When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: inexpensive bushes for landscaping

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. 27 Best Types of Juniper Shrubs for a Low-Maintenance Landscape

    www.aol.com/27-best-types-juniper-shrubs...

    J. scropulorum ‘Blue Arrow’– One of the narrowest junipers, ‘Blue Arrow’ makes a colorful exclamation point in the landscape with its columnar habit and tightly packed blue-green foliage ...

  3. 8 Cheap and Simple Front Yard Landscaping Ideas - AOL

    www.aol.com/8-cheap-simple-front-yard-141600193.html

    With these eight cheap and simple landscaping ideas, you'll have a few actionable ideas in no time. Looking to upgrade your front yard without breaking the bank? With these eight cheap and simple ...

  4. Saikei - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saikei

    Trees, soil, and rocks form a miniature living landscape. Saikei (栽景) literally translates as "planted landscape". [1] [2]: 228 Saikei is a descendant of the Japanese arts of bonsai, bonseki, and bonkei, and is related less directly to similar miniature-landscape arts like the Chinese penjing and the Vietnamese hòn non bộ.

  5. Gardening in restricted spaces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gardening_in_restricted_spaces

    A container garden in large plastic planters. Container or bucket gardening involves growing plants in some type of container, whether it be commercially produced or an everyday object such as 5-gallon bucket, wooden crate, plastic storage container, kiddie pool, etc. Container gardening is convenient for those with limited spaces because the containers can be placed anywhere and as single ...

  6. Natural landscaping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_landscaping

    Natural landscaping using pine, redbud, maple, and American sweetgum with leaf litter.. Natural landscaping, also called native gardening, is the use of native plants including trees, shrubs, groundcover, and grasses which are local to the geographic area of the garden.

  7. Pyrus calleryana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyrus_calleryana

    The trees were introduced to the U.S. by the United States Department of Agriculture facility at Glenn Dale, Maryland, as ornamental landscape trees in the mid-1960s. They became popular with landscapers because they were inexpensive, transported well and grew quickly.