10 Tips for Home Garden Landscaping (2024)

Gardening

Landscaping

By

David Beaulieu

10 Tips for Home Garden Landscaping (1)

David Beaulieu

David Beaulieu is a landscaping expert and plant photographer, with 20 years of experience.

Learn more about The Spruce'sEditorial Process

Updated on 06/15/22

Reviewed by

Debra LaGattuta

10 Tips for Home Garden Landscaping (2)

Reviewed byDebra LaGattuta

Debra LaGattuta is a Master Gardener with 30+ years of experience in perennial and flowering plants, container gardening, and raised bed vegetable gardening. She is a lead gardener in a Plant-A-Row, which is a program that offers thousands of pounds of organically-grown vegetables to local food banks. Debra is a member of The Spruce Garden Review Board.

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"In a nutshell, what is the best way to go about beautifying my yard?" It's a tough question to answer. There are so many variables in do-it-yourself landscaping, such as budget, skills, the climate of your region, your personal design tastes, how you'll be using your yard, etc., but there are certain steps you can take that are so sound that they readily suggest themselves as answers to this question.

10 Tips for Home Garden Landscaping (3)

10 Best Garden Planners, Programs, and Apps

  • 01 of 10

    Year-Round Interest

    10 Tips for Home Garden Landscaping (4)

    Here's a can't-miss tip for beautifying your yard: make sure you're providing something of interest in each of the four seasons. Do-it-yourself landscaping for four-season interest begins with a well-researched plant-selection plan. The goal is to have flowering trees and/or shrubs throughout spring and summer, fall foliage in autumn, and good structure in winter. This article describes how to achieve that goal.

  • 02 of 10

    Layer Your Flower Beds

    10 Tips for Home Garden Landscaping (5)

    Layer your flower borders in three rows: a back row (facing north, preferably) with the tallest plants, a middle row with the next tallest, and a front row composed of your shortest plants. Use repetition, both in the planting bed and elsewhere in your yard, to provide unity.

  • 03 of 10

    Creating Continuity

    10 Tips for Home Garden Landscaping (6)

    Many DIY landscaping tips focus on deciduous trees and shrubs but don't forget evergreens and other plants prized as much or more for their foliage as for their flowers. The deciduous specimens ​provide more color and variety, while the evergreens will provide continuity.

  • 04 of 10

    Annuals Supplement Perennial Color

    Perennial flowers are wonderful for your planting beds, but they bloom for only so long. You may have perennials blooming in your bed in May, then nothing until July. Incorporating annuals into a do-it-yourself landscaping plan will "plug the gaps," giving you continuous color in the yard. Try using picture galleries to find ideas for your ​color schemes in landscape design.

    Continue to 5 of 10 below

  • 05 of 10

    Incorporate Hardscape

    10 Tips for Home Garden Landscaping (8)

    Don't restrict your do-it-yourself landscaping to plants. Include hardscape features, too. Like evergreens, they provide structure in winter and much more than that. Walls and ​fences make an essential design statement, as they frame your property. When you drive around the countryside, you might notice how much more “finished” the properties with fences look. Decks and arbors are other important hardscape features. Patios and decks provide transitions from indoors to outdoors.

  • 06 of 10

    Install Water Features: It's Easier Than You Think

    10 Tips for Home Garden Landscaping (9)

    Good landscape designs are anchored by focal points. One of the hottest trends is to use water features as focal points. This is one trend with "sound" reasoning behind it: water features are not only visually appealingbut emit soothing sounds. Using pre-formed rigid plastic liners, durable pumps, flexible tubing, and cheap fountains, they're also a lot easier to install than you think. Once you've experimented with ponds, you may even decide to advance to the next level: simple waterfalls.

  • 07 of 10

    Using Form and Texture

    10 Tips for Home Garden Landscaping (10)

    Flowers are great but don't forget the characteristics of a plant's branching pattern and foliage. In landscape design, varying form and texture is one way to spice up a yard with diversity. Evergreen conifers, while lacking flowers altogether, nonetheless have foliage that offers a myriad of different forms and textures. While browsing these do-it-yourself landscaping tips, you'll discover many ways to enhance the beauty of your yard.

  • 08 of 10

    Make Your Life Easier With a Low-Maintenance Yard

    10 Tips for Home Garden Landscaping (11)

    You can follow all the above do-it-yourself landscaping tips and still not be happy with your yard. For, besides giving your yard a pleasing appearance, you must also be sensible in planning for its maintenance. Beautiful or not, you'll resent your yard if it causes you too much work. Unless you don't mind spending hours each weekend on upkeep, plan your design for low maintenance.

    Continue to 9 of 10 below

  • 09 of 10

    Use Drought-Resistant Plants

    10 Tips for Home Garden Landscaping (12)

    Many novices at do-it-yourself landscaping start with high hopes in spring, only to have them dashed in summer. Why? Because the summer heat wilts all of that promising spring perkiness out of their plants! The answer? Select drought-tolerant plants to grow, instead.

