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August 19, 2009

Landscape Water Feature Design Tips

Here at Enhancescape, we’re big fans of landscape water features. We’ve worked with clients all over the country to install everything from fountains, to waterfalls and ponds and have seen how they can transform a hum-drum landscape into an oasis.

Dallas water feature, Atlanta water feature

Dallas Water Feature, Waterfall

There are so many different ways to use water to enhance your landscape, with options for every landscaping style and budget:

  • In a more formal setting, fountains can be added to create drama and elegance as a focal point for your landscape. Fountains are closed systems that recirculate water with an electric pump, so they can be used anywhere, including places such as Dallas or Atlanta, where there are seasonal watering restrictions. Manufactured fountains are available in a range of styles (including rising jets and downward falls) and materials (masonry, rock, slate, and marble are but a few) and costs vary widely.
  • Waterfalls make a beautiful addition to a terraced backyard or as part of your pool setting or a garden wall. When designing a waterfall, be sure to consider property slopes and architecture, connecting ponds or pools, and water flow. A common mistake is to build a tall waterfall – while dramatic, large waterfalls may seem out of place among your existing landscape, whereas smaller designs give you the sounds and visual pleasure you want while providing better balance and harmony with your existing landscape design. Manufactured landscape waterfalls can be specifically designed to fit your property in just about any material
  • Ponds do a great job of attracting wildlife and injecting a note of tranquility into your garden, but must be located in well-drained areas that get at least six hours of sunlight daily (to ensure that aquatic plants thrive). And remember, aquatic plants should cover at least half of your pond’s surface in order to control the buildup of algae. A good variety to begin with includes Water Lillies, Duckweed, and Anacharis.

Water features can be constructed using either natural or architectural materials. Natural stone will blend beautifully into the surrounding landscape, while materials such as concrete block or pavestone can be used to ensure that your water feature is seamlessly integrated with your patio.

Regardless of how you design your water feature, it will bring sound and movement to your landscape, adding new dimensions to your plants, trees and lawn and creating a tranquil environment in which to relax and enjoy the outdoors.

August 8, 2009

Gardening in August

Filed under: Landscaping/Outdoor, Services — Tags: , , , — Kathleen @ 1:09 pm
atlanta_retaining_wall, dallas_retaining_wall_landscape

Retaining wall, Atlanta retaining wall

Throughout most of the country, the month of August is one of the hottest times of the year. Whether you live in the dry heat of Dallas or the humid Atlanta suburbs, August is generally a time for relaxing and enjoying the last lazy days of summer.

In the garden, August seems to fall in the lull between the explosive growth of Spring and early Summer, and the cleanup and Winter prep that occurs in the Fall. As such, many homeowners look at the month of August as an opportunity to take a break from yard work and gardening. But while the list of gardening tasks for August is indeed shorter than in many other months, there are still ongoing tasks to perform in the garden:

  • Water: Vegetable gardens, most flowering plants, and the lawn all need about one inch of water every week to keep them green and looking nice. Be sure to water thoroughly and deeply. When possible, water in the morning or early afternoon so the soil has a chance to warm up before the cooler evening hours set in. Deep watering will induce the plant’s roots to grow deeper, where they are less likely to dry out, thereby anchoring the plant into the ground better.
  • Deadhead: Pick off the old dead flowers on your annuals, as well as the spent flowers on perennial plants. A little time spent on grooming the plants will make a big difference in the overall appearance of your landscape. By removing spent flowers, plants will not go into the seed producing stage and should continue to flower longer into the season.
  • Prune: Summer blooming shrubs should be pruned for shape after they have finished flowering. Remove any dead or diseased branches.
  • Weed: Weeds in the garden are harmful because they rob your plants of water and nutrients, harbor insects and diseases, and, on occasion grow tall enough to shade your flowers and plants. Weed control is important in August, because with warmer weather and increased watering, weed seeds will germinate and grow faster, and mature to the point of producing more seeds. Keep the weeds pulled, before they have a chance to flower and go to seed again. Otherwise, you will be fighting newly germinated weed seed for the next several years.

A little preventive work in the month of August will save you lots of time and hard work later this Fall and into next year. And you’ll have a beautiful, well-tended landscape to gaze upon as you lounge in your hammock or dine al fresco on your patio!

August 6, 2009

Plant Shade Trees to Lower Your Energy Bills

Dallas pavestone, drainage

Dallas pavestone, Dallas covered decks

Did you know that just three trees properly placed around a house can save up to 30% of home energy use? This is according to the U.S. Forest Service Center for Urban Forest Research, which carried out computer simulations of annual cooling savings. They found that a typical energy efficient home in the Southwest spends about $250 each year for air conditioning. Shade from two 25-foot tall trees on the west and one on the east would save this same household $57 a year, or 23%.

