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MDA Design creates London’s most economic garden studio

Created for an artist and photographer living in East London, the 12 square metre garden studio has been designed by Mike Dye from MDA Design. The cuboid-shaped studio’s entire surface has been left uncoated, prompting the name ‘Raw.’

Made of a new innovative waterproof MDF material, the studio’s exterior is clad in the FSC-approved Medite Tricoya 18mm MDF available with a 50-year guarantee. The material has been used to create an experimental design that hints at the workshop-style, investigative nature of the work that the space will be used for.

The robust, pared-down structure has simple detailing throughout with all screws remaining uncovered. To reduce project costs and ease construction, the windows are attached directly to the shell of the building resulting in a building without window frames.

A light-filled space is created through large expanses of transparent, highly-insulated polycarbonate material. These elements were also economical, with the project being constructed under £4,000 and within one week.

The studio is the first stage in a series of research projects initiated to test the potential of the waterproof material, with plans for MDA to create small studio spaces suitable for tropical climates.

At Home: Designers Garden Tour 2013


Around solstice each year, the Association of Northwest Landscape Designers (ANLD) organizes a garden tour to showcase some of their members’ best designs of the past year. For 2013, there are seven gardens, all on Portland’s west side. As always, the tour is self-guided (you receive a map and directions upon registering) and you toodle from one garden to another, admiring the layout, materials and plants and gathering ideas of your own to take home.

These tours also provide a superb opportunity to talk with the designers and homeowners about the gardens, plant choices and conditions, as well as hardscape materials and art work. Learn about the decision-making process designers go through and the solutions they adopt for problems both common and unusual. Poke around the ANLD website a bit for answers to such common questions as why hire a landscape designer and to access a list of ANLD member designers.

This year’s gardens range from modern to naturalistic, with a nod to Mediterranean and tropical plant aesthetics. Low-maintenance gardens are increasingly popular, and there are also some creative outdoor entertaining spaces. Needless to say, there are edible gardens and gardens that integrate chickens. This is Portland, after all!

If you’re considering hiring a designer for your own garden, seek out some of the designers and homeowners and talk with them about how the process works.

WHAT: 9th Annual Designers Garden Tour
WHEN: Saturday June 22, 2013 from 10 am to 4 pm
WHERE: A self-guided tour of seven of Portland’s west side gardens
COST:  $20 per person for seven gardens. Purchase tickets. Proceeds from the sale of the tickets help fund scholarships for landscape design students at PCC and CCC.

Designers featured this year:

Vern Nelson, The Hungry Gardener; Laura Crockett, Garden Diva Designs; Lori Scott, Lori Scott Landscape Design; John Gawlista and Izzy Baptista, Lapiz Lazuli Tile and Garden Design; Debbie Brooks, Creative Garden Spaces; Adriana Berry, Plant Passion Design; and Alyse Lansing, Joy Creek Nursery.

Clermont wants to hear more ideas on how to make city a destination

Perhaps you have an idea that’s been banging around in the ol’ cranium for what Clermont ought to do to make itself attractive to visitors.

Tonight would be the time to fish it out of there and bring it to City Council members during a forum set for 6:30 to 9 p.m. at the Family Christian Center, 2500 S. U.S. Highway 27.

The meeting is the second in which the city is asking residents what they’d like to see Clermont become. The first meeting, on May 21, resulted in an idea for a zip line from the Citrus Tower to Waterfront Park. About 400 people attended, and the city is hoping for another big turnout.

Whatever is suggested, city officials should keep in mind that no single attraction is magically going to turn Clermont into the hottest destination in Central Florida. What makes a city a place where people want to spend time is a cohesive theme and a collection of fun choices — along with an attitude of pride. And in the end, perhaps the latter is the most important. It’s just not something that can be bought.

Meanwhile, here are a few suggestions from Clermont folks who have been doing a little thinking about what would make the city a better place to live:

A zip line would be fun and unique for Lake County. However, as founder of the Moonlight Players, I feel money spent on the arts would bring more balance to the community.

The Moonlight Players will be 20 years old next summer. We have existed without any help from the city, unlike theater groups in Eustis, Mount Dora and Leesburg.

