Found these lovely romantic armchairs at Lukas Nursery in Oviedo. The comfortable, blue chairs made out of a cement resin, look like they were designed for an Alice in Wonderland fantasy. I can picture them sitting on a lakefront landscape of a picturesque mansion. The price would require a mansion. They are selling for just under $1000 for the pair.
Showing posts with label landscapes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label landscapes. Show all posts
Thursday, December 22, 2011
Monday, November 21, 2011
Leesburg Couple Rips Up Grass But Is It Florida-friendly?
Central Florida communities that use a lot of water seem to be blaming it all on the turfgrass. In a Lake Sentinel article this weekend, one Leesburg couple using 30,000 gallons of water a month on their landscape decided to overhaul their entire yard and replace it with rocks, mulch, and supposedly "drought-tolerant" landscaping. But was it necessary?
That term drought-tolerant is getting really old and the misperceptions of turfgrass being the culprit is just downright wrong. All plants are drought-tolerant in the right locations and turfgrass needing a lot of water is not true. St. Augustinegrass only needs between 1" and 1.5" of water a week during the summertime if it doesn't get rainfall and only needs that amount once every ten to fourteen days in the cooler winter season. That anyone uses 30,000 gallons on their lawn is the fault of the homeowner, an inefficient irrigation system, and a poorly designed landscape. If you have a rock, mulch, and "drought-tolerant" plants, depending on the size of your yard, even 10,000 gallons is too much! Your landscape should be able to survive and thrive on rainfall alone after establishment.
Its up to the cities and counties that are approving landscape plans and irrigation systems to allow only the correct landscapes with efficient irrigation. Homeowners working with builders or buying new homes need to demand and insist on a certified Florida Water Star landscape and irrigation system. Then the responsibility falls on the homeowner to maintain his landscape and watering system correctly to ensure that it works efficiently.
Rocks are not the keystones to water efficiency and can actually increase the amount of water that installed plants in a rock garden need. The heat around the home will be greater. Using no tufgrass is going to lead to more stormwater pollution of our water bodies. I repeat: There is nothing wrong with turfgrass.
Heck, this is Florida! This is not Arizona and we can have beautiful landscapes with lots of flowers, shrubs, palms, and yes, Virginia, even turfgrass and not have a high water bill or overuse our ample water supply. Florida receives abundant rainfall and with observant care, our irrigation systems should only be used as a supplement when we don't have rain. Depending on the size of your lawn and your landscape plants, using 10.000 gallons of water or less should be easily achievable.
Before anyone installs a landscape that is all rocks, mulch, and no turf, do your research, contact your County Extension office and find out the facts about waterwise landscaping. You will be very surprised to learn that its probably not your grass's fault that you have a high water bill or high maintenance landscape.
The Vision House 2008 in Montverde, Florida uses only non-potable water from a HOOT system and a 7,000 gallon cistern. It is a great example of Florida-friendly landscaping. Low maintenance and low water use.
Vision House 2008
That term drought-tolerant is getting really old and the misperceptions of turfgrass being the culprit is just downright wrong. All plants are drought-tolerant in the right locations and turfgrass needing a lot of water is not true. St. Augustinegrass only needs between 1" and 1.5" of water a week during the summertime if it doesn't get rainfall and only needs that amount once every ten to fourteen days in the cooler winter season. That anyone uses 30,000 gallons on their lawn is the fault of the homeowner, an inefficient irrigation system, and a poorly designed landscape. If you have a rock, mulch, and "drought-tolerant" plants, depending on the size of your yard, even 10,000 gallons is too much! Your landscape should be able to survive and thrive on rainfall alone after establishment.
Its up to the cities and counties that are approving landscape plans and irrigation systems to allow only the correct landscapes with efficient irrigation. Homeowners working with builders or buying new homes need to demand and insist on a certified Florida Water Star landscape and irrigation system. Then the responsibility falls on the homeowner to maintain his landscape and watering system correctly to ensure that it works efficiently.
