Archive for Customer Testimonials – Page 9

10 Things to know about landscaping your new home

Ah, the glory of a new home.  Everything is, well, so new.  So fresh.  And there’s not a chip, dent or scratch anywhere (yet).

"I hired Carol to help me make the most of every inch of my new property." Photo by Kelly Uchytil

“I hired Carol to help me make the most of every inch of my new property.” Photo by Kelly Uchytil

Outside, however, it’s another matter altogether.  With most new homes, there simply isn’t anything but dirt.  So what to do?  Well, here are my ten ideas on how to do the landscape right…so you won’t have to do it over.

1.  Hire a landscape designer to lay out the land and give it the look and feel you want.  This needn’t cost an arm and a leg (call me and be surprised), and you’ll get the over-all plan set up before you start all that digging.

2.  Plan for more drainage than you think you need for areas adjacent to driveways, patios, pathways, lawns and especially retaining walls.  Ask neighbors about standing water in winter and spring.  Find out how long standing water takes to drain and where it drains to (your yard perhaps?!)

3.  Plant some larger sized trees in your first phase so everything won’t look so puny while they spend the next five years growing into the space you’ve provided for them.

Sherry and Kelly got exactly what they wanted and more.

Sherry and Kelly got exactly what they wanted and more.

4.  Consider how long you plan to live in the house.  If it’s less than five years we often focus on the entry and front yard.  If it’s longer, then invest in a good design for the whole property that you can build on over the years.  Curb appeal sells your home.

5.  Create an oasis for privacy.  It needn’t be large, but ideally it should have some eye appeal from inside the house.  Sunny days are precious, so create a place to enjoy them.

6.  Know how you’re going to handle upkeep.  The idea of “low maintenance” can be a misnomer:  it’s easier to mow than weed.  Decisions about upkeep need to be made right along with the design.  And if you don’t want to be the gardener, make sure you have someone who will, because there is no landscape short of concrete that doesn’t require upkeep.

7.  Pay close attention to watering the first year.  Many a well-intentioned landscape has gone to ruin in the first year for lack of proper watering.  Such a waste!

8.  Avoid BDS, one of the leading killers of new plants.  What is BDS, you ask?  Bored Dog Syndrome.  It happens when Fido pulls up plants, shakes them good, and doesn’t replant them; or decides to water them with full force.  The cure?  While plants are still young, don’t let Fido out alone.  This may be a pain, but trust me, you’ll save a lot of money.

9.  Before you pave your driveway or paths, lay PVC conduit pipe underneath.  That way you can easily add irrigation or lighting later on.  PVC pipe is cheap.

10.  Soil prep is where it’s at — it’s the difference between plants that thrive instead of die.  You need soil that drains well in winter but holds moisture in summer.  Every site has different requirements, so get professional advice at the start.

Designer Places Studio Garage for Perfect Property Flow

My clients had a large property that had been a historic dairy.  They already had the fabulous old craftsman house that they had lovingly restored.  I was hired to create a landscape design.  They needed a detached garage for cars, extra parking and a studio for Hudson’s photography business.

Clients needed a garage studio placed for best use of property and curb appeal

Clients needed a garage studio placed for best use of property and curb appeal

They had a design for the studio/garage and thought they had the perfect placement.   I quickly realized the placement of the garage was all wrong as it would have the patio, outdoor dining and entertaining area looking directly at parked cars when they had guests.  After establishing my credibility, I told them I could make it so much better and that we needed to think about the property as a whole in order to place the garage to its best advantage. They were surprised and then grateful.  As we got into the design process, we discovered the right location for the garage meant changes to their original garage design.  It was the right thing to do.

New location alters the design of the garage

New location of the garage/studio.

 

No matter how much I love plants, landscape and garden design, design is all about how you move through the property…. and that includes cars. When I’m having dinner with my friends outside, I don’t want to look at parked cars. They had a large property but we needed clever use of the usable space.

 

My design: I turned the garage so that while on the back porch of the grand old house or down in the woodland patio, what we saw was the inviting studio entrance complete with its own small porch and softening summer interest plantings.  We did not see the garage doors.

Soft plantings soften studio porch entry.