Our “theater kids” learn communication techniques, creativity and problem-solving. Many have gone on to Chicago, Los Angeles and New York as performers, and some have even performed on Broadway.

More important, we have had these same kids stay in Lake County as community leaders, teachers and respected parents and taxpayers. The arts are the heart of any community, and the theater nurtures all the arts.

We must keep the arts alive in South Lake County.

Jan Sheldon

What Clermont needs to do is strike a balance between quality-of-life issues and economic development.

The balance has been out of whack, with economic development being about 90 percent of the focus. For example, the arts, youth activities and senior activities all require an investment in facilities.

Also, Clermont’s needs are tied to regional needs such as a light rail system connected to Orlando’s attractions, stadiums and airport, along with a system of public transportation locally.

We’ve got to stop the mind set that more roads are the lone answer to traffic congestion.

Clermont cannot fund every activity in south Lake. It needs a partnership with the county and other cities to help finance new facilities and run them. Probably a majority of people using facilities in Clermont are not city residents. Still, Clermont is in a good position financially because it did not overreach during the boom as other cities did.

Gimmicks like a zip line are visible projects that would attract attention, but they add nothing to the quality of life for residents. A zip line would be economic development.

Whatever is done, we’ve got to protect the natural beauty of the area, which is a huge part of the quality of life.

Marvin Jacobson

Clermont should develop water sports at the downtown lake. It would be great to go there to rent kayaks, paddle boards and other fun things, and it would be a natural fit. (A little concession would be nice to buy water, soda and snacks, too.)

Aso, why doesn’t Clermont landscape State Road 50 and U.S. Highway 27? Clermont can’t expect to attract people if the place looks run down.

Cities can have landscaping, but the state Department of Transportation requires that they participate in the maintenance. That could be a clue as to why it hasn’t been done. Clermont hasn’t wanted to participate in anything that requires the city to spend money, even if it would increase the number of visitors to the area who would be spending money.

Linda Cousins

Lritchie@tribune.com. Lauren invites you to send her a friend request on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/laurenonlake.

Calif. Station Landscaping Is Fire Prevention Model

June 17–RANCHO CUCAMONGA — Residents who live in the northern portion of the city now can get ideas for fire-safe landscaping at Hellman fire station.

The Rancho Cucamonga Fire District recently introduced the Wildland-Urban Interface Fire Safety Education Project at the station. Landscaping at the station is meant to demonstrate best practices for homes in the high-fire-hazard foothill areas above the 210 Freeway.

Landscaping at the station, including stones, mulch, and low-lying native plants, when placed around a home can create defensible space to keep flames away from homes.

“This will help homeowners better defend themselves and help us to defend them should a fire burn through the area like it did in 2003 during the Grand Prix fire,” Fire Chief Mike Bell said.

In addition, the Fire District recently announced a new warning program and RC Fire Watch. When a red-flag warning is issued to warn of high wildfire risk, the district will hang red flags at its stations.

The department also plans to deploy red-shirted RC Fire Watch volunteers on red-flag days and the Fourth of July to have “eyes and ears” out in the field as an early warning system for fire. Volunteers would also contact people entering mountain areas and make sure they’re prepared to go into canyon, mountain and wildland areas.

In a separate project, the fire department is working with Eagle Scout Jacob Fakhoury to identify fire-safe plants in the high-risk zones in

the foothills.

“I will be putting the signs near the identified plants just to help the community so we can help prevent fires as much as we can from destroying the community,” Fakhoury said.

Residents can get fire-safety tips and check whether their home falls in the Wildland-Urban Interface Area at rcfire.org.

Mary Peat, who lives in northwest Rancho Cucamonga, said a visit to the fire station has given her ideas on how to landscape her own backyard.

“I have a back section like this that I wanted to develop, and the landscape architect was able to answer some questions for me,” Peat said.

Peat had to evacuate horses when the Grand Prix fire swept through the area 10 years ago.

The 6,000-square-foot single- story Hellman Fire Station 177 opened on Jan. 24, 2012. A three-person crew staffs a paramedic fire engine ready to respond to fire, medical and rescue emergencies.