Rocks are not the keystones to water efficiency and can actually increase the amount of water that installed plants in a rock garden need. The heat around the home will be greater. Using no tufgrass is going to lead to more stormwater pollution of our water bodies. I repeat: There is nothing wrong with turfgrass.
Heck, this is Florida! This is not Arizona and we can have beautiful landscapes with lots of flowers, shrubs, palms, and yes, Virginia, even turfgrass and not have a high water bill or overuse our ample water supply. Florida receives abundant rainfall and with observant care, our irrigation systems should only be used as a supplement when we don't have rain. Depending on the size of your lawn and your landscape plants, using 10.000 gallons of water or less should be easily achievable.
Before anyone installs a landscape that is all rocks, mulch, and no turf, do your research, contact your County Extension office and find out the facts about waterwise landscaping. You will be very surprised to learn that its probably not your grass's fault that you have a high water bill or high maintenance landscape.
The Vision House 2008 in Montverde, Florida uses only non-potable water from a HOOT system and a 7,000 gallon cistern. It is a great example of Florida-friendly landscaping. Low maintenance and low water use.
Vision House 2008
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Sustainability Isn’t a Plant List
First published in Ornamental Outlook, June 2008
Horticulture experts expect similar plant questions seasonally – it’s what we do. With the new landscaping trend of “Florida-friendly”, I’m finding one question germinating the same way: “I can’t find this plant on THE plant list!” Government planning departments, builders, homeowners, and landscapers trust that if it’s on the plant list, it’s sustainable and could, no, should be used. That’s not the point of sustainable landscaping. Suitable, sustainable landscaping isn’t a plant list, nor is it the mandatory turf grass, five trees, fifty shrubs, for every lot.
There are three basic needs of sustainable landscaping: knowledge, efficiency, and proper maintenance.
Deciding on a plant palette doesn’t require an adherence to a plant list. It requires knowledge of the site, which includes sunlight, soil contents, site percolation, and pH conditions. When plant lists are used, the ugliness of cookie-cutter landscapes, less diversity, and higher maintenance properties becomes the norm.
Designing a landscape entails knowing how the site is going to be used and what the building will look like, specifically where the doors and windows, sidewalks, driveways, etc will be placed. This information is crucial to which plants are selected and how the owner of the property will eventually maintain it. Selecting improper plants for a site can mean high maintenance bills with necessity for using chemicals to curtail insect and disease problems, the usual symptoms of an overstressed landscape.
An on-site inspection before the landscape is designed, then again - before the landscape is installed is also necessary. If the site is undeveloped property, depending on how it was graded with roads, swales and utilities installed, the soil conditions may have been impacted since the landscaping plan was designed and need adjustments to the plant recommendations.
New environmental aficionados still want a plant list. “Just tell me what I need to plant” is a familiar plea and when you depend on someone’s expertise, you’re hoping they know what they need to do. The plant list is only a tool to use but just like the familiar adages “the right tool for the job” and “there’s more than one way to skin a cat” – plants lists are not the end-all and frankly, shouldn’t be used except for suggestions for specific plant needs, i.e. xeric, hydric soils or shade loving plants. Recommending a plant list without knowing the site conditions or having a variety of site conditions is tantamount to having an unsustainable landscape.
Getting an efficient irrigation system comes with a price. That can be a hard sell to builders, developers, and homeowners who have become quite comfortable with Florida’s low-cost lifestyle. Water, labor, and materials are cheap compared to other parts of the country, especially when it’s not being correctly done; so changing the mindset of what efficient is can be tricky. Having irrigation systems with 15% to 47% effectiveness isn’t sustainable but it’s usually what the homeowner gets when the bottom line means not informing the end-user of the cost of not installing irrigation correctly.
When improper plants are selected, crammed into an instant landscape , compounded with an inefficient irrigation system, you have an unsustainable landscape. The results are less drought tolerant landscapes, usually more weeds, insects, and diseases resulting in an overuse of chemicals, leading to stormwater runoff issues and a vicious cycle of expensive and high maintenance. High maintenance details of constant pruning, usually with unsterilized or infected tools can lead to spreading of insects and disease, with hedges succumbing to inevitable bare-bottom syndrome and ornamental trees falling prey to crape murder. I’m always amazed at homeowners and businesses settling and paying for these landscape disasters thinking that these disastrous methods are best management practices.
