The most off the garden is laying south-west.
I want to change the garden and I do need tips and help with it.
I will give my tip, based on bitter experience.
I had a flat landscape at the back of my (dads) house when I moved home after he passed away.
Friends suggested planting shrubs in the borders.
I did. This proved to be very bad advise.
From once having large, open, unshaded garden I find I am severly restructed in where I can plant things due to having to work around shrubs.
Heres an aerial show (another thread on this forum)
http://www.flowergenie.co.uk/ideas/forum/index.php?topic=17.0I'm removing may of the large shrubs and trees in that pic (especiall the huge tree on the border hedge, right of the picture - I was horrified when I saw how big it was from the air).
I'm now hiring a mini-digger to remove stumps.
Fortunately, I'm very pleased with the design of my garden. Its perfect for a plantsman, with grass paths everywhere, with neat trimmed edging. Thats my style.
I have another tip. NO CONCRETE until you are really really sure. Personally, I cringe when I see a cement mixer at work in those BBC garden makeovers. I hate hardscaping. I'd make Tommy redundant!
My garden has soft grass paths - OK in Ireland as we (used to) dont habve long periods without rain in summer.
So, my advice (the tip, eventually).
Until you settle on a design you like, dont plant anything "permanent".
Plant annual flowers and perennials for one or two years. If annuals, you get a chance to eradicte weeds at the end of the growing season (digging over the patch) or in the following spring (weeds will be in growth and can be sprayed - no risk of killing precious plants).
I'd recommend, in a new garden - Only small shrubs, which are easy to remove (if you dont like them) or transplant according to your new design ideas.
Above all, avoid large fast growing shrubs and trees.
Digging them up after a few years is a nightmare!! Working around them multiplies your work load - there are roots everywhere - and worse still, suckers shoot up many meters from the parent plant. One shrub I found to be particularly bad was Kerria. It actuall wormed its way UNDER a Box hedge and the suckers emerged at the other side.
I had a big problem with Prunus suckering, so be careful (includes Plum and Damson trees)
Theres an old saying:
Plant in haste, regret at leisure.
Its very true.
Over to the other members!
Edited again: Thu 10th May