Family Gardens London
Family Gardens
Family Gardens
Many gardens have to be used by a variety of age groups, and a family garden should be agreeable to everyone using it, whatever their age. Decide on a list of priorities and plan your garden accordingly. It's possible to design your garden so that it evolves with the changing needs of you and your family. If you get the major areas right, garden features and planting can be altered as your circumstances change, or as time and money become more available.
Design
Include all the features and areas that you want in your garden. Patios are dry places for play even in winter - make yours large enough to be useful for everyone. Materials can be upgraded later. If you have space, a paved path circuit around your garden is a great all-weather track for trikes, bikes and cars.
Lawns
Leave as large as possible space for ball games and play. Site your greenhouse away from here, or add a greenhouse at a later stage when more time is available to use them.
Compartments
Children love secret places and small areas where dens can be made. However, in smaller gardens a simple open area can be the only way to have plenty of room for ball games. If you have the space, use lawn shapes to create quiet corners and bays that can be used for play. Leave spaces for tents and makeshift dens to be made.
Multi Purpose Items
Using things for more than one function is important in small gardens. Stout, mature tree branches are good hangers for rope ladders, scrambling nets and hammocks. Make garden arches that double as a swing frame - you can buy swings to hook on and off when not in use. Make football goals that are plant supports or washing line posts. Design some outdoor storage for toys, such as timber bench seats with cupboards underneath. Barbecues areas can also make useful storage. Sandpits should be covered and include stowage areas.
Water, Sand and Soft Surfaces
If you have inherited a pool and safety is a concern, install a metal grid just below the surface of the water or fence it off. When planning a new garden, make water features child safe, with no standing water. Make a narrow, shallow channel of water which can be drained when not in use for splashing and small boat sailing - this can be turned into a rill and left full later.
Sand pits that are excavated can be turned into ponds at a later stage. Use split bamboo (available on a roll) as a cover for sand.
Play surfaces are expensive and may require specialist installation. Bark can be used around climbing frames, but may need containing.
Children's Gardens
Make a children's garden - set aside a small plot for plant growing. Grow fast favourites such as runner beans, radishes, nasturtiums, sweet peas and experimental giants such as sunflowers and pumpkins. As children get older or lose interest incorporate area back into your own garden.
Wildlife
Encourage plenty of wildlife through planting and providing the right homes. Fence off wildlife pon...