Soft plantings soften studio porch

The garage was turned so the cars would enter on the 45° angle. This also created more room for lawn and plantings on their property.  I used screening plants to hide guest’s parked cars.  Driving into the property we saw the attractive facade of the garage with overhead arbor. Because the garage is angled, the doors are not the most powerful visual you see as you drive up.  This greatly enhances curb appeal.

When they were working with their architect, they didn’t know the questions to ask that might have led them to the same placement I selected. While they thought they were hiring me just to create the garden, they were very pleased that I took on the task of designing for the whole property.

We created wonderful plantings for the new woodland patio garden and foundation plantings for both the house and the garage. This is one of my happiest designs because I was able to make the property work so much better. 

Henry before garage studio

“The landscape design is perfect for the property. There was a lot more to placing the garage that we didn’t realize until Carol pointed it out.”

After Landscape Design in a Day

With the new placement of garage and studio, there is room for a fire pit patio, and a real patch of lawn. Photo by Hudson Henry

“The landscape design is perfect for the property. There was a lot more to placing the garage that we didn’t realize until Carol pointed it out.”

Quick Fix for Front Entry Patio

Kris Jones is a professional graphics designer of Red Door Designs.  She hired me to help her with what seemed an impossible task. Kris wanted a private outdoor dining lounge in her tiny front landscape that was next to a public sidewalk.  She told me on the phone that the property was so tiny there was no additional outdoor space.

modern front patio fits with old house

Modern clean lines and simple plantings of boxwood fit the space perfectly

Before the Design in a Day

Before the Design in a Day

While I was hired to create a design for the front,  on the day I arrived the back porch was being torn down.  I immediately realized we had the perfect opportunity to  design a covered private dining room.  The front dining patio idea had problems: too far from the kitchen, too public, and we couldn’t do tall screening plants without removing natural light from her living room. The end result is a semi public sitting area in a front courtyard patio that looks like a million bucks and a small, but highly functional, private dining room directly off her kitchen.  I could see she had room for an 8′ x 8′ area,  Kris needed a second pair of eyes to see the possibilities.

“Carol is not only fun to work with, but she is a creative out of the box thinker who is thoughtful, and has a deep knowledge of her subject. She is incredibly talented and helpful. She helped me put together a plan for my front patio area and my back covered porch. Now both areas feels like shangri la.  I don’t have a green thumb and Carol was able to break things down in a way that really made it easy for me to achieve my exterior planting goals.

I really look forward to working with Carol again in the future.”

 

Do Experienced Gardeners Need a Professional Garden Designer?

"I hired Carol to help me make the most of every inch of my new property."  Photo by Kelly Uchytil

“I hired Carol to help me make the most of every inch of my new property.” Photo by Kelly Uchytil

Yes! But you may think being an expert gardener and having a life long passion for plants would mean you don’t need a landscape designer.

Sherry Uchytil had to sell her multi-level garden and home due to family health problems. She and her husband Kelly put on a brave face and found a new single level home they liked. The landscape was so important to them that she hired me before the new house had even closed.  This design did not include a planting plan because being a passionate and experienced gardener meant Sherry wanted to pick her own plants.

Kelly and Sherry had a round iron wheel they wanted to incorporate into the entry gate of the garden.

Kelly and Sherry had a round iron wheel they wanted to incorporate into the entry gate of the garden.

Our design process would focus on creating the perfect layout.  We had some typical issues, privacy, dog friendly, curb appeal but we also had wonderful art from the previous garden to place and the new planting beds needed to showcase her existing plants waiting patiently in pots from her former home.

There were so many functions that were needed for this landscape. How the shed was placed was critical since Sherry would be in and out of the shed constantly while playing with and caring for her plants.

This was accomplished with a design in a day on a rainy December day.  We couldn’t get inside the home because she did not yet own it, so we ended up finishing it in the local Starbucks because we got too cold to draw.

Sherry and Kelly got exactly what they wanted and more.

Sherry and Kelly got exactly what they wanted and more. Photo by Sherry Uchytil

It was so much fun and the results of our collaboration are stunning. Sherry’s garden was on a Clackamas County Master Gardeners garden tour this past summer.  Sherry is proud of her garden.

