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It’s coming up roses at Leicestershire Garden Design and Landscaping Company



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The owners of a county landscaping business are forecasting a big upturn in business following a relocation and planned rebrand.

Brothers Jeff and Barry Randall have been in business together since 2006, running Small Landscapes and Paving.

On March 22, they are renaming the business The Leicestershire Garden Design and Landscaping Company, which they hope will broaden their appeal to potential customers.

Current rates start at around £5,000, although with the rebrand they expect the starting figure to rise to £15,000.

The company raised its profile last year after featuring in an episode of the BBC’s DIY SOS, presented by Nick Knowles, and a Richard Hammond candid camera show called Secret Service.

The business recently moved to new premises in The Warren, East Goscote, where it can show off its gardening services.

Barry said attracting a reputation as “the best dressed landscaping company” around had helped build up work from referrals.

He said: “Business peaked and troughed during the recession, but has grown quickly over the last year.

“We don’t just design gardens but build them and offer life-long maintenance – it’s a seamless transition.

“Last year, we had about 250 jobs and have gone from two of us to having 12 people working for us.

“We’ve also taken on three apprentices and have a team leader that has relocated from Suffolk.

“We started taking people on almost from day one – after deciding how we were going to market the business we started taking subcontractors on, but quickly found the right people and offered them contracts.”

Barry said they turned over £378,000 last year and hope to see that grow significantly in the coming years.

He said: “We’re now building a sample centre in East Goscote so that our clients can see live gardens and the products.

“It’s also inside, which is quite unique. There will be paving samples, miniature gardens, water features and outdoor furniture.

“We took a six-year lease on the property in November and believe we can build the business up to a turnover of £3 million in three years.”

Barry said they had prospered by trying to maintain a happy and busy workforce.

He said: “I’ve been in this business for 20 years and worked with lots of different companies.

“We wanted to create something that was a bit more unique, with a strong team spirit to ensure the staff approach the work as enjoyable.”

Aitkin Master Gardeners offer free gardening classes

The Aitkin County Master Gardeners, from the University of Minnesota Extension Service, will be offering free gardening classes at the Aitkin Public Library this spring.     


This is the third year of free gardening classes, in conjunction with the Friends of the Library. This series is being offered a month later in the winter/spring season, than we have offered in the past as more interest is generated in gardening and in attending garden classes especially as we get closer to spring. It is hard to wrap your mind around the possibility of spring while watching the swirling, blowing, cold snow of winter.

Mark these dates on your calendar and come along and learn while enjoying a cup of coffee from the Friends of the Library. Classes start at 5:30 p.m., lasting an hour with time allowed for discussion afterward.

• Tuesday, April 8 – 5:30 p.m.  – Straw Bale Gardening – Presenter, Janice Hasselius. Learn about the hottest new rage in vegetable gardening; planting your vegetable garden in straw bales. The hardest thing about straw bale gardening is getting the straw. Once it has been conditioned it is a lot  less weeding, a lot less watering, and a lot more veggies. Try something new and fun. Come to learn something new about something old.

• Tuesday, April 15 – 5:30 p.m., Prairie Flowers. Presenter, Jim Ravis. Native Upland Wildflowers: The discussion will cover native upland wildflowers that are hardy in the Aitkin area, the characteristics of each flower and the appropriate soil conditions for them. Information will be provided on which wildflowers might be appropriate for a small prairie or your garden and how to obtain seed and plants.

• Tuesday, April 29 – 5:30 p.m. Composting, Ron Ritter. Learn how to make your own rich compost to apply to your flowers, vegetable gardens and yard. Turn your grass clippings, leaves household vegetable waters, etc. into black gold. Secrets revealed to make great compost.

• Tuesday, May 6 – 5:30 p.m. Pollinator Gardens, Ron Ritter. Pollinators are needed for the successful production of 25 percent of all we eat and drink. We are rapidly  depleting their habitats with our expanding encroachment. Pollinator gardens will cover the usual butterfly and hummingbird gardens, plus other beneficial pollinators – dragonflies, native bees, bumblebees, flies and yes, even wasps, are needed for pollination. Learn how to attract pollinators to your flower, vegetable, fruit trees, grapes, blueberries and other fruit gardens.

• Tuesday, May 13 – 5:30 p.m. Basic Sustainable Landscaping. Presenters, Iona Meyer and Janice Hasselius. Learn about landscapes that are sustainable. We will cover basic design elements and how to implement them cost effectively, visually pleasing, functional and maintainable as well as environmentally sound.

