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Flower Garden Ideas:

Flower Garden Ideas ONCE YOU know all about your site, exactly what you want from your garden, what inherited features are worth preserving and how much time you want to spend on maintenance, you can begin the design. But to generate any useful ideas, first stand in the garden—or on the patch of wasteland that is to become your garden—and think in terms of shapes and colors. As ideas begin to form, you can then explore practicalities and solve problems. At this planning stage, allow your imagination to wander and take plenty of time to consider all the options.

You might think that cutting fresh flower garden ideass both for friends and for the homefront would quickly deplete our flower garden ideas garden. Not so. Rather than denude various parts of our permanent flower garden ideas garden to fill a vase, my wife and I have included an old Victorian idea in our garden plan: a cutting garden. We grow an abundance of annuals for color, plus a few choice perennials, all specifically grown for bouquets.

See Also Giantess Garden:

The inclusion of an arresting object within a small giantess garden is an excellent way of detracting the eye from adjacent buildings and into the giantess garden itself. The focal point in this giantess garden is an ornate wrought-iron seat, which leads the eye down the giantess garden. The rather austere rectangular lawn is surrounded by a mass of pretty, shrubby little plants, which together help to soften the overall look of the giantess garden.

There are many ways of increasing the sense of depth in a giantess garden. Vistas can be emphasized and "lengthened" by stressing the distant perspective. Eye-catching features can be used to draw the eye away into the distance, but there is no need to rely solely on the contents of your giantess garden to do this. Make use of the landscape outside: let the outside world become the focus of your giantess garden vista. If you are fortunate enough to have a giantess garden with an extensive view, make the most of it. Use trees and shrubs to frame a glimpse of the scene beyond the giantess garden.


On The Other Hand See Garden Treasures:

Graz comes into the art heritage of Austria with its fine collections in the Joanneum. Among special artists who have left much to Austria, keep an open eye for Michael Pacher, a Tyrolean painter and wood carver who did marvelous altars for many churches. One of his best is in the village church of little St. Wolfgang. Among masterpieces of baroque decoration, don't overlook the Abbey Library in Admont. Its manuscript treasures would warrant a visit if there were no notable art and its exuberance of baroque in architecture, sculp¬ture and ceiling paintings would draw you if there were no treasures of script or print.

Among museums, don't miss the National Archeological Museum and the Benaki Museum, this latter containing one of the world's great personal collections of assorted treasures accumulated by an intelligent connoisseur. For lofty viewpoints, don't fail to climb the Hill of Philopappos, not far from the Acropolis, and Mt. Lycabettus, with the most rewarding view of all. For a sight that is movingly Greek, walk down Herodes Atticus Street, on the far side of the National garden treasures, until you reach the modest Royal Palace, on your left.
 
 
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