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sweetannie4u

Need landscape ideas for my front yard

17 years ago

Hi,

Now that the front yard has recovered from the brutal installation of the septic lines last year (what a nightmare), I want to make some changes or just add some things to my front yard.

This is my little Ivy-covered Cottage.

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Preferably using plants I have, and possibly utilizing native rocks and grasses. I want it to be low maintenance. I think I would like Alpine-type trees and plants.

I posted some pics of some of my favorite areas, plants and trees at my PhotoBucket entry page for ideas, but feel free to suggest other things and ideas.

It faces the west. The little trees in the center have grown enough now that they provide some shade, so it is not so glaringly sunny and hot.

The leach lines now provide some deep underground water (and nutrients). This year we've had lots of rain, but that is the exception and not the rule. We also have periodic droughts. It drains really well.

I was thinking maybe some wildflowers and grasses...Alpines.

Perhaps a gravel pathway with steps down the slope with landscape rock stops and large rocks scattered here and there. The local rock is terra cotta red and red-orange and red-to-purple.

I just can't quite see the plan when I look at it, but I have to have an easy maintenance landscape. I like the lawn because it is cooling, but it requires a lot of work to keep it looking good. So, I am up for suggestions.

There are so many of you who are fantastic with designing gardens. Please Help.

Thank you.

~ Annie

Here is a link that might be useful: look at pics of my front yard and tell me what you think

Comments (12)

  • 17 years ago
    last modified: 10 years ago

    Oh, I love the combo of the purple echinacea and the grasses...bunny tails?? Also the lamb's ears and yellow daisies. I'm guessing that you will want to keep with the tall theme, as anything else would be overpowered.

    If you did gravel and alpines, I think you would need a couple of substantial 'focal point' rocks. Then pea gravel or shale, whichever is cheaper in your area. I would then use colourful alpines as exclamation points. Don't I sound all artsy!!??

    I am also changing up a front area, but am not organized enough yet to articluate my desires.

    Good luck, I know how damaging septic updates can be, but it is a great opportunity to try something new!!! You'll get lots of ideas here.

    Nancy.

  • 17 years ago
    last modified: 10 years ago

    Annie,
    I looked at your pics and can't figure out what it is you want to change, as everything looks great to me. Are you thinking about taking some of the plants out and moving them around? I'm afraid I'm not very helpful with ideas. Are the two tall flowers in the front mullein?

    Sue

  • 17 years ago
    last modified: 10 years ago

    Annie, I agree with Sue. When I looked at your pictures I kept thinking how pretty everything was. I like it just as it is so no advice here either.

  • 17 years ago
    last modified: 10 years ago

    I too can imagine anything either. Especially cottage garden wise. Perhaps a pathway to the front steps?

    Libby

  • 17 years ago
    last modified: 10 years ago

    It doesn't look like a prairie! I don't live in your zone, so I don't know enough about the plants there. If you want a gravel path, I think that would be pretty. Perhaps the red/purple gravel?

    Your flowers are beautiful!
    Cameron

  • 17 years ago
    last modified: 10 years ago

    Hey, Annie - are you confused yet???

    Maybe you should move your question over to the Landscape Design Forum - I'll keep looking to see the question!!

    Nnancy

  • 17 years ago
    last modified: 10 years ago

    Annie,

    I think what you have looks great too. I'm no expert but this is what I would do:

    To create your path, lay a couple of garden hose down to figure out what looks best - which you are lucky enough to be able to curve around your existing plantings. Make the path wide enough that it reduces enough of the lawn and keep in mind what will make mowing easy. You can edge your existing plantings with stone to reduce more grass. Make the beds larger than you might think you need since you don't want them to look spotty.

    You can mulch the beds with newspaper and compost (to kill the grass around your lovely plantings) and later add some low growing plants to fill in for low maintenance.

    I wouldn't do wild flowers as they haven't been low maintenance for me, at least not in the long run. I wouldn't plant ivy either since it climbs everything. Maybe some hellebores in the shady parts - they are evergreen, bloom in late winter, and are tough as nails here in my zone 7b.

    The cooler weather of fall and the milder days of winter are a good time to work on something like this. I wish I lived nearby and I could help you but I think you're off to a beautiful start already.

    Hope this helps.

  • 17 years ago
    last modified: 10 years ago

    Thanks everyone.

    Okay, the pictures showing the house are what is there, except for the roses (Red Blaze & pink and white Fairy roses) on the fence (not shown), with tall Bridleswreath spirea bushes and a Forsythia with old-fashioned Day lilies. It is so dry along there. This year I added a small white Rose of Sharon.
    The other FLOWER pics on the entry page are just plants I have that I was considering using to add some color to the front yard in Summer and then in Fall.
    I would like to plant roses on either side of the front steps to grow up the pillars to mingle with that dark green ivy, but worry about the thorns.
    There is a huge buttery-yellow flowering Lady Banks Rose on the south side (right side of the porch).
    I would love to add roses out front...shrub roses which are hardier and bloom from Spring thru' Fall.
    I am going to remove the purple garden phlox on the left (north) side of the porch. It got crowded out by the Nandinas and has become scraggly looking the last few years. Time for a change.
    I would like to add a Winterberry shrub out there somewhere, and some pillar-type evergreens, and three Colorado Blue Spruces...maybe some meadow flowers around the spruces and some big rocks. I can get big rocks anytime if I catch the county road grader guy when he goes by. He will push them to my driveway. I just have to get someone to help me move them into the front yard.
    Whatever goes out there has to be tough, I can tell you that.

