Posts Tagged ‘gas meter set’

Part Nine – Block It Out

Friday, May 6th, 2011

As Spring approaches, the trees and plants start to bloom, the grass turns from brown to green while you think to yourself that anything is possible. Its true that anything is possible but where to start in your own backyard can be overwhelming and somewhat exciting with all the possibilities. GasCov has put together a 12 part series that informs us all on how to grow fruits and vegetables in various situations. GasCov discusses many tips and tricks to use in your garden for the upcoming season. While remembering that to beautify and provide your home with curb appeal be sure to use GasCov gas covers for your gas meter set. Keeping the environment in mind, all GasCov products provide protection against the elements. To learn more about it, simply contact us at http://www.gascov.com/contact_us.php

Today: Part Nine – Block It Out
Or follow the advice of Utah gardener Mel Bartholomew, author of the best-selling Square Foot Gardening: Divide your bed into 1-square-foot sections, meaning a bed 4 feet on each side would have 16 sections. Plant and harvest each square individually, perhaps with a single broccoli or cabbage plant right in the middle; or nine medium plants, such as beets or spinach, 4 inches apart; or 16 carrots, radishes, or onions 3 inches apart. Sow new seeds every few weeks, spring through fall, to extend the harvest. It’s an easy way to feed a family and keep from feeling overwhelmed with upkeep.

Part Eight – Create a Raised Bed

Thursday, May 5th, 2011

As Spring approaches, the trees and plants start to bloom, the grass turns from brown to green while you think to yourself that anything is possible. Its true that anything is possible but where to start in your own backyard can be overwhelming and somewhat exciting with all the possibilities. GasCov has put together a 12 part series that informs us all on how to grow fruits and vegetables in various situations. GasCov discusses many tips and tricks to use in your garden for the upcoming season. While remembering that to beautify and provide your home with curb appeal be sure to use GasCov gas covers for your gas meter set. Keeping the environment in mind, all GasCov products provide protection against the elements. To learn more about it, simply contact us at http://www.gascov.com/contact_us.php

Today: Part Eight – Create a Raised Bed
A raised bed filled with good soil will warm up and dry out faster in spring, and the added elevation will help keep people from walking across it and compacting the soil or trampling tender shoots. A bed 4 feet square works well, but adjust dimensions to fit your space. Along a wall or fence, go for 2 feet in depth (learn how to build one of any size at thisoldhouse.com/bonus). Grow more food and shade out weeds by staggering plants in all directions and not in rows.

Part Seven – Plants Overhead

Wednesday, May 4th, 2011

As Spring approaches, the trees and plants start to bloom, the grass turns from brown to green while you think to yourself that anything is possible. Its true that anything is possible but where to start in your own backyard can be overwhelming and somewhat exciting with all the possibilities. GasCov has put together a 12 part series that informs us all on how to grow fruits and vegetables in various situations. GasCov discusses many tips and tricks to use in your garden for the upcoming season. While remembering that to beautify and provide your home with curb appeal be sure to use GasCov gas covers for your gas meter set. Keeping the environment in mind, all GasCov products provide protection against the elements. To learn more about it, simply contact us at http://www.gascov.com/contact_us.php

Part Seven – Plants Overhead
Mounting pots on walls, balconies, and roof overhangs also uses vertical space. If your best sun lands on a small area or against a wall, place pots there on a tiered plant stand.

There are also newfangled vertical growing systems modeled after modular systems that support green roofs. Options range from plastic grid systems with angled planting cells (ELT Easy Green) to products made of metal mesh (McNichols) to fabric pockets that look like shoe storage systems (Urban Garden Products, Inc and Plants On Walls). Just make sure you understand where excess water will drain so that you don’t rot out a wall or balcony.

Part Six – Grow Up Where You Can

Tuesday, May 3rd, 2011

As Spring approaches, the trees and plants start to bloom, the grass turns from brown to green while you think to yourself that anything is possible. Its true that anything is possible but where to start in your own backyard can be overwhelming and somewhat exciting with all the possibilities. GasCov has put together a 12 part series that informs us all on how to grow fruits and vegetables in various situations. GasCov discusses many tips and tricks to use in your garden for the upcoming season. While remembering that to beautify and provide your home with curb appeal be sure to use GasCov gas covers for your gas meter set. Keeping the environment in mind, all GasCov products provide protection against the elements. To learn more about it, simply contact us at http://www.gascov.com/contact_us.php

Part Six – Grow Up Where You Can
You aren’t limited to what can sprawl along the ground. Trained up a trellis, pole peas and beans, cucumbers, small melons, and vining squash all have a small footprint in the garden. A full or half cage made of field fencing is easy to anchor to a container for supporting tomatoes. For a garden bed, Creasy favors 4×4 posts and hog- or cattle-wire panels, which come in sturdy, flat sections and can support even the heaviest fruit. For either style, get material with 4-inch openings so that you can reach through at harvest time. You can also grow pole beans or cherry tomatoes on a garden arch, which makes harvesting especially easy—just walk through and pluck.

