Christine Neil
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40 Ways to Stretch your Landscaping Dollar

Save Money

  • Reputable nurseries offer free advice and can save you from costly mistakes.
  • Use magazines and books as resources, or enlist a green-thumbed friend's assistance.
  • Make your own decisions – Keep in mind that profit motives make some unprofessional landscapers overzealous.
  • Stick with what you want and can afford – you can always add more later.
  • Share bulk purchases with a friend (or combine mail-order purchases to cut down on delivery costs), and rent garden equipment with other gardeners.
  • Avoid impulse buying – When you visit the nursery, ask yourself: Do I really have room for these plants?
  • Comparison shop – Nurseries may differ in price and quality.
  • Self-reliant species are sometimes better buys than high-maintenance exotic beauties.
  • Landscape with mature sizes in mind, or you may end up paying to move too-large plants.

Dirt Cheap

  • Test to see what your soil lacks, and you won't buy unneeded additives or the wrong plant.
  • Neutralise your soil's pH – If it's too acidic or alkaline, plants can't take up nutrients, and fertilisers are wasted.
  • Collect manure – Some farmers give it freely. Let fresh manure age before using it or it may burn plants.
  • New plants need phosphorus for roots; leafing plants need nitrogen for structure; budding plants need potassium for fruiting.
  • Convert garden and kitchen refuse into humus and improve your soil's health, aeration, and water-holding capacity.

Lavish Lawns

  • Save on labour by leaving grass clippings on the lawn.
  • Buy fertiliser in bulk.
  • Feed lawns in autumn when growth slows and roots can store the nutrients.
  • Leave grass clippings where they fall – You will return vital nutrients to the soil, reduce your need to fertilise, and not need to compost the clippings.
  • Seed lawns in the autumn – There's less likelihood of humidity-triggered diseases or hard-washing rains.
  • Disease and insect-resistant grasses reduce the need for lawn chemicals.
  • Make your own insecticide – Water mixed with 1-2 percent liquid dishwashing soap kills soft-shell insects.

Flower Power

  • Annuals will give you color all season without the price tag.
  • Save surplus flower seeds – In a cool, dry place, they'll remain viable for four to five years.
  • Sow seeds directly in the ground – You won't have to outlay for potting mixtures, trays etc.
  • Mix annuals into your planting scheme – Perennials are an expensive investment, so purchase some of the bulk punnets of petunias and impatiens.
  • Of the perennials you do buy, plant those that are vigorous multipliers, such as daffodils or lily-of-the-valley, and in two to three years you will have three to five times as many plants.
  • Divide large clumps of perennials such as hostas, daylilies and chrysanthemums into several plants. Take root cuttings from easy-to-grow shrubs such as pussy willows, azaleas, and forsythia.
  • Select species that grow naturally in your region to avoid such costs as extra watering, pampering through winter, and soil correction.

Magnificent Mulch

  • Mulch saves the time and labour spent on weeding.
  • Mulch reduces watering costs, prevents erosion, provides climate protection, and improves soil.
  • Layer about 24 pages of newspaper in your garden bed, soak them with water, then anchor them with a thin soil layer or other mulch.
  • Gather fallen leaves. Your garden will have a more balanced pH if you mix in a broad range of acid/alkaline leaf varieties.
  • Collect untreated sawdust from sawmills. It's clean, easy to spread, and cost effective.
  • You'll save $’s by buying bark by the truckload.
  • Wait for end of season sales – Tree planting is generally as effective in early autumn as in early spring.
  • Plant wind-resistant trees – Storms can cost you a huge tree-removal bill if you plant a brittle species such as silver maple.
  • Protect your foundations – Roots can damage concrete blocks, so plant large trees at least 10 metres from the house.
  • Good pruning can perform miracles on neglected shrubbery and save you the expense of replacements.
  • Camouflage eyesores – Plant climbing vines to hide a sagging fence.
  • Make a septic tank goldfish pond – In most areas a septic-tank bottom costs less than a fiberglass pond. Since the structure is underground, the only difference you'll see is in the cost.

 

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