českyslovenskyenglishdeutschpolsky
Who's Online 658

LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE

Plants: x Chitalpa tashkentensis 'Pink Dawn' - chitalpa

Posted by havlis 06.09. 2011 11:41:49 (4023 readers)
Need a tree flowering in summer, ideally with an exotic look? Then chitalpa is the best choice! This beautiful and hardy hybrid was created in 1964 in Uzbekistan. It is a cross between Desert Willow with rather exotic flowers and northern Catalpa.
( Read More... | 1542 bytes more | Printer Friendly Page | Discussion forum| )

Landscaping With Fruit

Posted by amazon 06.09. 2011 11:32:41 (2461 readers)
Strawberry ground covers, blueberry hedges, grape arbors, and 39 other luscious fruits to make your yard an edible paradise
Fruit trees, shrubs, and vines are true two-for-one plants. Many varieties are strikingly beautiful — well suited to doing double duty as delicious sources of sweet, organic fruit and as ornamental additions to the home landscape. Backyard fruit plants also tie in perfectly with the growing locavore movement. It's difficult to find food that's more local than one's own backyard!
( Read More... | 2227 bytes more | Printer Friendly Page | Discussion forum| )

Plants: Mespilus germanica - common medlar

Posted by abies 06.09. 2011 11:22:52 (1994 readers)
The Common Medlar is a large shrub or small tree. In Middle Europe it grows up to 3 m tall. It has luxuriant dark green foliage, elliptic, 8–15 cm long and 3–4 cm wide. The leaves turn a spectacular red in autumn before falling. The five-petalled white or pinkish flowers are produced in from May to June.
( Read More... | 2314 bytes more | Printer Friendly Page | Discussion forum| )

Plants: Morus nigra - black mulberry

Posted by abies 06.09. 2011 11:16:25 (3188 readers)
The black mulberry is generally considered the best tasting of the various mulberry species. It is grown for its delicious, raspberry-like fruit, mulberries. They have a unique tart-sweet taste and are eaten fresh or can be used just like any berry.
( Read More... | 1090 bytes more | Printer Friendly Page | Discussion forum| )

The Permaculture Way

Posted by amazon 06.09. 2011 11:07:41 (1840 readers)
Practical Steps To Create A Self-Sustaining World
The Permaculture Way shows us how to consciously design a lifestyle which is low in environmental impact and highly productive. It demonstrates how to meet our needs, make the most of resources by minimizing waste and maximizing potential, and still leave the Earth richer than we found it
( Read More... | 435 bytes more | Printer Friendly Page | Discussion forum| )

Plants: Osmanthus aquifolium - sweet olive, tea olive

Posted by havlis 12.08. 2011 10:56:00 (3996 readers)
Osmanthus is a genus of about 15-20, while only a few ones are hardy enough to grow down to zone 6. Those are often mistaken for hollies owing to their foliage appearance. Osmanthus is native to Japan and China, some species originate in the south of USA.
( Read More... | 2618 bytes more | Printer Friendly Page | Discussion forum| )

Garden Ponds, Fountains & Waterfalls for Your Home

Posted by amazon 12.08. 2011 10:46:58 (2883 readers)
Garden Ponds, Fountains & Waterfalls for Your Home provides essential information on designing and installing all types of home water gardens, from naturalistic to formal, plus fountains, waterfalls, streams, and bog gardens.
( Read More... | 1339 bytes more | Printer Friendly Page | Discussion forum| )

Great Gardens of Britain

Posted by amazon 12.08. 2011 10:40:40 (2274 readers)
Britain is famous all over the world for its gardens. In this book Helena Attlee focuses on twenty of the finest gardens in the country. Her choice encompasses a rich selection of sites all over England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, ranging from famous eighteenth-century landscapes such as Stourhead to quirky modern gardens such as Charles Jencks' Garden of Cosmic Speculation in the Scottish borders. Her lively text provides a brief history of each garden combined with a vivid account of its main features.
( Read More... | 1629 bytes more | Printer Friendly Page | Discussion forum| )

Plants: Campsis radicans - trumpet creeper

Posted by havlis 12.08. 2011 10:26:40 (2889 readers)
Campsis radicans - tree form
This is the species of north-american trumpet creeper trained into a tree with a real stem. It bears terminal cymes of rich red, trumpet-shaped flowers from early summer until the first frosts. Pinnate leaves are deep green and enhance its tropical appearance.
( Read More... | 1745 bytes more | Printer Friendly Page | Discussion forum| )

Plants: Acer platanoides 'Drummondii' - Norway maple

Posted by havlis 11.08. 2011 12:47:16 (2701 readers)
Drummondii is a variegated form of Norway maple, only some 100 years old. The decades from its birth proved its popularity which is still very high. The leaves are beautifully creamy white variegated at the margins, with bright green centres.
( Read More... | 1169 bytes more | Printer Friendly Page | Discussion forum| )