Today our 12 part series on Growing Fruits & Vegtables Anywhere

Monday, May 2nd, 2011

We continue our series on growing fruits and vegtables anywhere in our 12 part series. Brought to you by GasCov. If you are looking to beautify your home, then think of GasCov gas covers to hide your gas meter set and bring curb appeal to it. For more information, please contact us at: http://www.gascov.com/contact_us.php

Landscape Gardening:Its Time to Think of What Could Be…

Friday, January 21st, 2011

Landscape gardening has often been likened to the painting of a picture. Your art-work teacher has doubtless told you that a good picture should have a point of chief interest, and the rest of the points simply go to make more beautiful the central idea, or to form a fine setting for it. So in landscape gardening there must be in the gardener’s mind a picture of what he desires the whole to be when he completes his work.
From this study we shall be able to work out a little theory of landscape gardening.
Let us go to the lawn. A good extent of open lawn space is always beautiful. It is restful. It adds a feeling of space to even small grounds. So we might generalize and say that it is well to keep open lawn spaces. If one covers his lawn space with many trees, with little flower beds here and there, the general effect is choppy and fussy. It is a bit like an over-dressed person. One’s grounds lose all individuality thus treated. A single tree or a small group is not a bad arrangement on the lawn. Do not centre the tree or trees. Let them drop a bit into the background. Make a pleasing side feature of them. In choosing trees one must keep in mind a number of things. You should not choose an overpowering tree; the tree should be one of good shape, with something interesting about its bark, leaves, flowers or fruit. While the poplar is a rapid grower, it sheds its leaves early and so is left standing, bare and ugly, before the fall is old. Mind you, there are places where a row or double row of Lombardy poplars is very effective. But I think you’ll agree with me that one lone poplar is not. The catalpa is quite lovely by itself. Its leaves are broad, its flowers attractive, the seed pods which cling to the tree until away into the winter, add a bit of picture squeness. The bright berries of the ash, the brilliant foliage of the sugar maple, the blossoms of the tulip tree, the bark of the white birch, and the leaves of the copper beech all these are beauty points to consider.
Place makes a difference in the selection of a tree. Suppose the lower portion of the grounds is a bit low and moist, then the spot is ideal for a willow. Don’t group trees together which look awkward. A long-looking poplar does not go with a nice rather rounded little tulip tree. A juniper, so neat and prim, would look silly beside a spreading chestnut. One must keep proportion and suitability in mind.
I’d never advise the planting of a group of evergreens close to a house, and in the front yard. The effect is very gloomy indeed. Houses thus surrounded are overcapped by such trees and are not only gloomy to live in, but truly unhealthful. The chief requisite inside a house is sunlight and plenty of it.
As trees are chosen because of certain good points, so shrubs should be. In a clump I should wish some which bloomed early, some which bloomed late, some for the beauty of their fall foliage, some for the colour of their bark and others for the fruit. Some spireas and the forsythia bloom early. The red bark of the dogwood makes a bit of colour all winter, and the red berries of the barberry cling to the shrub well into the winter.
Certain shrubs are good to use for hedge purposes. A hedge is rather prettier usually than a fence. The Californian privet is excellent for this purpose. Osage orange, Japan barberry, buckthorn, Japan quince, and Van Houtte’s spirea are other shrubs which make good hedges.
I forgot to say that in tree and shrub selection it is usually better to choose those of the locality one lives in. Unusual and foreign plants do less well, and often harmonize but poorly with their new setting.
Landscape gardening may follow along very formal lines or along informal lines. The first would have straight paths, straight rows in stiff beds, everything, as the name tells, perfectly formal. The other method is, of course, the exact opposite. There are danger points in each.
The formal arrangement is likely to look too stiff; the informal, too fussy, too wiggly. As far as paths go, keep this in mind, that a path should always lead somewhere. That is its business to direct one to a definite place. Now, straight, even paths are not unpleasing if the effect is to be that of a formal garden. The danger in the curved path is an abrupt curve, a whirligig effect. It is far better for you to stick to straight paths unless you can make a really beautiful curve. No one can tell you how to do this.