    Cameron,
    There are many types of prairies. The type most people thik of when they hear the word "prairie" is like the one you see on the old TV series, "Little House on the Prairie". That is the Shortgrass Prairie, which is in the American Savannah. This area where I live in Central Oklahoma is where the Tall Grass Prairie changes to Hardwood Timberland. This Eco-Region is called, "Cross-Timbers and Southern Tallgrass Prairie"

    The Native trees are:

    Black Willow (aka Creek Willow or Pond Willow)
    Blackjack Oak
    Post Oak
    Chinquepin Oak
    Red Oak
    White Oak
    Shumard Oak
    Boxwood Elm
    Slippery Elm
    Bur Oak (introduced)
    Hackberry
    Cottonwood (I also have 2 large Aspens)
    Oklahoma Red Cedar (State Tree)
    Oklahoma Redbud
    Texas Redbud
    Texas Buckeye
    Wild plum
    Chickasaw Sand Plum (a shrub-like tree)
    Mulberry (introduced)
    Catalpa (introduced)
    Mulberry (introduced)
    Paper Mulberry (invasive tree introduced from China)
    Persimmon
    Osage Orange
    Possum Haw
    Fringe Tree
    Sweet Gum
    China Berry (introduced)
    Texas Ash
    Black Walnut - all I can think of off hand.
    Winged Elm (introduced)
    Black Haw
    Black Hawthorn
    Elderberry (a shrub that can get as tall as a small tree)
    Red Osier Dogwood
    Carolina Buckthorn

    Prairie Grasses:

    Big Blue stem
    Little Blue stem
    Inland Sea Oats
    Switch grass
    Indian Grass (State Grass)
    June Grass
    Love Grass (introduced)
    Muhly Grass
    Buffalo Grass
    Frost Grass
    Eastern Gramma Grass
    Side Oats Gramma
    Blue Gramma
    Woodward Sand Blue Stem
    Prairie Sand Reed
    Canadian Rye
    Panic Grass (introduced)
    Tall Fescue (introduced)
    Blue-eyed Grass
    Foxtail Barley
    (There are others, but I cannot recall them now)

    Prairie Flowers:

    Purple Poppy (aka: Wine Cups)- love these!
    Snow-on-the-Mountain
    Orange Butterfly weed
    Silver-leaf Nightshade (blue flowering)
    Clasping-leave Coneflower (yellow w/brown cone - waxy leaves)
    Purple Coneflower
    Pale Coneflower (Echinacea pallida)
    Narrowleaf Coneflower
    Gray Coneflower
    Purple Prairie Clover
    Prairie Dogbane - waxy leaves and purple stems
    Stenosiphon (tall growing w/small fuzzy white cone flowers)
    Wax Goldenweed
    Compass Plant (sunflower-like flowers w/ fern-like leaves)
    Ashy Sunflower (very stiff ashy looking leaves)
    Wild Quinine (purplish stems w/ tiny white flowers
    Joe Pye Weed
    Iron Weed (purple flowers)
    Yellow Iron weed
    Tall Boneset (tiny white flowers)
    Daisy Fleabane - tiny white daisies
    Carolina Larkspur (tiny plants)
    Lanced-Leaf Coreopsis (aka Tickseed) - golden yellow
    Plains Coreopsis - golden yellow w/reddish brown centers
    Rocky Mountain Bee Balm
    Spiderwort
    Lemon Mint (Horse Mint) - purple flowers
    Wild Four O'Clocks
    Blue False Indigo (blue flowers)
    Wild Indigo (cream flowers)
    Mist Flower - minute purple flowers looks like purple mist
    Yellow Gaillardia
    Yarrow (white to pale lilac)
    Maximillion Sunflower
    Pink Primrose
    Arrow-leaf Violet
    Passion flower (flowering vine)
    Yellow Primrose
    Gayfeather (purple Liatris)
    Dotted Gayfeather (Liatris)
    Rough Blazing Star (purple Liatris) - aka: Snake root
    Yellow Coneflower aka: Camphor weed
    Blue Speedwell
    Bitterweed
    Flannel leaf Mullein (grow your own toilet paper!)
    Mexican Hats
    Prairie Rose Gentian
    Indian Blanketflower (State Wildflower)
    Red Honeysuckle
    Yellow Japanese Honeysuckle (introduced)
    Blue Mealy Sage
    Blue Sage
    Cardinal Flower (Red Sage)
    Golden Rod (short variety)
    Golden Rod (tall and stoleniferous)
    Obedient plant
    Black-eyed Susans
    Brown-eyed Susans
    Scarlet Indian Paintbrush
    Prickly Poppy (Cowboy Fried Egg Flower)
    Wild rose (white rosettes - very fragrant)
    Prairie rose - tiny leafed, low-growing 8" plants
    False Garlic
    Nodding Onions
    White Prairie Aster
    Purple Rose Verbena
    Slim Prairie Aster - blue-violet flowers
    Heath Aster
    Wild Violet (has triangular shaped leaves)
    Leavenworth Eryngo (thistle-like deep purple flowers)
    Bull Thistle
    Globe Thistle (introduced - I think)
    Blue Indigo
    Ox-eyed Daisy (one of my favorites)
    Buffalo Burr (such a mean ting!)
    Partridge Pea (yellow pea-like flowers)
    Catclaw - Sensitive Brier (fuzzy pink flowers like a Mimosa)
    Shepherd's Purse
    Purselane
    Gerardia - low growing w/pink buttercup-like flowers
    Sow Thistle - similar to a dandelion
    Musk Thistle
    Spider Milkweed (cool looking green flowers)
    Illinois Rattlebox plant
    Poppy Mallow (light pink)
    Yellow and pink Wood Sorrel
    Prairie Ragwort