Landscape Design Takes N.E. Portland Concrete Jungle into Graceful Entry

Can She Do it? Design 2 tiny concrete jungle gardens into unique graceful entries

Putsch before front yard best pic

For Jeff and Carrie the biggest problem was the builder had planted two Aspen trees.  2013

After Tiny N.E. Portland Entry Design is installed with boulders and new plantings. (2016)

The Design Challenge    

Initially Jeff and Carrie hired me to create a Landscape Design in a Day for their small backyard. They loved the design we created together and installed it themselves over three years.

Last spring they contacted me to design their tiny front yard in tandem with their next door neighbor.  The front yards were less than 400 square feet and set in a very urban environment.  They wanted their landscapes to flow together.  I thought this was a great idea!

Design Requirements for Difficult Site  

The clients wanted plants with low maintenance water needs that could thrive in hot south sun. There was reflected heat off the ginormous concrete drive.  They wanted plants with year-round color/curb appeal.  There were so many problems to solve but the biggest was the two initial Aspen trees planted in their tiny front yard.

Landscape Concept Sketch for quick landscape design for front yard in NE Portland

Rough sketches helped my clients and I work through to the best idea.

Five 10″+ wide trunks (suckers) erupted from the small Aspen trees.  The roots filled every square inch of the soil in their yard and their neighbors. Their neighbor wanted simplicity and color and no Aspen tree roots.

Before Photo: Tiny landscape is completely engulfed by Aspen trees and needed a new landscape design.

Aspen trees and roots removed and new soil and boulders installed by D and J Landscape Contractors

Remove the Tree Roots and Bring in New Soil

Because the “soil” was tight hard clay fill, I knew my design solution would include bringing in new soil. Attractive boulders would retain the soil and add a naturalistic style.

The Process  I met with all my clients, collected their thoughts and desires and sketched two design options.  Important considerations included:

Tiny Driveways  The driveways were so tiny that there was no place to walk except in the soil side strips.  I used large flagstone so they could step out of their car onto the flagstone.  I repeated the same flagstone for the front walk.  Practicality reigns in all my designs.

Cars were constantly running over existing plants at the end of the drive, so we added a strong turf stone and planted it with Stepables.  This softened the look of the turf stone which is rather industrial.  I also selected plants that would grow to hide a large 4×6 metal plate.

Once planted this turf stone will make a safe place for stepable plantings.

Practical material suggestions from Donna Burdick.  Once planted this turf stone will make a safe place for stepable plantings.

Boulders and Soil  Raised rock wall planting beds were designed for each property. Each bed had its own individual shape so they fit together, but had their own style.

While removing the Aspen roots and grading, the contractors discovered there was more concrete and rubble than fill dirt!  It would have been impossible to grow anything (besides aspen trees or maybe cactus) without the raised and retained new soil.

Trees:  The Focal Point

New tree Lagerstroemia 'Cawtaba' (Crape Myrtle) replaces the evil Aspen trees for this tiny NE Portland front yard.

“We are very happy with the design and install. Thanks for all the great ideas!” – Jeff Putsch

The focal point trees shape and mature sizes were selected with care so they won’t grow into one another as they age.  The new trees, a Crape Myrtle and an improved Bloodgood Japanese Maple, provided each landscape with individuality.  They will need some yearly pruning to achieve my goals.

Teamwork   Since it was such a tricky site, I needed an experienced and creative contractor for the final landscape installation. I met with Donna Burdick of D&J Landscape Contractors and walked through the design and site.  I knew my clients were in good hands.

The Results   Designing both front yards at the same time allowed me to create a landscape that appears larger and cohesive for both homes.  Since I always work collaboratively, the clients helped me make each garden unique.  They loved my design and I got kudos for referring Donna Burdick, since her installation made these gardens come together perfectly.  The clients were very pleased with her work.

Contact Me in 2025

This design was completed and installed almost 20 years ago.  Today I have many Portland landscape design clients with wildly different needs.  Its been wonderful taking on these difficult sites.  They don’t have to be difficult but I love a tricky city landscape property with problems to solve.  I still specialize in custom landscape design because even if the property is simple the clients may have unique and complex wants for their home.  Call me.  I still answer my phone, return voice messages and quickly answer my contact form.