The word from Fridley: Plant native to help protect water




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    The use of native plants in landscaping can help prevent runoff, protecting water sources and improving soil.

    Photo: Adrian Danciu , bluethumb.org

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    Kay Qualley urges suburban homeowners to go a little wild.

    Let go of those stodgy 1950s ideals of the perfect turf and add some color and texture to your landscaping with native plants. Push a little further and add a rain garden. Native flora will attract native birds, butterflies and compliments, Qualley said.

    It isn’t just about aesthetics.

    It saves homeowners time and money — less mowing, watering and fertilizing — and it’s protecting rivers and lakes and recharging groundwater supplies, Qualley says.

    Qualley is Fridley’s environmental planner. The city, along with the Anoka Conservation District, is hosting an event this Thursday to promote the idea; the event is called “Fridley Loves the Mississippi: Re-thinking Landscaping for Water Quality.”

    “I sometimes wonder if it’s about control,” Qualley said of the traditional ideals of a perfect lawn. “Let’s get the lawn in order, the shrubs pruned. Let’s get order imposed on the landscape. But it’s fun to have birds and butterflies floating in and out of your yard. We are loosening our idea of what is beautiful in landscape.”

    The free session runs from 5:30 to 7 p.m. at the Fridley Community Center and focuses on landscaping ideas that include adding native plants and rain gardens that help absorb runoff. The session will include design ideas, sample landscape plans, native plant guidance and plant sourcing, lakeshore and riverbank care, and planting sustainable lawns.

    There’s much at stake. Three watershed districts — Rice Creek, Coon Creek and the Mississippi River — touch the city of Fridley. Moore and Loche lakes are also inside the city’s boundaries.

    Runoff water from neighborhoods, driveways, parking lots and streets picks up pollutants and debris and flows them back into rivers and lakes. A rain garden, usually a low-lying spot that is landscaped with native plants, captures, absorbs and filters runoff, reducing pollution in lakes and rivers. It also improves ground water quality. Many north metro communities rely on ground wells for their city water supplies.

    “Particularly within our watershed, a lot of our lakes and streams have water-quality issues related to excessive nutrients, including phosphorus. It leads to a lot of algae growth. It impacts aesthetics and recreation. There are some biological issues,” said Kyle Axtell, water resource specialist with the Rice Creek Watershed District, which includes parts of Anoka, Hennepin, Ramsey and Washington counties. Axtell will be at Thursday’s event.

    Grant program

    The watershed district promotes best management practices including rain gardens and shoreline restoration with a grant program. Homeowners can be reimbursed for as much as 50 percent of an approved native landscaping project, up to $5,000. The Rice Creek Watershed District has $150,000 for these grants.

    It also contracts with the Anoka Conservation District to offer free site visits and landscaping advice for homeowners and businesses.

    Expense is actually not the biggest issue causing homeowners to hesitate.

    “The biggest hurdle to someone doing a project is not the money but the technical assistance. How do I go about doing it?” Axtell said.

    Mitch Haustein from Anoka Conservation District will also speak Thursday. He does site visits and provides technical assistance, helping residents determine where a rain garden will have the most impact on their lawns.

    Changing the landscape of Fridley’s neighborhoods won’t just improve water quality, Qualley said.

    Native plants including red milkweed, sweet black-eyed susan or purple liatris will create a distinctive sense of place vs. ubiquitous petunias and pansies, Qualley said.

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    Natural beauty at URI Botanical Gardens

    (WPRI) — Rhode Island is a beautiful state – especially during the summer months. The University of Rhode Island is offering visitors a chance to see some of that natural beauty every Tuesday night, at the school’s botanical gardens.

    The gardens are located at the north end of URI’s Kingston Campus.

    It serves as a showcase for sustainable plants and sustainable landscape practices.

    According to its website, “the URI Botanical Gardens and Horridge Conservatory are an educational resource for our community: students and professionals, scientists, teachers, and citizens.”

    Brian Maynard, Horticulture Professor and Director of the URI Botanical Gardens, stopped by “The Rhode Show” on Tuesday morning to discuss this lush garden of plants and flowers.

    URI students take part in creating and maintaining the gardens.

    URI has offered been tours of the botanical gardens for the past three years.

