Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta gardens design. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta gardens design. Mostrar todas as mensagens

5 Common Garden Weeds and How to Banish Them


The warm weather is coming and that means our gardens are going to start blooming again; hurray! Along with all the beautiful plants and flowers there are some rather unwelcome visitors that we can expect to appear soon. Weeds aren’t just unsightly, they can kill off our other plants and even be dangerous for children and animals. Grab your gardening gloves and a trowel, as we list the 5 most common garden weeds and how to banish them.
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1) Dandelion
That pretty looking little yellow flower that we always seem to forget is a weed. Perennial weeds like this are renowned for regrowing as soon as you get rid of them. They bury their roots so deep that even pulling them from the ground won’t stop them from growing back. It’s important that you dig deep and get rid of every last bit of the root, if you want to stop this weed from growing back.
2) Prickly Lettuce
Also known as a compass plant, this weed is certainly not as edible as iceberg lettuce unfortunately. Common in the South East of England and all over America, the prickly lettuce grows quickly and spreads even quicker. Just like with the dandelion this perennial weed will bury its roots deep, so you need to dig far into the ground to remove all of it. You can also use weed killer that works deep in the ground, but only if other plants are not nearby.
3) Japanese Knotwood
In the 19th Century this plant was introduced into Britain for those who wanted something a bit more exotic in their garden. However, Japanese Knotwood soon spread fast and became a bit of a weed problem in gardens, roadsides and even through pavement cracks. There are certainly environment agency rules about removing this plant so it is best to get professional TP Japanese knotweed treatment instead of digging it up yourself.
4) Couchgrass
Although it disguises itself as fairly normal blades of grass, this clever little weed is actually extremely harmful to other plants and a pain to remove. The thin white roots can bury themselves deep into the ground and wrap themselves around the roots of your garden’s flowers. You’ll find it difficult to completely remove couchgrass from anything other than raised beds, so it may be time to get the herbicide out for this one.
5) Nettles
Although nasty to touch, nettles aren’t actually all that bad. The substance it produces can actually be more helpful than harmful to nearby plants, as long as it doesn’t completely take over your garden. If you are going to pull up this weed then use it for good:
● Add your nettle leaves to a bucket of lukewarm water
● Cover the bucket so nothing can get in there and eat or drink the water
● After a couple of weeks decant the nettle water into a watering can mixed with fresh water (3 parts water and 1 part nettle water)
● Use as liquid feed for your plants, vegetables and flowers
As the nettle goes to prove, not all weeds are bad news the whole time. However, letting your garden getting overgrown with any kind of weed will stifle your own plants and leave the yard looking messy. Make sure you keep your garden in good condition and de-weed whenever you get the chance.