  • 10 of 10

    Types of Flowers

    10 Tips for Home Garden Landscaping (13)

    Carefully matching the types of flowers you'll be growing with the space where they'll be growing is a fundamental policy to follow in do-it-yourself landscaping. Light and soil requirements should always be considered before deciding which types of flowers to buy for your yard.

10 Tips for Home Garden Landscaping (2024)

FAQs

What is the key to a good garden? ›

It's all about the soil

The best soil suitable for vegetables includes lots of compost and organic matter such as composted leaves and ground or shredded, aged bark. Whatever you're starting with, incorporate enough organic material so that the amended soil is neither sandy nor compacted.

What is the best layout for a vegetable garden? ›

As a general rule, put tall veggies toward the back of the bed, mid-sized ones in the middle, and smaller plants in the front or as a border. Consider adding pollinator plants to attract beneficial insects that can not only help you get a better harvest, but will also prey on garden pests.

What are 5 things you should do to prepare a good veggie garden? ›

New Veggie Garden Checklist: 5 Essential Things to Get Right
  1. Most vegetables need plenty of sunlight to crop well.
  2. Make beds narrow enough that you can reach into the middle from at least two sides.
  3. Smother weeds to get your new veggie garden off to a great start.
  4. Great soil equals great harvests!
Jan 11, 2022

How do you maintain a garden for beginners? ›

Top 10 Gardening Tips for Beginners
  1. Pick the right location—ideally, a sunny site! ...
  2. Keep it close to home. ...
  3. Only grow things your family likes to eat. ...
  4. Water needs to be readily available. ...
  5. Good soil is the key to a successful garden. ...
  6. Amend your soil. ...
  7. Seeds or plants?
Nov 16, 2023

What grows well together in a vegetable garden? ›

Garden vegetables that grow well together include: Basil and tomatoes. Radishes and lettuce. Peas and carrots.

How do you make a beautiful low maintenance garden? ›

12 Ideas and Tips for Creating a Low-Maintenance Garden
  1. Limit the Variety of Plants in the Garden.
  2. Use Organic Matter for Low Maintenance Garden Beds.
  3. Grow Low Maintenance Garden Plants. ...
  4. Avoid Planting Perennials That Attract Pests.
  5. Use Ground Cover in Your Garden.
  6. Avoid Plants That Need Support.

What is the most basic garden layout? ›

The traditional basic vegetable garden design has been straight and long rows running from north to south. Usually anything growing tall, like corn, beans or peas are planted on the north side of the vegetable garden to keep them from casting shade on the shorter crops.

How do I plan my garden layout? ›

How to Map the Vegetable Garden Beds
  1. Step 1: Sketch the Garden Area. ...
  2. Step 2: Plot the Plants on the Map. ...
  3. Step 3: Start with High Value Crops. ...
  4. Step 4: Decide Which Vegetables to Grow Vertically. ...
  5. Step 5: Give Vining Crops Plenty of Room. ...
  6. Step 6: Fill in With Other Crops.
Feb 4, 2015

How to organize a garden? ›

Rows Vegetable Garden Layout Plan

The other rule of thumb when using this layout plan is to organize your spacing so that your tallest growing vegetables are planted on the north side of your rows. Follow them with medium height vegetables, and then plant your shortest crop on the south side of the rows.

How do you till ground for a garden? ›

Instructions
  1. Step 1: Get Rid of Obstructions. ...
  2. Step 2: Set the Tiller Depth. ...
  3. Step 3: Start the Tiller. ...
  4. Step 4: Till the Soil in Parallel Passes. ...
  5. Step 5: Make Perpendicular Passes. ...
  6. Step 6: Add Amendments. ...
  7. Step 7: Work in the Amendments Thoroughly. ...
  8. Step 8: Give the Nutrients a Few Days to Work.

How to make a perfect garden? ›

10 Tips for a Successful Vegetable Garden
  1. Seek Local Advice. ...
  2. Find a Good Location. ...
  3. Ensure Adequate Moisture and Drainage. ...
  4. Build Healthy Soil. ...
  5. Use Mulch. ...
  6. Plant the Right Plant at the Right Time. ...
  7. Monitor for Problems. ...
  8. Control Pests and Disease.

What is a key garden? ›

Named for its shape, a keyhole garden is a round, raised garden surrounded by a retaining wall. It's supported with stones and/or bricks, with a section cut out in the middle to provide access to a composting basket. The garden is watered through the basket.

What should be included in a garden? ›

Conifers and broad-leaved evergreens can protect your garden from harsh winds. Large-scale perennials or ornamental grasses can make an “instant” privacy screen. A well-placed tree or tall shrub border can provide a shady oasis in the heat of a summer's afternoon.

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