    The tours run every Tuesday night through Labor Day. 

    The tours last about one hour and are a fun time spent looking at the landscape and talking plants. Tour attendees can learn new plants, landscaping techniques, and get their questions answered. The tours are free, but we are entirely self-funded and suggest a donation of $5.

    Everyone is welcome and the gardens are handicapped accessible.

    Anyone wanting a longer walk can stroll around the 185 acre URI campus, where more than 150 trees are labeled and many unusual and beautiful plants can be seen.

    For more information on the URI Botanical Gardens, click here .

    Copyright WPRI 12

    Clients of Howard McPherson Landscaping Expert Reads of Falkirk Students …

    London, UK — (SBWIRE) — 06/18/2013 — Howard McPherson LinkedIn connections read a study of over two thousand people, which revealed that at least thirty three percent have little to know knowledge of gardening, whilst just five percent of those aged below fifty consider their horticultural skills to be good. However, the schools of Falkirk have been going to great lengths recently to encourage the younger generation to start getting involved in the world of plants, flowers and vegetables.

    A number of different primary schools have begun to plant orchards in the space surrounding the school buildings, and several have actually been awarded Green Flags due to the impressive nature of the environmental projects they have completed. And clients of Howard McPherson landscaping expert read that at Denny High, the students are starting to get interested not just in making their school grounds look prettier, but in entering national gardening competitions too.

    Denny High students will be competing in the Gardening Scotland exhibition of 2013, which will be hosted at Edinburgh’s Royal Highland Centre. This is one of the biggest outdoor living shows in Scotland, and attracts entries from many of the UK’s leading nurseries. In addition to this, a group of second year students from the same school are to enter the Pallet Garden Challenge, which tasks entrants with setting up a beautiful garden, from scratch. The catch, however, is that the garden can be no larger than one square metre.

    The main goal of this particular competition is to make the concept of gardening a less overwhelming prospect for beginners; it is hoped that this type of competition will encourage young people to develop a lifelong love for gardening. Howard McPherson Remax clients were surprised to learn that Denny High students have been preparing for months for this challenge; they have already developed a theme and drawn up the necessary plans, and are now starting to raise the plants so that they will be ready for the day of the competition.

    The students will have their skills tested in a very public setting, as the Pallet Gardens Challenge is invariably one of the busiest exhibitions during the gardening show. Howard McPherson NJ clients read that the local newspaper, the Falkirk Herald, paid a visit to the school earlier in the week, to ask about the competition and check the students’ progress. One of the participating students noted that whilst she initially thought gardening was a bit dull, she gradually started to love it; she added that it has taught her a lot, including the importance of working hard and being patient.

    About howardmacpherson.com
    Although a recent survey suggests that most young people are uninterested in gardening, students from Falkirk are doing their best to prove people wrong. They have revamped their school gardens, and are will be entering a national gardening competition this summer.

    MEDIA CONTACT:
    [NAME OR COMPANY]: Howard
    [EMAIL ADDRESS]: howardmacpherson.uk@gmail.com
    [COMPANY LOCATION]: London UK
    [COMPANY WEBSITE ADDRESS]: howardmacpherson.com

    How to grow your own fresh flavours

    Now the frosts have gone, there’s no better time to plant small salad crops.
    These can be in containers, hanging baskets or even among your flowers.

    The great thing about planting small or plug plants is that any tricky seed
    sowing has been done for you. All you are using are mini versions of the
    final product. There’s nothing easier than small plants of lettuce Cancan (a
    variety you can cut a few leaves from and come back for more later) or the
    deep red, oak-leafed lettuce Rushmoor – both will thrive anywhere sunny.

    Make sure there’s plenty of compost or organic matter in the soil. Keep the
    plants watered in dry spells and guard against slugs and snails. In a month
    you will be picking fresh leaves. The only problem? They’re so tasty, they
    may never make it to the kitchen. It is deeply satisfying to nibble on a
    handful as you wander the garden.

    But not all tasty greenery is in the form of lettuce – nasturtium foliage has
    a strong peppery taste and looks fantastic in hanging baskets and sprawling
    over walls. The flowers are a terrific garnish in salads. Now is the perfect
    time to plant them and you can also pop a few seeds into existing pots for
    later in the season.