DesignIntelligence 2012 Landscape Architecture Program Rankings

DesignIntelligence released its 2012 landscape architecture graduate and undergraduate program rankings. For the second year, Louisiana State University came in at the top of undergraduate landscape architecture programs and, for the eighth year, Harvard University came in as the best graduate programs in the annual survey conducted by DesignIntelligence on behalf of the Design Futures Council.
Detailed rankings are available in the 12th edition of “America’s Best Architecture & Design Schools,” which assesses program rankings and education trends in architecture, landscape architecture, interior design, and industrial design.
Respondents from 227 “professional practice” organizations, which are listed in the report, answered questions about how well prepared graduates are from different undergraduate and graduate programs. Some 74 percent said they “very satisfied” or “satisfied” with the state of landscape architecture education in the U.S. Some 64 percent found that graduating students had an “adequate understanding” of biology, biodiversity, and environmental degradation. However, only 51 percent thought recent graduates brought any new ideas on sustainability to their new jobs.
This year, the top five emerging concerns by practitioners are:
  • Maintaining Design Quality (51 percent)
  • Sustainability / Climate Change (49 percent)
  • Speed of Technological Change (39 percent)
  • Integrated Design (39 percent)
  • Retaining Quality Staff in Design Practices (32 percent)
DesignIntelligence asks us to only list the top five schools for each program. To see the top fifteen rankings for each category, purchase the report
Bachelor of Landscape Architecture Degree Rankings:
1) Louisiana State University
2) Pennsylvania State University
3) California Polytechnic University, San Luis Obispo; Purdue University; Texas A&M University (tied)
Master of Landscape Architecture Degree Rankings:
1) Harvard University
2) Louisiana State University
3) Kansas State University
4) Cornell University, University of Pennsylvania (tied)
An additional deans and chairs survey asked respondents from 111 academic programs about the top programs and the issues they find significant. According to 84 percent of the professors surveyed, the design professions’ biggest concern is climate change / sustainability while another 64 percent said urbanization. Following this, some 68 percent also thought the most significant change in the curricula over the past five years has been an increased emphasis on sustainable design.
In addition, for the first time, DesignIntelligence surveyed more than 670 landscape architecture students to gauge their satisfaction with 20 programs covered.
To see the full responses from professors and students, purchase the report
Lastly, DesignIntelligence lists their 25 most admired educators of 2012. This year, the list was dominated by leading landscape architecture educators:
  • Rod Barnett, Associate Professor and Chair, Graduate Program in Landscape Architecture, School of Architecture, Auburn University
  • James Corner, ASLA, Professor and Department Chair, Landscape Architecture, University of Pennsylvania
  • Hope Hasbrouck, Graduate Advisor and Assistant Professor, Landscape Architecture, School of Architecture, University of Texas at Austin
  • David Hulse, Professor, Department of Landscape Architecture, University of Oregon
  • Judith Kinnard, Chair of Landscape Urbanism and Professor of Architecture, School of Archictecture, Tulane University
  • Margaret Livingston, PhD, ASLA, Professor, School of Landscape Architecture and Planning, College of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, University of Arizona
  • Elizabeth Meyer, FASLA, Associate Professor, Landscape Architecture, School of Architecture, University of Virginia
  • Peter Trowbridge, FASLA, Chair and Professor, Department of Landscape Architecture, Cornell University
  • Charles Waldheim, Affiliate ASLA, Professor and Chair, Department of Landscape Architecture, Harvard University Graduate School of Design.
Check out the 2011, 2010, and 2009 program rankings.
Gardens are an indispensable part of society. Amongst the existing gardens, a particular kind stand as monuments for their heritage and beauty: the historic gardens. They represent the testimony of a past society in the landscape. The historic gardens are living art objects, a legacy from our ancestors and cultural landscape that we admire and ought to protect, understand and defend.
The historic gardens are a living patrimony which makes their maintenance sometimes very difficult. Frequently, their owners cannot face the maintenance of their gardens by themselves. Gathering these owners towards a common goal – the preservation of historic gardens – was one of the factors that led to the creation of the Portuguese Association of Historic Gardens and Sites.
The APJSH was established in 2003 due to the need to highlight and preserve the patrimony of Portuguese landscape art.
This initiative was launched by a team of professionals – currently members of the Board of Directors of the Association – and many owners aware of the fragile situation of their heritage scattered throughout the country. All together we believed that the recreational, economic and historic value of the gardens should be considered a repository of the Portuguese culture.
The APJSH now includes historic garden owners, landscape architects with a experience in the requalification of these areas, teachers in the field of garden art history, agronomy and forestry, jurists, economists and architects, of about two hundred members.
The professional objectives of APJSH are to increase the value, to maintain and conserve the historic gardens and sites, both public and private, that are viewed as areas of aesthetic value, and with a scientific, cultural, educational and landscape interest; represents and supports its members and owners; collaborates with the public administration, namely with the Portuguese Government, in the study and preparation of legal and regulatory diplomas, as well as projects that financially support the conservation and restoration of gardens.
The first three years were important to consolidate and to demonstrate the professional quality of the Association in relation to its members with the submission of applications for funds, namely the EEA Grants Program, in partnership with several of the associated historic gardens. Regarding the first application for funds, the Association was proud to be selected, amongst more than 150 applicants, in a project for the restoration of the hydraulic structures of twelve historic gardens.
In order for us to further strengthen the sense of better defences for the historic gardens we need to grow…become a member and support the work of APJSH. Membership form available on request from rosie@thebtf.net