i'd like to firmly plant myself in your bush, totter around your privit trim your hedge nibble your weed and if i may be so bold clear out yer guttering.
2006-08-17 17:19:12
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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It would be wonderful just like the garden of Eden.
There would be a wildlife area that would attract birds, bees, butterflies, ladybirds and other insects.
There must be some water flowing and some windchimes.
Lots of trees, bushes and colourful flowers that would bloom all the years round. There would be some lush green grass - it would be heavenly.
It would be located in the country but not far from the sea so if I did decided to go for a change of scenery I could then go for a stroll along the beach, hear the waves lap along the shore, see the many colours of the pebbles, collect some shells, hear the seagulls in the sky and laze upon the sands in the sunshine in my beach garden.
2006-08-17 07:17:53
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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It would be a large orchard with oranges, lemons, grapes, olives, and other permanenty annual fruit and fig trees.
That garden would be somewhere that citrus fruit grows well, close (or in) the Alps where skiing is possible in the winter.
The garden would be large enough to produce enough fruit (some of it preserved and some eaten fresh, some wine, and some jam) for a whole year for approximately 10 people in an average year. I would suspect that a few acres would be sufficient. (about 3-4 perhaps)
There would also be room for a few cows, sheep, chickens and pigs. (about 1-2 acres for a small renewable livestock for personal use only, or for trade)
If I was to be more specific it would probably be France or Switzerland in the French speaking corner.
Does this make you wistful?
2006-08-17 07:23:18
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answer #3
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answered by James 6
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It would be a walled garden with fruit trees (apples, pears, cherry, plum) at one end, a vegetable section, a laid out herb garden , flower beds, a shrubbery, a rose garden and a perfect bowling green lawn. There would be a pretty gazebo in which to have afternoon tea. There would be no weeds and a very handsome gardener to do all the work. The garden would be at the back of the house, which would be a large thatched cottage that has all mod cons inside. Oh, and the garden walls would be covered with honeysuckle, jasmine, clematis, wisteria and forsythia.
2006-08-17 07:20:16
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answer #4
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answered by blondie 6
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2016-04-25 19:27:06
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answer #5
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answered by irmgard 3
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My perfect garden, would have blooms on the plants for every season. I would have a shade tree for the main focal point with a bench or a hammock or both for reading or just relaxing. I would have a small pond with koi in it, the sound of rippling water can be soothing. I love Hosts, and roses, I would have a special place just for a rose garden. And lots of trellises and an arbor or two for my favorite vines, which are climbing roses, clematis, and potato vine. Bleeding hearts would be about everywhere also. Lilac bushes smell really nice too. I love frogs, I would have to have frogs and fairy statues in my garden at different places, and solar lights to show off all my favorite spots. I would have every color of rose of sharon tree i could find too. With stepping stones throughout to guide your way through my perfect garden.
2006-08-17 08:53:30
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answer #6
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answered by Vicki H 2
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I would have massive lawns broken up by flower beds full of roses, delphiniums and a host of other colourful flowers, a trellised arch would lead to an area of trees and shrubs with a water feature and a small Chinese style bridge over it. But most importantly it would have to be self maintaining with automatic lawn mowing, weeding, pruning (plus automatic disposal of rubbish), thinning and replanting without me having to lift a finger to do anything. I would also like two or three garden seats dotted around so that I could sit and dream when the mood took me.
2006-08-17 07:22:49
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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2016-04-13 13:44:09
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answer #8
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answered by ? 3
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The front yard would have a hedge of rosemary going all the way around it, with ground lighting installed at regular intervals. There would be rose bushes growing in front of all the windows, and a walkway of crushed granite would wind around the entire side of the house.
The gate going to the back yard would have creeping rose vines on trellises set all around it on both sides of the fence, with arched trellises on both sides of the gate.
A concrete walkway would lead up to the front door, and would have rows of impatiens blooming on both sides, with ground lights set at even intervals along it. Marigolds with ground lights would line the driveway.
The back, and side walls of the back yard would be surrounded by a row of alternating poemgranite and italian cypress trees, each planted about four feet apart. In the back, blackberries would be trained to grow up over the bars on all the back windows in patches. there would be a pool near the house, which would have a row of all different kinds of citrus fruits: Lemons, Limes, Oranges, Tangerines, Kumquats... Well, no grapefruit... but that's just me.
There would be no grass. Apricots, Cherries, Mulberries, and Prickly pears would grow in different spots. Tomatoes and chard would be in various parts of the yard, and a large Avocado tree would be in a prominent place.
2006-08-17 08:02:20
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answer #9
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answered by ye_river_xiv 6
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No grass. A mix of flowering perennials, shrubs, and ground covers. Some beautiful ornamental trees that let in some sun for the flowering plants underneath. All plants native to my area. No watering except during the hot summer months. A rather wild, untamed look for a less-than-formal garden. Bees, hummingbirds, and butterflies happlily fly from flower to flower doing nature's work.
2006-08-17 07:52:52
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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Hmmm, good question.
Moonlight gardens/evening gardens sound really nice. They are gardens that are meant to be be viewed mainly after dark. Lots of white and light-colored blooms. Silver plants like artemsia, dust miller, and lamb's ear. Plants that unfold thier blooms in low light. Plants that release thier fragrance after dark like evening stock, nicotiana, jasmine. With little solar lights lining a stepping stone pathway, garden benches, and little pond or fountain. Fairy houses and birdhouses made of natural materials.
I was impressed with all the purple plants I saw this past spring: flowering plum trees, purple heart, Bonfire dwarf peach, Persian shield, etc. You could have an all purple garden. I planted stock with purple blooms, dusty miller, blackie sweet potato vine, silver licorice vine, lamb's ear and purple heart in a tub and was very pleased with how it looked. Very soothing to gaze upon.
I love scented herb plants that give off scent when you brush against them. Basil, mints, fennel, etc. and soft touchable plants like lamb's ear and a similiar plant I don't know the name of.
Then there's xeriscaping...plants that don't require a great deal of water once they're established. Lots of those are hummingbird and butterfly attractants. www.highcountrygardens.com
2006-08-17 09:47:15
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answer #11
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answered by February Rain 4
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