In addition to saving you money, shade trees can also add to the beauty of your landscape. Just look at how they compliment this home (above) in the Dallas-Fort Worth area!

Some things to consider when planting trees:

  • Deciduous trees: Deciduous trees (ones that lose their leaves) should be planted on the east and west sides of your house. They will keep your house cool in the summer and let the sun warm your home in the winter, reducing energy use, and lowering summer air conditioning costs by up to 35% according to the U.S. Department of Energy. Be sure to check out the latest Arbor Day Foundation Hardiness Zone Map to see what deciduous trees will best grow in your area.
  • Evergreen trees: If you live in a cooler climate, after the leaves fall in autumn, the sun pours through tree branches to warm your home in winter. The sun travels lower on the southern horizon in winter, so you’ll want to avoid planting evergreen trees on the south side of your home where they’ll block winter sunshine. Instead, plant an evergreen conifer windbreak on the north and northwest of your home to block cold winter winds. Planting a row of conifer trees on the north and northwest sides of your property creates a wall against cold winter winds—saving your heating costs by up to 30%.
  • Planting locations: Trees or shrubs planted to shade air conditioners help cool a building more efficiently, using less electricity. A unit operating in the shade uses as much as 10% less electricity than the same one operating in the sun. And trees that shade patios, sidewalks, and driveways can cool the concrete or the entire yard.

The economic benefits of tree planting will vary from location to location depending upon climate and other factors. To get a better idea of how much you can save by planting a tree in your yard, check out the Tree Benefit Calculator from The Davey Tree Institute and Casey Trees.

August 3, 2009

Landscaping Around Your Water Feature

Water feature, waterfall, Dallas, Atlanta

Dallas Water Feature

More and more homeowners are choosing to add water features to their landscapes. Water gardens can add interest to an otherwise unremarkable yard, form an appealing border for a patio or deck, or provide soothing sounds to drown out the noise of a surrounding neighborhood or nearby street. Just look at how the pond and waterfall we installed for a Dallas-Fort Worth area homeowner adds to the appeal of this backyard!

Water gardens are fairly simple structures. Most begin with a pond of some sort, and ponds are built by digging a hold in the ground, laying down a liner, and placing rocks or other hardscape around the edge. But no pond is complete without plants, both in the water and in the area surrounding the pond.

Adding plants to the water itself is the key to avoiding algae problems. It’s important to cover at least 60 percent of the water’s surface with plants such as water lilies, water hyacinths and oxygenating plants, which actually filter the water to help keep it clean.

In addition to placing plants in the water, you should add plants in the area immediately surrounding your pond to mask the pond liner and soften the look of the rocks or hardscaping that forms the border.

Which plants should you choose?

  • If you want to create a Japanese feel, try dwarf conifers (such as Alberta Spruce) with minimum color or alpine plants.
  • To add height, you can use conifers, crimson fountain grass (Pennisetum rubrum) and Siberian iris (a bog-loving plant).
  • Other good plants to use around ponds, especially those with a lot of rock, include some of the sedums and hen-and-chicks. They add a variety of color. Some are tight and low growing, while others are more leggy. They do great in full sun and help soften the rocks by growing right around them.

When all of the plants are in place, the next step is to add mulch to help prevent the soil from eroding away. It protects the plants and provides a finished look for your water feature, but also helps retain moisture and keeps the weeds away. Be sure to water all of your plants regularly to get them up and growing.

July 20, 2009

Incorporating Stone into Your Landscape in the Dallas-Fort Worth Area

dallas firepits, patio covers

Dallas Firepits, patio covers

The Dallas-Fort Worth area’s humid, subtropical climate means that you can enjoy your yard year-round. Why not expand your outdoor living space and get more out of your time outdoors through the incorporation of stone in your landscaping? Take a look at the work we did for one Dallas-Fort Worth area homeowner. The new stone patio, fireplace, retaining wall, and water feature make the backyard feel like an extension of the home and create a new, outdoor room for entertaining or family meals!

Stone can be used in many functional and decorative ways to enhance patios, pathways, and garden borders, and to construct outdoor structures such as water features, fireplaces, outdoor kitchens, columns, gazebos, and raised planting beds. Why is stone so popular? Because it is attractive, versatile, and available almost anywhere.

Some of the key things to consider when selecting stone are:

  • Material: Both natural stone and pavestone products can be used in landscaping. The choice of stone depends to a large extent upon the look and feel you are trying to achieve with your landscape. Natural stone can be used to create a custom look, or a more natural and rugged feel, whereas pavestone results in a more uniform and structured look.
  • Color: Stones with dark colors may not be the best choice in shaded or dark areas but, instead, brightly colored ones that can brighten the area would be appropriate.
  • Shape: Stones that will be used in steps should be flat with a coarse surface so they will be easy to walk on but not slippery when wet. Stones that will be placed in sitting and dining areas should also be level and not pointy so that tables and chairs will not tilt.

