Planning Your Garden Manchester

You may have a brand new garden, with very little in the way of features, or a well-established plot, ranging from one that is overgrown and tangled, to one that is almost perfect for you and your family. Each of these situations will involve a different approach to planning; a new garden offers you a clean slate to work with, whilst an established one will require you to take into account existing features and planting.

Garsides Garden Centre
0161 6814789
8 Oldham Road
Manchester
City Garden Centre
0161 8325834
30-36 Swan Street
Manchester
Cleveland Garden Centre
0161 7952244
Bank Road
Manchester
All In One Garden Centre Ltd
01706 711711
Rochdale Road
Manchester
Pets & Garden Centre
0161 3030991
25 Grosvenor Street
Stalybridge
Patio Centre
0161 6835314
Daisy Nook Garden Centre
Manchester
Daisy Nook Garden Centre
0161 6814245
Medlock Hall Farm
Manchester
K & D Freeman
0161 3364377
Broomstair Nurseries
Manchester
Hopwood Arms Farm Shop & Garden Centre
0161 6549943
768 Rochdale Road
Manchester
Dutch Link Ltd
0161 7375247
Leirum House
Salford
Data Provided by:
 

Provided By: 

Planning Your Garden

Planning Your Garden

Planning Your Garden

You may have a brand new garden, with very little in the way of features, or a well-established plot, ranging from one that is overgrown and tangled, to one that is almost perfect for you and your family. Each of these situations will involve a different approach to planning; a new garden offers you a clean slate to work with, whilst an established one will require you to take into account existing features and planting.

When creating or redesigning a garden, your main aim should be to provide a personal place that fulfils the tastes and requirements of those who are going to use it. In some ways, it is similar to designing the interior decor of a house: the three central factors are the practical considerations of the site, its proposed functions, and personal taste - in other words, what you have, what you need, and what you like.

Unlike a house, however, a garden is ever-changing, even from one week to the next. Certain plants may be stunning in one season yet quite unremarkable in the next.

In this section, we take a look at the first basic stages in planning your garden, from deciding what functions you want it to fulfil, to considering the amount of time you wish to spend maintaining it.

Click here to read more from InterGardening.co.uk


Home | Privacy | Terms | Contact



© 2002-2010 InterCooking.co.uk