There are plants, shrubs, and trees for every lifestyle and landscape design. There are plants that thrive with shearing and there can be a need for deadheading and pruning after flowering to ensure a vibrant and healthy shrub or tree. Forcing high maintenance and instant landscapes on unsuspecting homeowners and commercial properties that trust that the builders, developers, landscape architects and landscape companies are installing a low maintenance, sustainable landscape, is not good business.
Sustainability is not a plant list but a philosophy. In gardening, sustainability’s philosophy is way of living so that landscape plants, irrigation, and the post-upkeep is efficient, uses resources wisely, and allows for proper maintenance. As more and more sustainable development is achieved, the lower the market costs for the plants, labor, and materials will become.
Researching the property for proper plant selection, determining the seasonal attractiveness so that there is lusciousness and beauty, combined with installing an efficient irrigation system that in the future will mean lower bills for the homeowner and a better use of our precious water supply will benefit the entire state of Florida.
Want to find the right plants for your landscape? Check out SJRWMD's Waterwise Landscapes.
Horticulture experts expect similar plant questions seasonally – it’s what we do. With the new landscaping trend of “Florida-friendly”, I’m finding one question germinating the same way: “I can’t find this plant on THE plant list!” Government planning departments, builders, homeowners, and landscapers trust that if it’s on the plant list, it’s sustainable and could, no, should be used. That’s not the point of sustainable landscaping. Suitable, sustainable landscaping isn’t a plant list, nor is it the mandatory turf grass, five trees, fifty shrubs, for every lot.
There are three basic needs of sustainable landscaping: knowledge, efficiency, and proper maintenance.
Deciding on a plant palette doesn’t require an adherence to a plant list. It requires knowledge of the site, which includes sunlight, soil contents, site percolation, and pH conditions. When plant lists are used, the ugliness of cookie-cutter landscapes, less diversity, and higher maintenance properties becomes the norm.
Designing a landscape entails knowing how the site is going to be used and what the building will look like, specifically where the doors and windows, sidewalks, driveways, etc will be placed. This information is crucial to which plants are selected and how the owner of the property will eventually maintain it. Selecting improper plants for a site can mean high maintenance bills with necessity for using chemicals to curtail insect and disease problems, the usual symptoms of an overstressed landscape.
An on-site inspection before the landscape is designed, then again - before the landscape is installed is also necessary. If the site is undeveloped property, depending on how it was graded with roads, swales and utilities installed, the soil conditions may have been impacted since the landscaping plan was designed and need adjustments to the plant recommendations.
New environmental aficionados still want a plant list. “Just tell me what I need to plant” is a familiar plea and when you depend on someone’s expertise, you’re hoping they know what they need to do. The plant list is only a tool to use but just like the familiar adages “the right tool for the job” and “there’s more than one way to skin a cat” – plants lists are not the end-all and frankly, shouldn’t be used except for suggestions for specific plant needs, i.e. xeric, hydric soils or shade loving plants. Recommending a plant list without knowing the site conditions or having a variety of site conditions is tantamount to having an unsustainable landscape.
Getting an efficient irrigation system comes with a price. That can be a hard sell to builders, developers, and homeowners who have become quite comfortable with Florida’s low-cost lifestyle. Water, labor, and materials are cheap compared to other parts of the country, especially when it’s not being correctly done; so changing the mindset of what efficient is can be tricky. Having irrigation systems with 15% to 47% effectiveness isn’t sustainable but it’s usually what the homeowner gets when the bottom line means not informing the end-user of the cost of not installing irrigation correctly.
When improper plants are selected, crammed into an instant landscape , compounded with an inefficient irrigation system, you have an unsustainable landscape. The results are less drought tolerant landscapes, usually more weeds, insects, and diseases resulting in an overuse of chemicals, leading to stormwater runoff issues and a vicious cycle of expensive and high maintenance. High maintenance details of constant pruning, usually with unsterilized or infected tools can lead to spreading of insects and disease, with hedges succumbing to inevitable bare-bottom syndrome and ornamental trees falling prey to crape murder. I’m always amazed at homeowners and businesses settling and paying for these landscape disasters thinking that these disastrous methods are best management practices.