    If you haven’t got a plot dedicated to veg – and your name is way down the
    allotment waiting list – try growing a few edible crops in among your
    herbaceous perennials and shrubs.

    If the border is hot and sunny then plant herbs. Rosemary is a tough plant and
    adores dry, sun-baked situations. Wild rocket becomes stronger tasting as
    the temperature rises. Young plants are a great way to try out a wide range
    of herbs.

    You can, of course, mix and match herbs, young vegetables and your existing
    plants to create a true cottage garden – one that supplies both blooms and
    food for the house. There few rules to growing your own vegetables.

    Once you’ve tasted your home-grown crops there will be no turning back.
    Vegetables will soon appear in all your containers and hanging baskets,
    squeezed into gaps in your borders and whole portions of the garden will be
    turned over to their cultivation. Grow what you like to eat and trial as
    many new varieties as you can.

    *Next week: the ultimate city garden

    More gardening ideas from this series:

    Garden
    structures: how to create arches and pergolas

    Make
    your garden patio an ideal retreat

    Unearth
    Your Summer Garden homepage

    Waitrose Garden:

    For even more ideas and tips, as well as advice on how to get the most from
    your crops, visit waitrosegarden.com

    Plotting success: tips for planning your vegetable garden

    To prevent unpredictable weather mucking up your plans, don’t slavishly
    follow the calendar for each sowing. Instead, time the follow-on sowing when
    the seedlings of the previous sowing are just emerging.

    More gardening ideas from this series:

    How to grow your own
    fresh flavours

    Garden
    structures: how to create arches and pergolas

    Make
    your garden patio an ideal retreat

    Unearth
    Your Summer Garden homepage

    Waitrose Garden:

    For even more ideas and tips, as well as advice on how to get the most from
    your crops, visit waitrosegarden.com

    Eye of the Day Garden Design Center Announces Calendar of Events at …

    The month-long pop-up event from June 14 to July 14 at Stanford Shopping Center in Palo Alto, California will showcase Eye of the Day’s garden pottery from around the world, including modern and classic terra cotta from Italy, rustic Greek terra cotta, California’s own Gladding McBean and French Provencal Anduze Vases. In addition to providing availability of their products in a new location, Eye of the Day has scheduled a number of demonstrations and speakers throughout the month, as well as a variety of giveaways taking place weekly.

    Santa Barbara, CA (PRWEB) June 13, 2013

    Saturdays, June 22, 29 and July 6 at 12:30 pm: Larry Walling of Bellissimo Architectural Finishes, will demonstrate how to re-finish old and new terra cotta and concrete pottery and fountains to look like new.

    Saturday, July 6 at 2:00 pm: Jean Cross, Executive Directory of the Art League of Lincoln and Gladding McBean sculptor will present a slide show and lecture on Gladding McBean’s contribution to the Stanford University Campus.

    Saturday, July 13 at 11:30 am: presentation by Stefani Bittner, co-founder of Star Apple Edible Gardens and co-author of The Beautiful Edible Garden.

    Saturday, July 13 at 1:00 pm: presentation by garden designer, Rebecca Sweet, from Northern California’s Harmony in the Garden and best-selling author of “Garden Up! Smart Vertical Gardening for Small and Large Spaces”.

    Sunday, July 14 at 11:30 am: presentation by garden designer and best selling author, Rebecca Sweet.

    Sunday, July 14 at 12:30 pm: Julie Chai, a garden writer who was Senior Garden Editor at Sunset Magazine, will discuss Container Gardening 101.

    Sunday, June 23 and Sunday at June 30,11:30 am – 12:30 pm: Pacific Horticultural Society will speak on a variety of subjects pertaining to horticulture and gardening today.

    Eye of the Day Garden Design Center’s first pop-up store will be on location in the Pavilion at Stanford Shopping Center from June 14 through July 14, open between 11 am – 6 pm . The flagship retail store is located at 4620 Carpinteria Avenue in Carpinteria, California and is open every day from 10 am to 5 pm.

    For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/prweb2013/6/prweb10829575.htm