10 Super Cool Garden Ideas

You could be having a home as your castle, but don’t surround it with a moat. Instead, employ various gardening ideas to add color, warmth, and texture to this lovely place of residence. Unlike what many people believe, having a beautiful garden doesn’t have to break the bank. With some little effort and creativity, you can create professional outdoor space at a cheap price.

Beautifying your garden requires a combination of several items. From planting annuals and perennials, deer-proofing the garden to growing blooming shrubs, there are several wonderful ways to make your garden and entire home not only inviting but also appealing. That said, check out the following 10 super cool gardening ideas.

1.   Welcome Guests with Flowers

Flowers are a good way of making your home appear welcoming. You can then adorn your outer entrance with various assorted annual and perennial flowers to keep your garden awash with various colors all year round. You can try out a combination of several flowers including the Lily of the Nile, Petunia, Snapdragon and Jekyll roses that can mise-en-scene.

That aside, if there is a small space between your house and the street, you can construct a low-level fence around the yard. This gives the illusion that your house is quite far from the street than it really is. It also creates a good space for growing vines and flowers.

2.   Try Out Rambling Vines

The other best way of making the most from your garden or backyard is planting these lovely rambling vines. For sure, nothing is more romantic or stately than seeing deep tendrils wind around the columns and fences as they display their delicate flowers. To get the most from this, go for vines with attractive flowers and a nice smell.

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One that most gardeners prefer is the Clematis vine. Besides the good smell, it offers great blossoms of red, pink, white, purple and blue. You can try out this versatile vine on your trellis, container or on a fence. For a laissez-faire style, you can let it ramble free and scramble over your perennials and shrubs.

If Clematis is your flower of choice, you should be well versed with its planting guide. For starters, you should plant it when the weather is cool. This automatically calls for planting during the falls and springs. You should also plant it in fertile, well-drained and loose soil with a lot of organic matter.

For better health, use organic fertilizer once monthly during the springs and summer. Some vines blossom on new growth while others blossom on old growth. Therefore, always ask during purchase, as it will help you with choosing pruning periods.

3.   Dress Your Driveway

You should always be careful when choosing your garden plants and materials. A good choice of these can help you hide your unattractive driveway. With some few modifications, you can switch your less picture-perfect driveway into a gardener’s nirvana.

For instance, you can start by creating some slightly raised lawn area in the center of the lawn. Add some boxwood hedge at the back of this island by planting annuals and perennials that rise above the front. You can blend various colors, heights, and textures for a better look.

4.   How About the No-Fuss Lilies?

No-Fuss Lilies are rough, resilient, and tumble. They laugh at the drought, doesn’t require much fertilizers and blossom with breathe-taking perfume in hot, humid areas. They grow resembling huge bulbs thus difficult to destroy. However, they require low maintenance but leave a high impact.

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These flowers are available in various rainbow hues. This ensures that your garden is adorned with your favorite vivacious colors. Provided they receive enough sunlight, these flowers don’t care the sort of soil you plant them into. You will love their fragrant smell with trumpet-shaped flowers that blossom during summer, springs or fall.

5.   Deer Proofing Your Garden

One of the most heartbreaking gardening misfortunes is an invasion by a deer. Well, to prevent your flowers from being gobbled up by deer, plant flowers that appear glorious to your visitors but disgusting to deer. This isn’t hard as most gardeners imagine.

Plant various deer averse perennials such as butterfly weed, the royal red butterfly bush, the purple cornflower, and the globe thistle. With such flowers in your garden, deer won’t come close to them, but you will have a full flowerbed of gorgeous blooms and leaves to enjoy.

6.   Boost Height with Baskets and Planters

You will definitely enjoy a multi-dimensional garden design over a one-dimensional landscape. Well, if so, add some lovely and eye-catching layers into your yard by coupling normal flowers with elevated planters and hanging baskets. This sure strategy creates undoubted visual interest yet requires minimal effort.

