Outdoors Landscaping & Gardening Curb Appeal
Don’t let badly designed or maintained landscaping wreck your home’s curb appeal.
Here are pitfalls to avoid.
Clumsy, neglected, and hodgepodge landscaping not only hurts your home’s curb appeal, it can cut the value of your property and make it harder to sell.
Real estate appraisers say bad landscaping is a buyer turnoff that can increase the number of days a property languishes on the market, which also hurts prices.
Even more important, bad landscaping is a downer that hurts the way you see and enjoy your home.
Don’t let bad landscaping happen to you. Here are the seven landscaping mistakes that bust, rather than boost, your home’s curb appeal.
1. Planting Without A Plan
Some landscaping choices, such as a line of begonias, will last a season; others, like trees,
can last a lifetime. So, take time to plan and plot a yard that gives you maximum enjoyment
and curb appeal.
For the design challenged, landscape architects are worth the investment ($300-$2,500
depending on yard size). They will render elevations of your future yard, and provide plant
lists so you can install landscaping yourself.
2. Too Much Togetherness
Yes, planting in clusters looks way better than installing single plants, soldier-like, throughout
your yard. But make sure your groups of perennials, shrubs, and trees have plenty of room to
spread, or they’ll look choked and overgrown. Also, over-crowded landscaping competes
with itself for food and water, putting the clusters at risk, especially during drought.
Google how high and wide the mature plant will be, and then combine that info with the suggestions on planting labels. At first, garden beds of young plants will look too airy and prairie-like. But within three years, your beds will fill in with room to grow.
Remember: First year it sleeps, second it creeps, third it leaps.
3. Zoning Out
Don’t be seduced by catalog plants that look gorgeous on paper but aren’t suited to your
hardiness zone. You’ll wind up with plants that die prematurely, or demand winter covers,
daily watering, and other intensive efforts to keep them alive and well.
Check plant labels to see which hardiness zones are best for your plants.
4. More of the Same
Resist the design temptation to carpet-bomb your yard with your favorite plant or shrub,
which will create a boring, monochromatic landscape. Worse, your yard will look great when
your fave flowers bloom, then will look drab the rest of the year.
Mix things up and strive for four-season color. For example, combine spring-blooming
azaleas with summer-blooming roses and autumn-blazing shrubs — such as burning
bushes (Euonymus alatus). For winter color, try the red osier dogwood (Cornus stolonifera),
a hardy shrub that sports bright-red branches in winter.
Related:
5. Refusing to Bury Your Dead
Nothing wrecks curb appeal faster than rows of dead or dying shrubs and perennials. So
quickly remove your dearly departed landscaping from your front and side yards.
Spent plants that lived their natural lives are good candidates for a compost pile — if you
grind them first, they’ll decompose faster. But if your landscaping succumbed to disease or
infestation, it’s best to inter them in black plastic bags, then add to the trash.
6. Weeds Gone Wild
Weeds not only wreck the look of your landscaping, they compete with pricey vegetation for
water and food. Weeds also can shorten the life of brick, stone, and pavers by growing in
mortar cracks.
The best way to stop weeds is to spread a pre-emergent about three weeks before weed
seeds typically germinate. If you can’t stop weeds from growing, at least get rid of them
before they flower and send a zillion weed seeds throughout your yard.
7. Contain Those Critters
Deer, rabbits, and other backyard pests think your landscaping is an all-you-can eat buffet,
leaving you with denuded branches and topless perennials.
If you’ve got a critter problem:
Plant deer- or rabbit-resistant varieties. Your local extension agent can provide a list of
green things critters won’t eat in your area.
Install an electric fence around landscaping you want to protect.
Spray plants with critter repellent. After a hard rain, spray again.
© Copyright 2013 NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS
By: Lisa Kaplan Gordon
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