Garden paths may be of gravel, of dirt, or of grass. One sees grass paths in some very lovely gardens. I doubt, however, if they would serve as well in your small gardens. Your garden areas are so limited that they should be re-spaded each season, and the grass paths are a great bother in this work. Of course, a gravel path makes a fine appearance, but again you may not have gravel at your command. It is possible for any of you to dig out the path for two feet. Then put in six inches of stone or clinker. Over this, pack in the dirt, rounding it slightly toward the centre of the path. There should never be depressions through the central part of paths, since these form convenient places for water to stand. The under layer of stone makes a natural drainage system.
A building often needs the help of vines or flowers or both to tie it to the grounds in such a way as to form a harmonious whole. Vines lend themselves well to this work. It is better to plant a perennial vine, and so let it form a permanent part of your landscape scheme. The Virginia creeper, wistaria, honeysuckle, a climbing rose, the clematis and trumpet vine are all most satisfactory.
close your eyes and picture a house of natural colour, that mellow gray of the weathered shingles. Now add to this old house a purple wistaria. Can you see the beauty of it? I shall not forget soon a rather ugly corner of my childhood home, where the dining room and kitchen met. Just there climbing over, and falling over a trellis was a trumpet vine. It made beautiful an awkward angle, an ugly bit of carpenter work.
Of course, the morning-glory is an annual vine, as is the moon-vine and wild cucumber. Now, these have their special function. For often, it is necessary to cover an ugly thing for just a time, until the better things and better times come. The annual is ‘the chap’ for this work.
Along an old fence a hop vine is a thing of beauty. One might try to rival the woods’ landscape work. For often one sees festooned from one rotted tree to another the ampelopsis vine.
Flowers may well go along the side of the building, or bordering a walk. In general, though, keep the front lawn space open and unbroken by beds. What lovelier in early spring than a bed of daffodils close to the house? Hyacinths and tulips, too, form a blaze of glory. These are little or no bother, and start the spring aright. One may make of some bulbs an exception to the rule of unbroken front lawn. Snowdrops and crocuses planted through the lawn are beautiful. They do not disturb the general effect, but just blend with the whole. One expert bulb gardener says to take a basketful of bulbs in the fall, walk about your grounds, and just drop bulbs out here and there. Wherever the bulbs drop, plant them. Such small bulbs as those we plant in lawns should be in groups of four to six. Daffodils may be thus planted, too. You all remember the grape hyacinths that grow all through Katharine’s side yard.
The place for a flower garden is generally at the side or rear of the house. The backyard garden is a lovely idea, is it not? Who wishes to leave a beautiful looking front yard, turn the corner of a house, and find a dump heap? Not I. The flower garden may be laid out formally in neat little beds, or it may be more of a careless, hit-or-miss sort. Both have their good points. Great masses of bloom are attractive.
You should have in mind some notion of the blending of colour. Nature appears not to consider this at all, and still gets wondrous effects. This is because of the tremendous amount of her perfect background of green, and the limitlessness of her space, while we are confined at the best to relatively small areas. So we should endeavour not to blind people’s eyes with clashes of colours which do not at close range blend well. In order to break up extremes of colours you can always use masses of white flowers, or something like mignonette, which is in effect green.
When thinking of landscaping your garden be sure to look around and permanent fixtures like your gas meter set. Its possible to hide the unsightly fixtures by using GasCov gas covers. To learn more go to http://www.gascov.com.
Finally, let us sum up our landscape lesson. The grounds are a setting for the house or buildings. Open, free lawn spaces, a tree or a proper group well placed, flowers which do not clutter up the front yard, groups of shrubbery these are points to be remembered. The paths should lead somewhere, and be either straight or well curved. If one starts with a formal garden, one should not mix the informal with it before the work is done.

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Mid Winter Checks can save you $ in the Long Run

Wednesday, January 19th, 2011

Now that we are in mid-winter, the snow has fallen covering up many access points around your home. Your heat is on to keep you warm. Let’s not forget that there is still some maintenance checks to do even in the snowy cold. Take a walk around your home, make sure that no pipes or drains are clogged. Check to make sure that a heavy snow pile is not building up in an access area. Make sure that your gas meter set has no leaks or extra snow to clog any areas on it. The best way to protect against the elements is to use GasCov gas covers. They are environmentally friendly, have a useful window where you can still see your meter reading. GasCov also enhances your home. For more information, please go to http://www.gascov.com