• Tuesday, May 20 – 5:30 p.m. Landscaping and Gardening Plus, Jim Ravis. The discussion will focus on the most important features of your landscape – the ones that please you. A landscaping example will be followed from concept to the resulting examples. The examples will demonstrate how landscaping, even if an out-of-the-ordinary objective is desired, can achieve results that are pleasing to the user. The landscaping and gardens plus example was used because creation of bubble diagrams, concept plans and draft designs, adds more colored, motion and sound to the garden.

Janice Hasselius, originally from Aitkin, has been a University of Minnesota Master Gardener since 2000. She regularly volunteers for writing, teaching classes, and demonstrations on gardening subjects through the University of Minnesota Extension Service.

The Eastern Coyote

Posted: Monday, February 24, 2014 10:51 am
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Updated: 10:51 am, Mon Feb 24, 2014.

The Eastern Coyote

By Bob Beyfuss
For Columbia-Greene Media

thedailymail.net

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0 comments

First of all I want to wish a very Happy Birthday to George Story on Feb. 22. I think he is either 93 or 94 years young and he has inspired at least three generations of gardeners, including me! Story’s nursery in Freehold remains one of the premier garden centers in the region. A visit to their greenhouses on these cold, February days is a sure cure for cabin fever! It is too cold and snowy to think about plants this week, so I will share some information about one of our local wildlife species. Most of this column is taken from a publication prepared by SUNY Syracuse.


There are some people who live in the Catskill/Hudson Valley region who have not seen this somewhat shy, local resident, but once they hear them, they will never forget the sounds. The Eastern Coyote is considerably larger than its southwestern cousin that most of us have seen on TV. The largest individuals are as big as smaller timber wolves. Adults may range from 35-45 pounds and some large males may exceed 50 or 60 pounds in body weight. Eastern coyotes have a German shepherd-like appearance, which sometimes leads to confusion about their identity. A small percent are black or reddish-blond, the latter being the more common deviation. Coyotes can be distinguished from most dogs based on their habit of carrying their tail at or below a horizontal level when traveling. At a distance it is more difficult to tell coyotes from wolves.

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Monday, February 24, 2014 10:51 am.

Updated: 10:51 am.

Some drought gardening tips

John Fleck has written about science for the Journal since 1990. His specialties include nuclear weapons work at Sandia and Los Alamos labs and the federal budgets that drive them, along with New Mexico’s tenuous water situation and the climate issues that underly it. He’s worked as a newsman since before he could drink legally, covering NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory before moving to New Mexico to work at the Journal.

He’s been a fellow and contributing editor at Stanford University’s Bill Lane Center for the American West, where he worked on water issues with the center’s Rural West Initiative. He’s the author of A Tree Rings’ Tale, a University of New Mexico Press book for young people about the science of climate, water and weather.

Email John | Twitter: @jfleck

Helpful Gardening Tips: Keeping Plants from Dying to Thriving – WBBJ

WEST JACKSON — A weekend of warm temperatures have led many to roll up their sleeves and get out in the garden. The cold temperatures are returning, though as we begin that crucial transition between winter and spring.

“With a few days of warm weather, it’s really got us anxious in the garden,” Jason Reeves said, Horticulturalist at the University of Tennessee Agriculture Center. “Daffodils and tulips are beginning to come up. You don’t really have to worry so much about them being cold damaged and cold tolerant. There are a lot of things you can be doing in the garden to get ready for spring,”

This is a tough time for many household gardeners and commercial landscapers as temperatures continue to “roller coaster ride” out of control. Cold temperatures are returning to the region as we begin a drastic temperature swing which includes the chance for snow.

This means more chances for damage to plants that have already taken a beating from the harsh temperatures earlier this winter.

“One thing you don’t want to get over anxious about planting things in the garden just yet. Some of the box stores may get some plants in early. If you put them in the ground to early on those warm days once it gets cold it could be damaged,” Reeves said.

There are some simple steps you can take though to prepare your plants for the cold and spring ahead. Many are cost effective which include cultural practices that can make a huge difference.

“A couple things you can do in the garden to get ready for spring is cutting things back that need to be. Some good examples are evergreen ferns they’ll be putting out new growth soon. Monkey grass is another plant that needs to be cutback before that new growth appears,” says Reeves.

Chemicals can also be used to fend off weeds that will begin to grow as temperatures warm up. This would be a time to apply a pre-emergent herbicide which you could find at your local home center such as a Lowes or Home Depot.

