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5-changes-to-make-to-your-yard-this-spring

Your yard may be lovely in all seasons, but there may come a time when you glance out your window and see something that’s a little too familiar and even a bit boring. How can you liven up your yard to make it something really special? Here are five changes you can make to your yard this spring.

1. Buy New Outdoor Furniture

You have enjoyed the patio or lawn furniture you inherited from your grandmother for many years, but it’s become a bit long in the tooth. It’s time to buy a new set of outdoor furniture. Make sure that this set bears up well under the weather. This includes its upholstery. Decorating experts also recommend choosing a neutral color palette that can go with any style of architecture. Donate your old furniture or pass it down to a relative who doesn’t care if the chairs, table, and settee have seen better days.

2. Get Rid of Your Lawn

More and more people are replacing their grass lawns with ground covers such as clover or creeping phlox or allowing their lawns to naturally grow into a sort of meadow. According to these people, grass needs too much water and too much work. The toxic nitrates in fertilizer can get into groundwater. Mowing the lawn with gas-powered lawnmowers also wastes energy and pollutes. Lawns made of ground covers, especially those native to the area, don’t need nearly as much pampering.

3. Plant a Vegetable Garden

If only flowers grow in your garden, or if your front or back yards are just great expanses of turf grass, consider growing vegetables. Spring is the perfect time to start vegetables from seed. Plant them in trays in seed starting formula, and if you’re in a cooler climate, you can start them indoors. Start them outdoors in a warmer climate, and bring the trays in on chilly nights. Set up raised beds in a sunny area, and plant the seedlings when you see evidence of “grown-up” leaves that come after the cotyledons, which are the first tiny leaves that appear when the seed sprouts. Start cool-weather crops such as lettuce and kale, followed by warm-weather crops such as tomatoes, zucchini, and peppers.

4. Add Water Features

Water features can be surprisingly easy to add to your yard. They range from solar-powered devices you can set at the bottom of a bird bath or a jug of water to create a bubbler to rain chains and simple waterfalls where water flows from one jug to another and back again. If your budget allows, you can install a traditional manorial fountain, a stream, a pond full of koi and water lilies, a proper waterfall with a pond, a water wall, a swimming pool, or even a moat that encircles your property. Don’t forget to put rain barrels beneath downspouts to catch rainwater.

5. Plant Some More Trees and Shrubs

In most places, trees and shrubs can be planted as soon as the ground thaws. Spring is the best time to plant in cooler climates, for the tree has time to establish itself before temperatures get terribly hot. If you don’t have fruit trees, consider planting a few that thrive in your hardiness zone.
By: Katherine Robinson, a writer for Gabion Supply

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