Tips For Planting Bulbs in the Fall

If you’re the type that likes immediate gratification for a job well-done, then waiting for spring bulbs to bloom that have been planted in the fall probably isn’t your idea of a fun end-of-project reward. But if you don’t mind waiting a few months to witness the fruits of your labor, cultivating bulbs can be very enjoyable! Spring-blooming bulbs include plants like crocuses, daffodils, tulips and hyacinths and clearly come in a variety of sizes and shapes.

Phase One Landscapes encourages you to remember these essential tips from HGTVwhen planting bulbs in your garden:

From HGTV:

Although bulbs come in a variety of sizes, buy ones that look as big as possible for that type of bulb. The bigger they are, the larger the flowers they’ll produce.

Before planting, inspect bulbs carefully, making sure that they look clean and are free of mold. They should be firm with no soft spots.

To plant bulbs, start with well-draining, loosened soil (especially important if you’re planting daffodils). Bulbs are susceptible to rot when planted in poorly drained sites.

After the planting site has been prepared, lay out the bulbs in the desired planting pattern and plant them in the ground six to eight inches deep, generally about the depth of the blade of a planting knife or trowel.

Make sure to plant spring-flowering bulbs that deep so they’re protected from a winter freeze. Also as the bulbs grow, their roots will grow deeply into the soil so that they stand strong and tall, and the wind and rain won’t blow them over.

Plant the bulb with the pointed tip facing up.

Photo Credit: Ehow.com

Shout it From the Mountain Top!

Have a gardening tip you’d like to share? Want to learn more about a specific area of landscape? Think we could stand to dive a bit more into an unexplored family of plants? Here at Phase One Landscapes, we truly appreciate feedback from our customers. So tell us what we can do to improve, what do you think about our latest blog posts or even simply what would you like to see more of. After all, this blog was initially created with the hopes of creating dialogue with our friends and customers and sharing information. So join in the conversation and tell us what’s on your mind! Don’t know how to leave a comment on a blog post? It’s easy: from the home page, click on the title of the particular post you’re reading, e.g. “Fall-Colored Shrubs for Your Landscape”.   This will take you off of the home page and to the post. At the bottom of the post is an area called “Speak Your Mind” where you can leave your comment. Just fill out the gray boxes with your information and submit.

And that’s all it takes to make your voice heard!

Fall-Colored Shrubs for Your Landscape

Dwarf Fothergilla

Just like interior designers change home decor to correspond with the current season, landscapers and gardeners often like to plant seasonally with varieties that complement the time of the year. Changing the canopy color of your landscape is simple if you know which plants to look for.

Since today is the first official day of fall, we thought we’d give you a breakdown of the best shrubs to plant to add a little autumn flavor to your landscape, as presented by HGTV.

Japanese pieris (Pieris japonica): The lovely evergreen that produces pendulous clusters of bell-shaped flowers in spring also has a fall and winter interest: The reddish buds of next year’s flowers appear late in the growing season and remain through winter.

Dwarf fothergilla (Fothergilla gardenii) and large fothergilla (F. major): Bottlebrush flowers appear in spring on both versions of this deciduous shrub, and in late autumn, its foliage goes out in a blaze of oranges, yellows and reds.

Visit  Q&A: Shrubs for Fall Color to learn more.

Photo Credit: The Country Gardener

Let Phase One Landscapes Work for You!

If you are contemplating a new garden area, a great place to entertain, or just a relaxing outdoor space to enjoy a glass of wine, just give us a call. At Phase One Landscapes, we will schedule a free initial consultation with you at your residence.

Your designer listens carefully to your concerns and goals, and our design approach helps you realize your dreams. We work through the design process from detailed site surveying to creative plans, realistic budgets, responsive changes and common sense contracts.

The construction communication starts with your designer, but quickly you will realize that you’re in great hands with your on-site foreman and the construction personnel. Coordination of our crews, the subcontractors, and materials are key to our successful construction process. Concerns are handled efficiently on the spot.

Our team approach makes sure that helping you realize your outdoor vision is exciting and enjoyable. How we work relates to what we do – extend your living space into the garden! Take a look at some photos from one of our “Gardener’s Garden” project.

Visit our gallery to see more of our work.

Phase One Landscapes Congratulates the 2010 ASLA Student Award Winners!

Phase One Landscapes would like to take a moment to congratulate the winners of the American Society of Landscape Architects‘ 2010 Student Awards. Last week, the ASLA announced the winners of this year’s awards in 32 project categories ranging from General Design to Analysis and Planning and everything in between. On Monday. Sept. 13, a ceremony recognizing the recipients was held at the ASLA Annual Meeting and EXPO in Washington, DC.

We thought it would be fun to present a few snapshots of some of the winners of the “Award of Excellence”. Click on the images below to learn about the winners’ project details.

Click here to learn more about the ASLA.

Landscape Talk with Jeffery Gordon Smith

Have you ever taken a look at beautifully landscaped grounds in a magazine or on television and wondered how the designer dreamed up the plan that they did or why they placed certain elements in the spots that they did? For instance, why is there a fire pit near that above-ground jacuzzi? Why are those long, lush grasses surrounding the far trim of that pool? Why the composite-stone deck instead of a natural one?  Where, exactly, do landscape designers get their ideas and creativity form? California-based designer and landscape architect Jeffery Gordon Smith of JGSDesigns recently took some time out of his busy schedule of land sketching, dreaming and calculating to chat with Freshome about where he finds his inspiration and how he executes a good idea.Take a look at the interview with him here.

Phase One Landscapes would like to know, what inspires your residential landscape?

Photo Credit: Freshome

Have You Visited the Betty Ford Alpine Garden Yet?

If you’re looking for something fun to do in Colorado this week, check out the Betty Ford Alpine Garden. Our friends over at Cliff and Canyon recently posted about this public botanical garden that’s located in Vail Valley and named after long-time resident, Betty Ford. It’s certainly  next on out list of places to visit!

As the highest elevation botanical garden in the United States, it’s got one of the most comprehensive varieties of high-altitude plants and a labyrinth of beautiful gardens that are used for both conservation and educational purposes.

From Cliff and Canyon:

The botanic garden is located close to the center of Vail in the shadow of Colorado’s Gore Range.  There is an assortment of perennial beds, rock gardens and waterfalls that dramatically display an astonishing selection of the world’s most unique and beautiful high elevation plants.  Gardening at high altitude can certainly have its challenges, but these gardens let you see the possibilities associated with  high altitude gardening.

Photo Credit: GardenFaerie

Please visit the garden’s website for full details.

Shredded Paper for Garden Compost: What’s Your Take?

You have to admit that there’s a special type of quiet joy that comes along with walking over to the paper shredder — whether at home or in the office — and feeding a heaping handful of scraps into the mouth of the hungry contraption. Okay, maybe it’s not that much fun but it sure would be a whole lot better if the shreds that came out on the other side could see a second life cycle.

At Phase One Landscapes, we’re always interested in learning about more sustainable ways to garden and landscape. So when we found a recent blog post from Apartment Therapy that suggested that there may,  in fact, be use for all that paper shredder waste after all, we jumped for joy.

While there’s not a clear consensus on if it’s really great for your garden, there does seem to be some heavy opinions circulating about the topic. So what’s your opinion, have you composted used paper shreds in your garden? If so, what was your experience like?

Photo Credit: Skippy’s Vegetable Garden