — likely coal-fired — would be needed no later than 2015. Critics say the estimate is outdated, ...

Hoe and Shovel: Come Rest Your Winter-Weary Eyes
Would you like to rest your winter-weary eyes and have a look around at some of the plants enjoying our Florida, zone 10 winter? My mind was racing today with plans for new beds and how to get them planted out on a budget. ...

Save Money From Landscaping
But as many trees, shrubs, plants and mulch as you can in season, when the prices are lower. In many places if you wait until October, you can make maintenance purchases and still have extra time to winter proof your landscape. ...

New York City Garden: Its Winter, Let's Act Like It
You are divided on new propositions and plans, but you are unanimous in rejecting and denouncing the old policy of the fathers. Some of you are for reviving the foreign slave trade; some for a Congressional Slave-Code for the ...

For Whom the Bell Tolls - The Home Garden: Gardening in the Home ...
Designing the Winter Garden: An Asymmetrical Plan · Designing the Winter Garden: A Symmetrical Plan · Designing the Winter Garden: Starting Small · Designing the Winter Garden: Aspectual Musings ...

Daily Herald | Now's the time to plan for successful growing season
Check plants that host Eastern tent caterpillars over winter: crab apple, apple, hawthorn, mountain ash, flowering cherry and other members of the rose family. If necessary, make plans to prune out any dark, iridescent egg cases ...

Handbook of Nature Study: Discover Nature in Winter-Read First ...
Winter is upon us but we are still making a point to go outside and observe what we can. The birdfeeders are the center of our nature study and Aaron has identified two new birds this week. 7:19 sunrise 4:47 sunset ...

My winter of solitude begins « A Mark On My Wall
I suppose I’m the only one of you who thinks the occasional marital hiatus is a good plan. Sometimes in the past, I’ve admitted to this kind of idea, thinking everybody must feel the same and then, much to my embarrassment, ...