Hopefully these tips will help you and your garden get through the rest of the winter ahead. Relief is on the way! By the end of next week we could see temperatures back near 60 degrees. This will give you that second chance to get out in the garden and cleanup the mess that winter has left behind.

Vectorworks® reseller Design Software Solutions sponsors innovative garden …

Design Software Solutions Ltd
miNiATURE takes place from 5th to 9th March 2014 at the Strand Gallery, a minute away from Trafalgar Square. Ten award-winning, international garden and landscape designers take the opportunity to showcase their designs, taken directly from their 3D design software, to a 3D printer. The 3D printed garden models are produced by Hobs 3D, providers of 3D printing services to the architectural and landscape design profession.

Garden designers need no longer be held back by the budget constraints of creating large, formal show gardens—they can make the most of their investment in 3D modelling software, such as Vectorworks Landmark and showcase their designs with ease. Visitors to the show will gain an understanding of the techniques involved in 3D printing and, of course, get to see the designs!

The designers who have been selected for the show are:

  • Myles Baldwin (Australia)
  • John Brookes (United Kingdom)
  • Jamie Dunstan (United Kingdom)
  • Sarah Eberle (United Kingdom)
  • Jim Fogarty (Australia)
  • Adam Frost (United Kingdom)
  • Jihae Hwang (South Korea)
  • Andy Sturgeon (United Kingdom)
  • Jo Thompson (United Kingdom)
  • Wilson McWilliams (United Kingdom)

Tamsin Slatter, Director of Design Software Solutions says, “We’re delighted to sponsor this innovative event, which gives garden and landscape designers an opportunity to explore cutting edge design concepts through 3D modelling and printing. Vectorworks Landmark is ideally suited to this process, as designers can work in 2D and 3D simultaneously, with intuitive landscape design tools as standard, together with the ability to export to a number of 3D printing-compatible formats. We’ve been thrilled to offer training and modelling support to some of the designers, including Jamie Dunstan Garden Design, and are proud of their continuing achievements as Vectorworks Landmark users.”

About Design Software Solutions

The team at Design Software Solutions improves the workflow and profitably of design firms, through deployment of the cutting-edge Vectorworks® software (from Nemetschek Vectorworks, Inc.), together with specialist training and consultancy. Their deep knowledge of garden, building, landscape and theatre design enables them to support individual firms at every growth stage from startup to nationwide practice.

Their mission is to reduce total cost, streamline workflow and enable working together across teams for every client they work with.

Contact Name:Tamsin Slatter Role:Director Company: Design Software Solutions Ltd Contact Email:click to reveal e-mail Contact Phone:01635 580318 Company Website:http://www.vectorworks-training.co.uk More Details:http://www.vectorworks-training.co.uk/training-for-design-in-the-news/design-software-solutions-sponsors-miniature/

Designing the perfect flower garden

Maybe your great aunt Tillie told you she can’t garden any longer and you should come over and take what you want from her yard. Maybe someone gave you a gift certificate to a local garden center for Christmas and you can’t wait to go flower shopping. Or maybe you just bought the place and want it to look pretty next summer.

Whatever your reason for wanting to spruce up your landscape, some people who are new to gardening are overwhelmed. Others jump right in and put plants here and there without a plan. Still others begin poring over books and magazines, or search other landscapes for ideas.

We have to start somewhere, so grab a pencil and a bit of note paper and jot down these few basic tips that every gardener, both new and experienced, needs to know so they can end up with an exciting and colorful place to escape in their own backyards.

Don’t skimp on width. Garden borders that crawl along the edge of a fenceline, along a sidewalk or beside a side door path are not just there to accommodate one row of marigolds. A guideline when creating a border is never make the width less than one-fourth its length, but never narrower than four feet. Use your judgment here, but keep in mind that wider is better.

Don’t skimp on the size of island gardens either. Whether you want it to be perfect circle, an oval or even kidney-shaped, don’t think small unless your space is extremely limited. The more variety and texture you add to a garden, the more natural it looks.

Shapely gardens are more attractive. Some people like straight lines. There is no rule against making a straight flower border or a square-shaped bed if that’s what you like. But most experienced gardeners avoid straight lines while reciting the mantra, “there are no straight lines in nature.” To make your garden seem as though it belongs in your landscape, I would advise curving those edges. But it’s your design, so it’s entirely up to you.