Many people spend hundreds of hours a year making their personal space comfortable and attractive. What sets every home, yard or garden apart is the individual ideas of the homeowner. With an almost endless range of sizes, shapes and colors available, there is a stone to fit every taste and budget.

July 9, 2009

Building Shade Into Your Dallas-Area Landscape

You’d be surprised how many people forget to incorporate shade into the design of their landscape when first getting started, especially when doing the work themselves. A professional landscape designer would not make that mistake. In the Dallas-Fort Worth area’s hot climate, unless you want to spend hours admiring your landscape from your home’s air conditioned interior, some form of enveloping shade is a necessity to truly enjoy it.

dallas arbors, dallas patios, dallas firepit

Dallas Patios

There are a number of ways to build shade into your landscape. Three of our favorites include:

  • Trees: Most people tend to plant ornamental trees and shrubs first for their beautiful blossoms and/or foliage. But a good shade tree – or several – is more important and should be one of the cornerstones of your landscape design. Located appropriately (i.e. the southwest corner of the dwelling), trees can not only impart shade, they can also be used to reduce temperatures inside the home – and that can make a big difference to your utility bill.
  • Pergolas: In addition to trees, there are other, man-made options that will create shade as well as enhance the overall look of your garden. Pergolas are a very popular solution for those who want some relief from the sun, but not necessarily total shade. Because pergolas provide shade while allowing some sunlight to come through, they help define an outdoor space without constraining it. Pergolas can be add-ons to your existing architecture at entryways or over decks, or they can be designed to emulate a room. Take a look at the pergola we put in over a Dallas-area patio. Not only does it create a shady spot for the homeowner to enjoy, it creates an outdoor dining room right in the backyard!
  • Arbors: Arbors are open frameworks designed to offer shady resting places in a garden or yard. Arbors are often made of rustic work or latticework which serves as a trellis on which climbers may grow or on which creepers may be trained. Because they are free-standing structures, arbors can be placed anywhere in your yard to highlight your landscape, create a nook for sitting or dining, or offer support for a prized climbing vine.

However you choose to create shade in your landscape, it will be well worth the time, money and effort spent the very first time you sit in your cool, shady, comfortable outdoor space.

July 5, 2009

Using Rocks and Boulders in Your Landscape

Have you ever considered landscaping with rocks? Not only can rocks add texture to your garden, but they are also very attractive and don’t cost a lot. The beauty of using rocks is that you don’t necessarily have to spend a lot on materials, as you might already find you have a wide variety of rocks on your land to begin with. If not, you can always use natural stone from a garden supply center or landscaping contractor.

dallas water feature, dallas covered decks

Dallas Water Feature

There are a variety of projects you can do with rocks and boulders. These include:

  • Building a rock wall to define your property border;
  • Creating a border around trees;
  • Laying a rock pathway;
  • Adding interest to a pond or water feature (like we did for a Dallas-area homeowner, above); and
  • Accenting your existing landscape with rocks here and there.

Accent rocks boulders can add a lot interest, impact, and character to your landscape. They can even add a second or third level to your landscape without actually having to create an elevated area. However, accent boulders need to be made a “part” of the landscape. Try burying the bottom of the rock four to six inches in the ground and see the difference it makes. Simply dig out a little under where the boulder is to be set and place your ground cover around it. This will give a more natural look as it would appear in nature. It also leaves a little to the imagination. There’s no telling how big the rock actually is or if it was really there to begin with!

July 1, 2009

Using Concrete for Your Patio Project

If you are interested in adding a patio to your home but haven’t found the right materials to fit your budget, consider using concrete for your patio project. Concrete designs are one of the hot new trends for patios, floors, entryways, countertops, pool decks and more. Concrete is no longer plain, grey and boring – new, decorative concrete products are available in a wide range of colors, textures, and finishes to suit any taste or budget.

Concrete patios, sometimes referred to as cement patios, provide the perfect sanctuary for outdoor living spaces because they are often connected to the house and blend the interior with the exterior living areas. For example, homeowners can match the stone facade of their house by installing decorative concrete to create a stone patio without the expense of installing traditional individual stones.

