Lawn and Garden Magic

Landscape Netting Section


 

Landscape Netting Navigation


|

Lawn and Garden MagicMain Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Berkshire Gardening Landscape |
Gardening Landscape Material Plant |
Hampton Bay Landscape Lighting |
Save On Landscape Gardening |
Garden Accessory Gardening Supply Garden Landscape |
Landscape Gardening Aberdeen |
Landscape Lighting Installation |
Landscaping Design Software |
Landscape Lighting Guide |
Starting A Landscaping Business |
Water Gardens Landscape Gardening Garden Composting |
Landscape Structures |
Fake Landscaping Rocks |
Garden Landscape Garden Accessory Gardening Supply |
Landscaping Schools |

List of Landscape-Gardening Articles
List of Landscape-Gardening Links


Landscape Netting Best seller

Organic Gardening For Beginners: Read More ...

Bonsai Tree Growing: Read More ...

Create Beautiful Water Gardens: Read More ...



Best Landscape Netting products

Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it


Main Landscape Netting sponsors

 



 

Welcome to Lawn and Garden Magic

 

Landscape Netting Article

Thumbnail example

This is a selection made from among articles on Landscape Netting. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

The Principles Behind Japanese Gardens

from: Lawn and Garden Magic



Japanese gardens have become very popular as landscaping features. This is because Japanese gardens seem to create an inherent feeling of peace and calm. Additionally, if properly planned and maintained, they aren't expensive, nor do they need to be time consuming to take care of. One of the biggest misconceptions is that a Japanese garden is supposed to have exotic flowers. This isn't true, as most Japanese gardens actually make more use of structures and plants to give them their distinctive look. It's a good idea to understand the principles behind Japanese gardens in order to have one that is truly authentic and not hard to take care of because of high maintenance exotic flowers.

One of the first principles in planning a Japanese garden is to take into account nature. Square ponds are not natural, but round ones are. Also, using shapes that occur in nature, such as rounded edges, complements the feeling of nature and peace. Also inherent in the principles of Japanese gardens is the elements of space.

Many people feel that there are "empty" portions of such gardens and the impulse is to fill them in. Leaving some attractive empty space accents the other portions of the landscape. Also understanding the concept of size is important. Don't put something large in a small space because it will look out of place and isn't in balance with its surroundings. Try to create a garden space that complements the rest of the landscape and use elements that complement each other.

Enclosures are also part of the basic design of a Japanese garden. Fences and gates create a feeling of seclusion, and also of retreat. Entrances and exits are important, not only to seal the garden away (often symbolically) from the outside, but also because it indicates moving in and moving out. Additionally, fences offer a barrier from the world, where the garden can be enjoyed fully without worrying about the cares that exist outside the garden.

There's no singular design in a Japanese garden and many people prefer to take elements and aspects of the garden and incorporate them in unique ways. Some elements of Japanese gardens include rock, water, plantings, ornaments and borrowed scenery. Each of these has a specific purpose.

Rock is the main foundation of the garden. After properly laying out the stones, the rest of the garden practically builds itself. Stone elements include tall vertical stones, short vertical stones, horizontal stones, arched stones and reclining stones. Stepping stones and rock pathways are also used. Placement of the rock is important, as the rocks have meanings. However, if you're more about aesthetics, you can simply place the rocks where you feel they best complement the look and feel of the garden.

Water can be literal, as in a built water feature, or simulated, as with raked gravel or sand. You can even make symbolic water by fitting river stones tightly together. The sound of actual water is calming and soothing and it adds to the serenity of the garden. The Japanese also view water as the symbol of the passage of time.

Plantings are secondary to that of stones in a Japanese garden, however, they are important and a main concern of the design. Placement of the plantings, as with the stones, is important to the harmony of the landscape design. You need not use bamboo trees or maples for your garden if you don't find them pleasing. Ornamental grasses, evergreens and a variety of deciduous trees can be very attractive in your garden while still fulfilling the basic principles of the Japanese garden.

Ornaments are things that serve to enhance the garden. They should not be main focuses. They're simply accents and not to be treated as main architectural elements in the garden. Some ornaments include lanterns, basins, stupas and even some sculpture. Borrowed scenery consists of element that can be seen from within the garden, but that are not actually located inside the confines of the garden. Different elements can be placed to accent a distant mountain or to reveal a beautiful tree on someone else's property.




 

Landscape Netting News

Your Letters - Chapel Hill News


Your Letters
Chapel Hill News
An Ad Hoc Deer Committee concluded we weren't overpopulated with deer and recommended using deer repellents and netting/fencing. ...

and more »

Read more...


Deaths highlight mental illness problems among asylum seekers - Irish Times


Irish Times

Deaths highlight mental illness problems among asylum seekers
Irish Times
Wire netting had been erected on higher floors to stop people jumping out. The United Kingdom Border Agency had told the Serykhs that they would be returned ...

and more »

Read more...


Hi-Line research project looks at antelope migration patterns - Billings Gazette


Hi-Line research project looks at antelope migration patterns
Billings Gazette
A helicopter netting crew works to capture antelope for radio-collaring in northern Montana. (Courtesy Photo) It's no big secret that antelope herds will ...

and more »

Read more...


How the Big Ten Network makes expansion more likely this time around - PennLive.com (blog)


PennLive.com (blog)

How the Big Ten Network makes expansion more likely this time around
PennLive.com (blog)
According to a recent Associated Press report, the Big Ten Network is now delivering $66 million annually to league coffers, netting an extra $4 million to ...

and more »

Read more...


Old-fashioned cattle thief looks to ride out term on house arrest because of ... - Dallas Morning News


Old-fashioned cattle thief looks to ride out term on house arrest because of ...
Dallas Morning News
Pippin picked off cattle in small batches, Heatly said, snatching five or six at a time and netting a few hundred dollars with each crime. ...

and more »

Read more...


Mogul owners dip sides in the mire of finances - Times of Malta


Times of Malta

Mogul owners dip sides in the mire of finances
Times of Malta
Liverpool's Steven Gerrard becomes the top British goalscorer in Europe, taking his total to 33 after his netting against Romanian side Urziceni. ...

and more »

Read more...