Think in layers. In any garden design, whether it’s borders or island beds, you want your view to flow from back to front as well as end to end. In borders, it is customary to put the taller plants to the back and the shorter, ground-cover type plants to the front. In islands, the taller plants are in the center with medium and smaller plants working their way to the edges, but feel free to mix it up as long as small plants don’t end up hidden. You may want to think in terms of seasonal blooms as well. Some plants are early bloomers while others open up later. You don’t want to fill the back of the garden with late blooming tall plants, such as black-eyed Susan or Montauk daisies and having nothing blooming earlier. Consider spring blooming dwarf lilac or mid-season coreopsis.

Not all plants have to produce large, colorful flowers. Ornamental grasses are a great way to bring texture into the design, while acting as a frame for those impressive bloomers. Grasses are available in all sizes and shades of green, white and maroon. Some grasses stand tall and erect while others drape and cascade like a living waterfall. Some seem to sparkle when the sun hits them a certain way and they all make a soothing, rustling sound when there is merely a light breeze in the air.

Gardens aren’t just about plants. This is why garden centers also sell bird baths, gazing balls, archways and other forms of artistic-looking structures. Think about what you like; perhaps an ornate fountain or a simple stone with water streaming over the top. Maybe you would like a simple bench where you can sit among the plants. Whatever you like, make the structure the focal point of your garden and place your plants so the view starts there and then drifts over the rest of the garden. The larger the garden, the more focal points you can add.

These are just a few things to remember when working on your own garden design for next season.

Kathleen Evanoff’s column will return on March 3. This column originally ran on Feb. 8, 2010.

Four shortlisted in Paradise Circus landscape contest

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The ‘New Front Yard’ saves water, supports wildlife

Whether you’re in an area that’s been ripe with drought warnings and emergency declarations, or you’ve just seen your utility bill, you know you’ve got to do something to save water.

It’s time to rethink the lawn. But what will replace it in the New Front Yard?

Imagine a fertile greenbelt of colorful native flowers alive with hummingbirds and buzzing with bees. Picture a garden space ripe with home-grown fruit. See substantial water savings – and no more mowing.

Yet many homeowners are reluctant to take out the turf; they know what the grass looks like and aren’t quite sold on alternatives. But in Sacramento, Calif., city officials have voted to ask residents and businesses to slash water use by 20 percent, so many consumers will be pushed into action.

“This situation offers an opportunity here,” said water-efficient landscape expert Cheryl Buckwalter, executive director of EcoLandscape California. “It’s time to actually take action and do what we’ve been talking about. If people really started these things some time ago, we’d be in a much better position today. But if you start now, we’ll be in a better position in the future.”

Landscape irrigation accounts for about 65 percent of household water use in the Sacramento area, according to water agencies. Turf grass ranks among the thirstiest landscaping, needing 2 inches of water a week (or more) during hot summer months.

Even with cutbacks, that water use adds up quickly: A half-inch of irrigation for a typical front lawn uses as much water as about 104 showers, 52 baths or 52 loads of laundry, according to efficiency experts. Faced with rationing, do you want clean kids and clothes or green grass?

“Unless you have horses grazing in front of your house, there’s no reason to grow grass there,” said Sacramento radio host “Farmer Fred” Hoffman.

He saw the water savings firsthand at his own 10-acre property in Herald, Calif. Hoffman removed about 2,600 square feet of Bermuda grass and replaced it with fruit trees, blueberries and native plants. He slashed his water use for that former turf area by 88 percent.

“The sprinklers used 2 gallons a minute,” Hoffman observed shortly after the makeover. “The drip system uses 1 gallon an hour (once a week). It’s a fraction of the water and very low maintenance.”

The blueberries don’t need to be mowed, he noted, and they’re a lot tastier than turf.

Some homeowners assume that the best drought-minded alternative to turf is concrete or other hardscape; it needs no water at all. That worries Buckwalter.

“(Low-water landscapes) are not all cactus and rocks,” she said. “There are beautiful landscapes that are low-water use. People take out softscape and put in impermeable surfaces such as concrete and it can create a heat island effect (making the surrounding area warmer); you no longer have the cooling effect of plants. You need the softscape – the plants and mulch.”

What if you could replace that grass with plants that need no summer irrigation or just a trickle? That was the goal of UC Davis Arboretum horticulture director Ellen Zagory and the arboretum’s staff in compiling a collection of easy-care – and beautiful – low-water candidates for use in residential landscaping.

“We call it ‘The New Front Yard,'” Zagory said of the 41 recommended plants. “These are lawn alternatives, making it look nice but without a lot of resources. We’re creating a new regional model for plants for low-water landscapes.”

Several of these plants also have a major side benefit – they help wildlife. This is the time of year when birds really need our help, Zagory noted.