Using hanging baskets with elevated planters creates a sea full of beautiful blossoms, both high and low. This visual effect gives an impression of intriguing waves of flowers rising and falling across your garden. It is a foolproof way to get started when creating an immersive escape. Plants will also enjoy the good drainage and sufficient aeration that the raised flower planters provide.

Basket planting tip: for each basket, ensure that you plant three types of flowers. Have a spiller, one that hangs down the edges such as begonias and variegated sage, a filler – those that mounds and fills the basket such as the Kong Coleus and a thriller – that are eye-catching such as the purple cordyline at the centre.

7.   Mix Up With Blooming Shrubs

Any gardener will agree that the quickest way to transform a garden is through planting blooms, shrubs, blossoming flowers, and trees. They bring up an incredible impact on the lawn. However, that aside, you can add color with one last step. For a quick difference, try the spring’s showiest shrubs, the Chinese snowball.

They blossom with white flower clusters that grow up to 8 inches wide and festoons its branches during spring. The flower grows big, reaching heights of up to 20 feet wide. Due to this possible growth, you should grow it in a prominent space where there will be no limitation to its expansion. Besides, plant it in fertile, well-drained soil in an area that receives partial sunlight. If necessary, you can prune them after the flowering season in spring.

8.   Hide Your Outdoor Structures

Garages, sheds, and other outdoor workplaces aren’t the most attractive areas of your yardscape. You can consider constructing them in a hidden area or alternatively make the most from these spaces by planting the best plants and flowers. There are various remodeling ideas for outdoor structures that can work for your situation.

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A common method involves adding fixing brackets and a wooden plant to form a shelf in its exterior structure, which could either be the entrance or windows. You can then set some lightweight fiberglass planters full of flowers to hide the structure as well as add some natural ambiance to its entry.

Potted ferns are also a prudent addition to the base of these structures as they give an earthy accent to its threshold. Make sure that you bring the plants closer to the walls to make them complement the structure.

9.   Enjoy Blossom Colors All-Year Round

Perhaps an exciting time for not only gardeners but also anyone with a yard or passers- by is when flowers burst with their vibrant blooms. Something rewarding about gardening is the fact that you will be treated to colorful flowers, berries, and leaves every season. However, how could that be if you enjoy this all year round?

The only sure of enjoying an all-year bloom is cultivating flowers that enjoy hot summers, mild winters and look great all through. Such plants are a great addition to your flowerbed as they offer amazing accents to your front porches, mailboxes, backyards, and flowerbeds.

Different flowers bloom in different seasons. That said, check out the following seasonal flower guide that can help you select and grow plants that blossom in alternating seasons.

  • During spring – azalea, wisteria, peony, bearded iris, dogwood, daffodil, and forsythia mandavilla.
  • Summer – daylily, lantana, crepe, zinnia, impatiens, gardenia, and hydrangea.
  • During fall – aster, sugar maple, ginger lily, holly, mum, autumn crocus, pansy, and camellia.
  • Winter – winterberry, amaryllis, rosemary, saucer magnolia, Colorado blue, and Lenten rose.

10.                Make a Garden Surprise

You should create a garden paradise in your lawn by constructing several intersecting trails with hidden rooms. Design intriguing hideaways where you can gather up your friends and family for outdoor snacks, drinks, and much more. It is a good place to make discussions too as it mixes both formal and informal setup, thus stimulates visual tension.

Perhaps the biggest garden surprise you will ever make should involve a wall full of plants, a functional fountain, bench with special flower display and even a statue. You can reserve this for the farthest spot of your yard instead of putting it adjacent to your house.

Conclusion

There are several other interesting gardening ideas that you can put to practice. The key is ensuring that your outdoor lawn not only looks good but also complements the design of your house and has breath-taking fragrance. Try out either of the above-mentioned garden ideas for a better and enjoyable patio.

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