Sunday 6 May 2018

How to Create a Desert Landscape


Ask This Old House landscape designer Jenn Nawada heads to Phoenix to recreate the desert in a homeowner’s front yard. Click here to SUBSCRIBE to the official This Old House YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thisoldhouse Time: 1 day Cost: $2,000 and Up Skill Level: Moderate Tools List for Creating a Desert Landscape: Shovel Wheelbarrow Hand truck Level Compacter Shopping List: Soil Boulders Variety of desert plants Cardboard ¼” stone Modular pavers Steps: 1. Dig out the outline of a walkway about 3’ wide and 3-4” deep. Give the outline a slight curve to add visual interest to the walkway. 2. To mimic the hills of the desert, shovel piles of soil onto the landscape into seemingly random mounds. 3. Determine a few locations to place boulders in the landscape. Dig holes in those locations about 4” deep and roughly the width of the boulder being placed. 4. Carefully load each boulder onto a hand truck, wheel it into position, and roll the boulder into its final place. Backfill around the hole to make it look like it really belongs there. 5. Stage the variety of desert plants across the landscape. Things aren’t really clumped together in the desert, so keep the plants spread out. Be mindful of when plants bloom, if ever, to have an even spread of color across the landscape. 6. Once each plant is in its desired position, plant them all with the shovel. Dig down just about as deep as the root ball and twice as wide. 7. To plant cacti, wrap a piece of cardboard around the needles and move the cactus only by holding onto the cardboard. 8. Give everything a good watering. 9. Put down a layer of ¼” stone on the outlined walkway and level it. 10. Compact the walkway with a compacter. 11. Lay down the pavers over the walkway base in a running bond pattern. Resources: In any landscape design, Jenn recommends looking for natural cues in the surrounding area to recreate in a controlled way in your yard. In this case, she identified an abundance of small stones coating the ground, plants spread far apart from each other, and undulating hills. Those cues informed the design in the homeowner’s front yard. Jenn installed boulders, red yucca, lantana, bougainvillea, a few variety of cacti, and a Chilean mesquite tree. These can be found at nurseries, particularly in the Southwest region of the US and in zones 9 and 10. Expert assistance for this segment was provided by Rod Pappas and Xeriscapes Unlimited, Inc. (http://xeriscapes.com), A-1 Materials Phoenix (https://ift.tt/2IkkBxb), All Season Nursery (https://ift.tt/2HYUubN), and Horizon Irrigation (https://ift.tt/1qkENQb). Ask This Old House TV Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we're ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O'Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.   This Old House releases new segments every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.   Keywords: This Old House, How-to, home improvement, DIY, jenn nawada, landscaping, desert, plants, ask this old house Watch the full episode: https://ift.tt/2HYUwAr Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House: Facebook: https://ift.tt/1psm4fC Twitter: https://twitter.com/thisoldhouse https://twitter.com/asktoh Pinterest: https://ift.tt/1psm4fE G+: https://ift.tt/1CtsNjJ Instagram: https://ift.tt/1psm1QZ Tumblr: https://ift.tt/1CtsLbH

No comments:

Post a Comment