    These wildflowers WERE all growing up in my meadow until the new land owner next door sprayed with Herbicide to kill off "weeds" and native prairie grasses. The wind blew some of that over into my side and then the rains carried the herbicide down the hillside thru' my property. Bye-bye wildflowers. Some how the grasses survived, except for the Love grass which was growing next to the fenceline. (grrrrr)
    So I am now reseeding the meadow.

    Except for the large native trees and one very old and very large Lilac bush, I planted all the trees, bushes, plants, groundcovers, and flowers in the one-acre yard around the house. The other acre is the meadow up on the ridge. There are two natural wooded areas that border the meadow. A small one on the west side (downhill) and a big one further up the hill on the south site.

  • 17 years ago
    last modified: 10 years ago

    Ooops!

    I wrote in the above:

    "Oklahoma Red Cedar (State Tree)"
    ------------------------------------
    Correction:
    Should have read -

    "Oklahoma Redbud (state tree)"

  • 17 years ago
    last modified: 10 years ago

    BUMP!

    I added some ornamental grasses for softness, color and textures, pillar junipers by the entry gate for height and to add a little formality; a spreading juniper in front of the huge Lilac bush, large rocks and the grasses. I am planting a few prairie-type flowers along there for color and to help draw the eye up through there to the front porch. (blanket flowers, black-eyed susans & salvias, etc). The main colors will be bright fall colors of oranges, reds, pinks, purples, browns, yellows and the greens of evergreen trees and shrubs.
    I will be adding more large rocks on that slope to serve as anchors for the new foundation plants in the center.
    The foundation plantings by the porch are Nandinas, aka "Japanese Heavenly Bamboo", which is very tolerant of the hot, dry conditions on the west side. They are evergreen and have beautiful bright red berries all winter. I love their airy leaf shapes (I love adding elements of the natural garden forms of Japanese gardens).
    I planted a weeping willow near the ivy-covered garden gate (on the north side) to provide shade, texture and provide it's cool ambiance to the hot front yard. My dogs will be happier too when they go out to play and go potty.
    I planted two Sugar Maples in the lower area to provide leaf color, textures and more shade.
    The center will remain the cool, green grass.
    I will be adding at least one Colorado Blue Spruce that will add texture, color and be an anchor. If I plant it near the leach lines on the north side it will get enough moisture when we are having dry spells, like it is now.
    I am having to water EVERYTHING like crazy right now. No rain in our area although it is raining just north of here. It is super dry and the ground is as hard as a rock.

    I will take progressive pictures to show how it all comes together as time goes by.

    Annie

  • 17 years ago
    last modified: 10 years ago

    Sounds very well-thought out. I will be waiting for pictures.

    I am never very inspired like you seem to be.

    We are miserably dry here too. I am only watering newly set plants and the mums...let my favorite dark red get too dry and the base is very brown and ugly looking.

  • 17 years ago
    last modified: 10 years ago

    Very gray and overcast again today. It has been so for the past several days, but no rain. Just hot and humid as heck. It rained like crazy just 20 miles north of here. We were there at a friend's when it hit. What a storm! That was the only place in the state that got any rain - so weird. Just a tiny pocket.

    I am watering in the newly planted things. Gave them all a dose of Miracle Grow as it helps prevent, or reduce at least, transplant shock.
    My kittens think I planted that grass for them. Brats! They keep getting in it and rolling and eating the grass. Great fun romping on the big rocks and jumping into the middle of my ornamental grasses. Little stinkers! I've been spraying them with the garden hose and today I have not seen them in there.
    All my plants are small, so it doesn't look like much now, but it will in a year or so. I can't afford to buy big trees, shrubs, or grasses. So...I will wait.

    ~ Annie

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