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Bold and Beautiful Zinnias
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The Only Shrubs You Need to Grow
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25 Robust Summer Bloomers
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A gardener's checklist for early summer
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Big Flowers from Bigleaf Hydrangeas
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Friendly Ways to Battle Garden Pests
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Perfect Edges for Your Beds and Borders
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Soil Testing is Worth the Effort
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How to Start a Vegetable Garden
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Free Download: Rose Pruning and Bed Prep
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10 Perennials Easily Grown from Seed
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All About Starting Seeds
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Garden Catalog Collector
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Make Your Own Hypertufa Container
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Backyard Makeover Game
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Building a Compost Bin
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Off With Their Heads: Deadheading Perennials
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Enchanting Japanese Maples
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How to Grow Raspberries
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Variegated Plants Create Drama
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Viburnums are Versatile Shrubs
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Find the Perfect Tomato
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15 Deer-Resistant Plants
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Lilacs: Time for a Fresh Look
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Video: Make a Straw-Bale Garden
READER PHOTOS! Tim's garden in Ohio, Day 1: The gravel garden
comments (14) January 25th, 2012 in blogs
We're spending the next three days in Tim Vojt's garden in Columbus, Ohio. He's got lots of good stuff to show us! We'll start with his driveway gravel garden. Tim says, "I've been slowly creating gardens on our small suburban lot in Columbus, Ohio (USDA Hardiness Zone 6) since 1997, around our 100 year-old, four-square home. There are challenges and surprises that shaped and continue to shape the gardens, but finding plants and creative solutions are part of the fun.
This first set of photos is of my backyard, full-sun gravel garden, between a perennial bed and our our off-street-parking gravel pad. At some point in the history of the house, the gravel parking area (about 9 inches deep) that extended all the way to the house was covered with about 6 inches of dirt. The perennial garden was created by digging out the gravel and replacing it with soil. I left a circular area of turf as a visual relief, but it was always a dry, weedy mess. I decided to take advantage of the great drainage of the dirty gravel and see what would grow. Now penstemons, cold hardy agaves, creeping thyme, sedum, dianthus, and muhlenbeckia thrive in the dry heat!" Such a great little garden, Tim! Stay tuned for Tim's front yard transformation tomorrow. Gotta love before-and-after photos!
* * * CALL FOR TIPS!! * * *
Hey all, while I have your attention, we're desperate for your gardening tips for the TIPS department in the magazine (remember that stuff called paper?). Got any helpful shortcuts, quick and easy design ideas, or nifty gardening tricks? Email me at mgervais@taunton.com! We pay $25 for each tip that we publish, and you could even win a free one-year subscription to the mag! Come on, do a girl a favor...please? --Michelle
posted in: hardscape, Ohio
Welcome to the Fine Gardening GARDEN PHOTO OF THE DAY blog!
Every weekday we post a new photo of a great garden, a spectacular plant, a stunning plant combination, or any number of other subjects. Think of it as your morning jolt of green.
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Comments (14)
Isn't Ohio icy cold and covered with that white stuff a good part of the year... that yard will be awfully boring during the cold months, will look like the Ohio State Penetentiary exercise yard, only thing missing are the guard towers. There needs to be shrubs, trees, and especially evergreens/conifers... should be easy pickings with no deer in that yard to contend with... I'm locked into spruce or fence. Sorry but I'm not liking all that moonscape gravelly appearance (says a septic system contractor lives here). No matter how contained that gravel flows like lava, I'd become very annoyed with having to constantly pick up all those pebbles and have to drag them back where they belong... everytime a vehicle backs out at least a pound of gravel will end up in the road. Now that there's a good gravel base rent a vibratory tamper to compress the driveway, add a layer of sand, and cover it with pavers, perhaps an attractive herringbone pattern. From what I can see of the neighbor's yards they look lush.
Posted: 10:06 am on January 25th
Looking forward to seeing more of Tim's efforts in the next 2 days. Posted: 9:10 am on January 25th