Friday, April 13, 2018

Why Your Health & Property Value Are Better With This Hedge

Most notably, in the garden, below, is the hedge.  Yet not the only notable element.  At the front end of reading this post, make your list of reasons the hedge is a good idea.  Perhaps your list is all negatives with the hedge, fine, make that mental list.
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At a point long past, in USA, the petite hedge lost favor, foundation plantings gained the upper hand.  Ignoring centuries of Garden Design history.
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After WWII, USA had a building boom, and builders had a certificate of occupancy to gain before being able to sell their new homes.  Landscaping was part of that package for the CO.  A fact remaining in force.
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Pic, above, here.
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The style of a home's architecture does not influence whether or not to have a similar hedge, above.
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Subdivisions, city scapes, a home close to the road, are viable territory for a hedge, instead of a foundation planting.
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See the hedge, above?  Now, go inside the hedge, go into the garden, go into the home, look toward the sidewalk and road.
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Gone.  Sidewalk, road, cars, now blocked to your view, at a minimum diminished. 
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More, depending on the height of your hedge, and ground elevations, a hedge will obliterate most views of cars passing by.
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Multi-tasking, a hedge hiding the view of cars, from your home, filters myriad toxins cars release from engine/tires.  Did you know living at a busy road, with car/truck toxins spewing, is the equivalent of smoking a pack of cigarettes/day?
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A hedge is also your starting point for a garden room.  Paradise, in derivative, is a walled garden.  Blocking the ogre of cars/traffic/toxins begins your sanctuary, with a hint of privacy.  More, a layer of control, better, controlled by you.
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What do you want to do inside your hedge?  A pair of benches inside the hedge, facing the house, focal points on axis, and a place to sit.  Perhaps a pair of stone terraces either side of the front walk, the list is long on choices, your choices. 
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A home, or neighborhood, with the garden design choice of front hedges, has increased property value.  If an entire neighborhood is conceived with all homes having front hedges, it will be of greater value than a replica neighborhood without front hedges.  Why?  Good landscaping increases property values. 
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Good landscaping also benefits health.  More layers of a good garden design, around your home, has more of the bacteria for our body's microbiomes.  Our bodies formed in synergy with Earth.  Without the bacteria of Earth, inside our bodies, we die.
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What are your thoughts about a hedge in front of a home?
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Garden & Be Well,    XO T

6 comments:

Unknown said...

What’s not to love??!! Thanx for the reminder!

Ann Munson said...

City ordinance prohibits hedges but not trees. So I planted a row of white pines.
A very big hedge!

Jacinta Arnold said...

Agree wholeheartedly, a hedge is a classic garden element.

Penelope Bianchi said...

Just brilliant, Tara!! Great post! I have things to send you from my granddaughters school's orchard! Just what you say!! Teaching in California school!

Jd said...

I've just moved into an older house with an established garden on a very busy street. Many of the plants have been neglected. The biggest problem I have are the multiple 100ft pine trees. The tree shed of straw is amazing. Over the years it has actually changed the elevation around several trees. It has also suffocated the lower 12 inches of all sorts of plants. 50 year old English Box. They look like topiaries. So I'm trying to plant a screen . The straw seems to tangle up into smaller branch plants and on the larger leaved ones it hangs like dangling earrings. I've decided to go with a mix of tall grass(because I can cut them down to get rid of the straw) and big leaf hydrangeas.Thinking I like the earrings more than the rats nests! Hoping it will work . The box were all planted less than a foot away from the foundation. Totally naked in back and horrid to look at out the window. Sorry my story is so long. Thanks for all your tips. Denise

Amy said...

I would love a hedge, but we have a very large Maple sucking up water and providing lots of shade in that location. I haven't figured out what I could use there. If you have any suggestions, I would love them!

I designed my herb garden based on an herb garden in colonial Williamsburg. I'm going to get rid of the more modern looking vegetable garden and add a large potager near the herb garden.