Gaia's Garden - Second Edition

Posted by amazon 11.08. 2011 12:39:30 (2129 readers)
A Guide to Home-Scale Permaculture Reclaiming Domesticity from a Consumer Culture
The first edition of Gaia’s Garden sparked the imagination of America’s home gardeners, introducing permaculture’s central message: Working with Nature, not against her, results in more beautiful, abundant, and forgiving gardens. This extensively revised and expanded second edition broadens the reach and depth of the permaculture approach for urban and suburban growers.
( Read More... | 1882 bytes more | Printer Friendly Page | Discussion forum| )

Australian Native Plants Concise Edition

Posted by amazon 11.08. 2011 12:30:37 (1968 readers)
Cultivation, Use in Landscaping and Propagation
This excellent volume of Australian native plants includes over 1500 species of plants, trees, shrubs, annuals, ground covers, bedding plants and climbers for your garden.
( Read More... | 446 bytes more | Printer Friendly Page | Discussion forum| )

Planting the Dry Shade Garden

Posted by amazon 11.08. 2011 12:26:23 (2320 readers)
The Best Plants for the Toughest Spot in Your Garden
In this book you'll learn how to prune selectively to admit more light and how to amend soil to increase its moisture retention. You'll also learn about more than 130 plants that accept reduced light and moisture levels-long-blooming woodland gems like epimediums and hellebores, and even lush foliage plants like evergreen ferns and hardy gingers, shrubs, climbers, perennials, ground covers, bulbs, annuals, and perennials - there is an entire palette to help you transform challenging spaces into rich, rewarding gardens
( Read More... | 810 bytes more | Printer Friendly Page | Discussion forum| )

Echinacea, Rudbeckia and summer grasses

Posted by pph 01.08. 2011 12:00:47 (3121 readers)
‘Heat’ is a powerful sensory stimulus – look at how it is used in advertising everything from perfumes to cars. Heat equates to danger, excitement, sexual attraction. Plants can very much evoke a sense of heat too, with vivid colours setting the pulse racing. Rudbeckia and Echinacea are two prairie flowers that love it as the mercury climbs and look just right shimmering in the sun. Add into the mix the calming balance of some flowering grasses and you have a ready-made planting combination that will cope with the driest of summers.
( Read More... | 3523 bytes more | Printer Friendly Page | Discussion forum| )

Plants: Caryopteris x clandonensis 'Kew Blue' - bluebeard

Posted by havlis 01.08. 2011 11:48:12 (2858 readers)
Bluebeard is an attractive shrub with rare late summer/early autumn flowering. In colder zones it is supposed to be a perennial rather than a woody shrub as it may freeze down to the ground.
( Read More... | 1143 bytes more | Printer Friendly Page | Discussion forum| )

Plants: Cornus controversa 'Variegata' - wedding cake tree, giant dogwood

Posted by havlis 01.08. 2011 11:38:01 (3425 readers)
This giant dogwood has another name which, in my opinion, characterizes the plant much better = wedding cake tree. Looking at the habit of the more commonly grown cultivar Variegata one knows exactly what it means. This beauty can easily become a show-stopping specimen in a garden of literally any style. Its tiered branches look exactly like several layers of a wedding cake and the white-variegated foliage stands for rich sugary icing. Want a piece?
( Read More... | 2318 bytes more | Printer Friendly Page | Discussion forum| )

Garden Designers at Home

Posted by amazon 06.07. 2011 19:06:06 (2604 readers)
The Private Spaces of the World's Leading Designers
The gardens designers have created for their clients may be familiar to garden enthusiasts, but what happens in the designers' own backyards? This fascinating book takes a look at the gardens of some top designers, investigating how they differ from their commissioned work, the design process, and how they reflect their owner's design philosophy.
( Read More... | 1311 bytes more | Printer Friendly Page | Discussion forum| )

Clematis - An Essential Guide

Posted by amazon 06.07. 2011 18:57:38 (2331 readers)
Clematis are loved for the abundance and color of their blooms but are not so well known for their versatility. Although they are typically and successfully used as climbers, they can be grown almost anywhere under most conditions. This essential guide introduces the genus in all its glory to the novice gardener and extends the knowledge of the more experienced. As well as explaining how to care for clematis, it inspires gardeners to recognize the vast range of clematis available today and the many different ways there are go grow them.
( Read More... | 1013 bytes more | Printer Friendly Page | Discussion forum| )

Plants: Acer palmatum ('Crispifolium') 'Shishigashira' - japanese maple

Posted by havlis 06.07. 2011 18:26:38 (2828 readers)
Japanese maples are the „créme de la créme“ of every garden. A majestic looking tree needs no pruning at all and we recommend to let it form its own shape.
( Read More... | 1330 bytes more | Printer Friendly Page | Discussion forum| )

Plants: Hibiscus syriacus 'Diana' - Rose of Sharon

Posted by havlis 06.07. 2011 18:14:09 (3753 readers)
Diana has large, pure white blossoms without the purple eye, so typical for hibiscus. This makes it a very elegant flowering shrub that is popular in Californian style where masses of green leaves come first and then attractive flowers, preferable of one colour. And white remains the top favourite.
( Read More... | 3277 bytes more | Printer Friendly Page | Discussion forum| )
Categories
06.09.
Articles
02.10.
Invitation
06.09.
Plants