Your Home and Garden

Workshop Overhaul your garden the smart way – Carol shows us how

Creating a new garden doesn’t have to mean starting from scratch. It’s better for the budget and the planet to work with what you have to give your garden a facelift

- Text by Carol Bucknell.

1 SURVEY YOUR SITE

Begin by assessing the garden thoroughly. When making over an existing garden (or, indeed, starting with bare earth), knowing your site well is the best way to avoid costly mistakes such as digging into a drain or putting barrow loads of plants in the wrong spot.

If you can, get hold of a profession­ally drawn, scaled site plan of your property (often held by council); otherwise do a rough measure of boundaries, the house footprint, paths etc yourself. Draw these to scale (1:100 normally) then mark it up with areas that are windy, sunny, boggy or have good soil, along with the plants you want to keep, the location of services such as electricit­y cables and sewer pipes, and changes of level.

2 PLANTING PLAN

Take a good, long look at the existing plants in your garden before you make any changes. Waiting a few months, or ideally a year, lets you see how they perform at different times of year.

If given a good prune, that scruffy tree might actually flower beautifull­y, provide shade in summer or produce fruit.

You may not especially like those daylilies, but they could cover that hot bank along the driveway. Think laterally. If there is only one mature tree on your site, is it worth keeping it and building the deck or terrace around it?

Keep any plants with potential in pots (large trees will often survive for months if their root ball is wrapped well in sacking and kept moist) until you decide where they could fit on your new plan. If they don’t, give them away.

3 FLOOR PLAN

Paving can make a big hole in the budget. You can save yourself a lot of money by reusing what’s there – for instance, breaking up old concrete to make stepping stones or crazy paving set in gravel (the cheapest form of hard surface in the garden and easy to lay). Or find used pavers online on Trade Me or similar. Rather than removing unsightly concrete, cover it with pavers and/or gravel.

4 GREEN WALLS

Another option is to cover shabby timber fences with horizontal trellis, brushwood or bamboo panels. To improve privacy and add interest and texture to a plain fence, try fixing trellis panels to the tops of existing timber fences (as long as this doesn’t exceed the legal fence height for your area). To improve an unattracti­ve concrete or brick wall, try training a climber on wires to grow over it.

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