Buying trees for the site.
Most gardeners, choosing trees for decorating their site, dwell on what neighbors, friends and what is sold in the markets can offer them. The first thing that comes to mind is the need to quickly plant the empty territories of the site, and the assumptions about how the tree will become, when it grows, often comes much later.
The most common mistake is the choice of such a tree that can grow much more than the territory of the site provided to it. And when it reaches such sizes, the owners will be sorry to cut it down, but it is also impossible to live with it.
Little large -scale coarse -breeders usually plant in the corners of the garden, thereby creating the visual boundaries of the site. These include a red oak, a tree dumps the leaves in the fall, and, having planted it at the border of the site, you can avoid the need to constantly remove them.
Generally large park trees cause a lot of trouble. For example, dump branches, which can largely ruin the property, or even harm your health.
Among decorative trees, the most unpretentious are larch, mountain ash, birch, willow and bird cherry. By the way, willow and birch can have various decorative forms.
If you choose willow, you must remember that it requires a raw area. Usually it is planted on the shore of a stream, a pond, or just in the place where raw soil prevails. By the way, willow helps to drain the marshy soils, which can be much served by you. Another unpretentious tree is an ordinary mountain ash.
Trees can be alternated with numerous shrubs that are common today in many forms, colors. A beautiful addition to your garden will be a well -groomed evergreen lawn or hedge, which can also be performed in the most diverse forms and from various plants. Entertone plants are usually chosen for hedges.