There are plants, shrubs, and trees for every lifestyle and landscape design. There are plants that thrive with shearing and there can be a need for deadheading and pruning after flowering to ensure a vibrant and healthy shrub or tree. Forcing high maintenance and instant landscapes on unsuspecting homeowners and commercial properties that trust that the builders, developers, landscape architects and landscape companies are installing a low maintenance, sustainable landscape, is not good business.
Sustainability is not a plant list but a philosophy. In gardening, sustainability’s philosophy is way of living so that landscape plants, irrigation, and the post-upkeep is efficient, uses resources wisely, and allows for proper maintenance. As more and more sustainable development is achieved, the lower the market costs for the plants, labor, and materials will become.
Researching the property for proper plant selection, determining the seasonal attractiveness so that there is lusciousness and beauty, combined with installing an efficient irrigation system that in the future will mean lower bills for the homeowner and a better use of our precious water supply will benefit the entire state of Florida.
Want to find the right plants for your landscape? Check out SJRWMD's Waterwise Landscapes.
Tuesday, April 05, 2011
April Showers Bring Relief
Last week Central Florida received abundant rainfall between six to eight inches in a three day span. The ground soaked it up! This week, we will be seeing an additional one to three inches which will go a long way to catch up rainfall lacking so far this year. Florida's rainy season is different than our Northern cousins. Our springtime and winter are our dry seasons. Florida receives most of its rainfall in the summer and fall with daily afternoon showers and our usual tropical storms and hurricanes. We need these torrential rain storms to replenish our aquifer systems. We shouldn't have to irrigate in the summertime if we have normal rainfall of an inch of water a week. But with these rains, especially in low-lying areas or in yards that are irrigated too much, we will see turfgrass and plant diseases. Treating these fungal and viral issues after we have diagnosed them is usually too late to apply the fungicides. Fungicides are preventive not curative. So if you usually have disease in your landscape, make sure that your irrigation system is not your watering overhead and for long periods at night. Then check your irrigation system to ensure that its watering your turf efficiently.
Here are important publications from the University of Florida IFAS for diagnosis and solutions:
Homeowner's Guide to Fungicides for Lawn and Landscape Disease Management
Turfgrass Disease Management
Brown Patch Disease November through May - All warm season turfgrasses
Cercospora Leaf Spot Late spring and summer - St. Augustinegrass
Fairy Rings Any abundant rainfall - all warm season turfgrasses
Gray Leaf Spot Late spring and early fall or excessive rainfall - St. Augustinegrass and centipedegrass
Helminthosporium Leaf Spot All year round - warm season turfgrasses
Pythium Root Rot - All year round - warm season turfgrasses
Rust - St. Augustinegrass and zoysiagrass - late fall to early spring.
Take All Root Rot - Summer to fall - all turfgrasses
We'll be discussing fungicides and disease issues on "In Your Backyard." Call in!
Here are important publications from the University of Florida IFAS for diagnosis and solutions:
Homeowner's Guide to Fungicides for Lawn and Landscape Disease Management
Turfgrass Disease Management
Brown Patch Disease November through May - All warm season turfgrasses
Cercospora Leaf Spot Late spring and summer - St. Augustinegrass
Fairy Rings Any abundant rainfall - all warm season turfgrasses
Gray Leaf Spot Late spring and early fall or excessive rainfall - St. Augustinegrass and centipedegrass
Helminthosporium Leaf Spot All year round - warm season turfgrasses
Pythium Root Rot - All year round - warm season turfgrasses
Rust - St. Augustinegrass and zoysiagrass - late fall to early spring.
Take All Root Rot - Summer to fall - all turfgrasses
We'll be discussing fungicides and disease issues on "In Your Backyard." Call in!
Labels:
diseases,
fungicides,
fungus,
grass,
IFAS,
landscapes,
pathogens,
turfgrass,
virus
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