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Garden Plans: In fact, the cutting garden plans is often more fun to contemplate than j the regular perennial bed or the rock garden plans. In the formal flower bed,! plans are often projected over several years and mistakes are not] always evident until it's too late for quick action. But the cutting garden plans j offers no such constraints; in it change can be enjoyed for change's j sake, experimentation can be the password.
Do you have a small yard to work in or something rather grander? Do you want a formal feel to your garden plans, or would you prefer something less geometrical, less orderly? Do you plan to spend a lot of time garden plansing or would you like a low-maintenance option? Is your backyard square, rectangular, or L-shaped, which gives you maximum opportunity for springing surprises? Does your garden plans take place on just the one level or are there two, or more, different levels to be exploited? Are you content with stone and cement, or do you hanker after something more adventurous? These are all questions that you need to ask yourself.
What follows over the next few pages is a number of different approaches to drawing up a garden plans plan. Take a look at these and see which of these garden planss approximates most closely to the raw materials you have to play with, and which type of garden plans comes nearest to your chosen style.
Look upon these plans not as blueprints to be copied but as sources of inspiration. See what takes your fancy and let your imagination do the rest.
—New York Botanical garden plans, Bronx, New York 10458.
The garden plans comes from London and is the monthly magazine published by the Royal Horticultural Society of England. From garden plans design to the newest in both indoor and outdoor plants, it has something to offer for everyone. The cost is $20 per year, but exchange rates vary (see Appendix 2).
—Vincent Square, London SW1P 2PE, England.
garden plans Design appears four times a year and is the showcase magazine for the American Society of Landscape Architects. It presents fine photos and plans of large garden planss both here and abroad and costs $20 a year.
—1733 Connecticut Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20009.
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