One reason that an increasing number of homeowners are choosing concrete for their patio designs is that it can be stained a variety of colors to match your decore. Stained concrete combines the best of both worlds: beauty and functionality. Concrete staining imparts a luxurious richness that can’t be achieved by any other coloring medium while leaving behind permanent, flake-proof color. Just look at the gorgeous color and finish on this patio we installed for a Dallas-Fort Worth area homeowner!

dallas patios, covered decks

Dallas patio and covered decks

Here at Enhancescape, we also do a lot of work with stamped concrete – a system of adding colors, patterns and textures to a plain concrete slab at the time of pouring. The concrete is poured, colored and then imprinted with a stamp to create the appearance of natural stone. Many different textures are available that simulate slate, granite, brick, cobblestone, or even custom designs and imprinted in concrete. Borders can be created for plain, matching or contrasting patterns. This technique can also be applied to stairs and ramps. This decorative concrete process creates a finished stamped concrete surface with an attractive, three-dimensional, two-toned appearance.

The advancements in concrete tools, concrete stains and dyes, textures, and patterns have made decorative concrete the most versatile, durable and cost-effective material on the market.

June 10, 2009

Five Great Low Cost Landscaping Improvements

In the current economic climate, people are increasingly looking at low budget options when it comes to home improvement and landscaping. Believe it or not, there are plenty of landscaping projects you can do that will have a big impact on a small budget.

When it comes to maintaining a landscape, the four factors that incur continual costs are trimming, mulching, weeding, and watering. By minimizing these, you will not only reduce the amount of maintenance (and work!) needed to maintain your garden – you will also save money!

dallas pavestone, dallas patio covers

Dallas Arbors, Fencing

 

Listed below are some landscape design tips that will help reduce the cost of maintaining your landscaped garden:

  • Replace mulch with gravel: Using gravel in place of mulch can help reduce weeds and also aids in soil retention. And unlike mulch, gravel seldom needs replacement.
  • Choose plants wisely: Avoid insect- and disease-prone plants (such as Azaleas), as well as plants that need continual pruning (such as dwarf yaupons and boxwood).
  • Develop various points of focus in your garden: Consider the use of things other than plants to serve as points of focus. Adding pathways to your landscape design can be a great way to allow access to various parts within the space, and can be quite pleasing to the eye.
  • Invest in landscape lighting: Lighting can help you showcase the most beautiful parts of your landscape, while masking those that are less desirable. Good lighting also provides security, and is a great economical way to increase your home’s value.
  • Add a water feature: Outdoor fountains are appealing to the eye and a great way to de-stress, and not all water fountains are expensive.

Not all landscaping projects require big budgets, and sometimes small changes can make a big difference in the look of your yard as well as your enjoyment of your outdoor space. Check out the beautiful pathways we installed around a Dallas-Fort Worth area home!

With some careful planning and wise investing, you can improve the look of your landscape without breaking the bank.

June 4, 2009

Five Ways that Landscape Lighting Can Improve Your Home

dallas landscape lighting, dallas patios

Dallas Patios and Landscape Lighting

Landscape lighting is a great way of enhancing the look of your home and yard after dark, making your yard more pleasant to relax in at night, and an attractive place for evening entertaining. If you’ve put the effort into making your yard attractive, landscape lighting will ensure that your hard work doesn’t go to waste once the sun goes down.

Homeowners install landscape lighting for a variety of reasons. Lighting can be used to illuminate steps and pathways for added safety, to highlight specific architectural details of your home, or to create a particular mood (from subdued or relaxed, to dramatic or formal) in your yard.

If you are thinking of installing landscape lighting as part of your overall landscape design, here are five ways you can use lighting to beautify your home and improve your landscape:

  • Pathway lights blaze a clear, bright walking path through your landscape while ensuring the safety of residents and visitors alike in the evening hours.
  • Patio lighting invites cheerful gatherings by adding practical light without sacrificing the evening atmosphere.
  • Uplighting carefully placed behind foundation shrubbery illuminates not only the shrubbery and your home’s façade, but also provides pathway lighting to increase safety and present a more welcoming appearance for evening visitors.
  • Poolside lighting yields a soft effect for your pool area, enabling safe evening use of the pool and unobtrusive visibility from the house. Take a look at the work we did for one Dallas-Fort Worth area homeowner – the new landscape lighting adds warm atmosphere to the pool area and enhances the safety of the deck and pool at night.
  • Recessed outdoor lights can be used to direct the eye to the movement of water in a fountain, waterfall, or other water feature.

Think of outdoor lighting as jewelry. Landscape lights can really make a home pop at night, but getting your lighting plan right can be tough.

A good landscape lighting contractor will approach each home as a blank canvas, considering the architectural details, landscape highlights and open spaces before crafting a lighting design that draws attention to the best aspects of all of these things. The results should leave your home’s outdoor areas more beautiful at night, safer for your family and more inviting for lingering and lounging outdoors into the evening and through the night.

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