“Personally, I’m obsessed with our relationship to animals,” she said. “They’re suffering from drought, too.”

Instead of just pulling out the lawn, replace it with native or other low-water plants that can support the local ecosystem, she suggested.

“There is a new paradigm in the garden world, and the model is spreading,” Zagory said.

She cited a statistic from the U.S. Forest Service: “With more than 80 percent of the U.S. population living in urban and urbanizing areas, protecting and restoring wildlife habitat in our cities and suburbs has become a vital component of wildlife conservation.

“For those planning to convert a water-guzzling lawn to a low-water landscape, now is also a great time to take stock and plan changes to also support wildlife.”

Buckwalter agrees. “That’s one thing I’m so excited about with new landscape plans: You’re creating a wholesome habitat, a food source for wildlife.”

The New Front Yard collection relies on California natives that are favorites of birds, bees, butterflies and beneficial insects.

“Adding or converting to California native plants wherever possible strengthens your garden’s draw to native animals,” Zagory said. “Planting design, plant selection and maintenance practices all add up to the difference between a yard rich with living things and one without.

“Many people don’t realize that the winter garden is home to a variety of both resident and migrating bird species,” she added. “Winter blooming plants provide sparkle during dreary winter days but also provide nectar and pollen for resident creatures, like hummingbirds and native bees.”

The old lawn may have been flat, but its replacement can have height, she noted. Consider such native shrubs as currants (Ribes malvaceum, Ribes viburnifolium), manzanitas (Arctostaphylos) and silktassel (Garrya elliptica). In the shade of oaks or other trees, the currants can live with almost no summer irrigation once established.

“Incorporating evergreen shrubs, including conifers, and growing thick hedges provides birds with shelter from inclement weather, places to hide from predators and a place to nest,” Zagory said.

For example, migrating cedar waxwings love toyon (Heteromeles arbutifolia).

“I’ve seen flocks of cedar waxwings devouring the berries,” Zagory said. “I led a tour recently (of an arboretum garden) and saw several toyon bushes wiggling around. I shook a bush and out flew all these waxwings. It was really fun.”

Think like a hungry bird when picking out low-water plants, she suggested. “Incorporating plants for berries and seed production will set the table where birds will dine.”

Don’t forget oaks, she said. “Native oaks provide acorns for jays, but also host a wide variety of insects eaten by birds.”

If weather returns to normal, the New Front Yard will still thrive, but those water savings will continue to add up.

“There are always going to be more people and that puts more pressure on our water supply,” Zagory said. “No matter what happens with the weather, we’ll always be under pressure to save water.”

SAVE WATER NOW AND LATER

Garden designer Cheryl Buckwalter, executive director of EcoLandscape California, teaches river-friendly and water-efficient landscaping and gardening techniques. She urges homeowners to come up with an “action plan” including:

– Take out lawn. It doesn’t have to be the whole lawn, but start reducing turf and convert it to more water-efficient landscaping. Water savings may not be immediate but will add up over time. Remember that any new plants (even drought-tolerant natives) need regular, deep irrigation until established.

– Turn off the automatic sprinklers. “I still see them going, every single day,” Buckwalter said. “It’s not like the middle of summer; in winter you need less water. There’s less evaporation and less heat.” Even traditional landscapes need irrigation only once a week in winter. Before switching on the sprinklers, check the soil. If it’s still moist two or three inches deep, wait a little longer before you water.

– Plant natives. Not all natives are drought-tolerant, but many were meant to grow in your area and adapt well to long periods with little rain. They also attract beneficial insects and support birds and bees.

– Mulch. If you do nothing else, add an insulating layer around trees, shrubs, perennials and bedding plants. Mulch maintains soil moisture levels, keeping roots hydrated and healthy. You’ll use less water, too. Depending on the size of your landscape, an inch or two of mulch potentially will save thousands of gallons a year.

– Convert to drip irrigation. Put water where plants need it most – at the roots. Drip systems also keep runoff to a minimum and can encourage deep root growth – necessary for surviving drought. Where appropriate, convert traditional sprinklers to water-efficient rotary-style sprinklers. Some water districts offer rebates and other incentives for installation of “smart” controllers, moisture sensors, sprinkler retrofits, drip systems and other efficient makeovers.

– Need ideas? Check out a gallery of water-efficient landscapes (and get more tips) at EcoLandscape.org. See more plant suggestions at www.watersavingplants.com. For more tips, visit BeWaterSmart.info.

– Debbie Arrington