Designing And Installing Fine Landscapes Since 1986

September 4, 2010
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Regency Landscape

P.O. Box 224
Millington, NJ 07946
Phone: 908 647 3434
Fax: 908 647 6633
Email: Click here

 

 
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Entries for 'Administrator'

05

Success is always hard to measure. It always depends on the person’s perspective and understanding. A successful landscape is no different. Beyond good design and proper installation what is needed and what are the obstacles to success? The main obstacle to a professionally designed and installed landscape’s success is managing expectations the client has. Education and communication are the tools I choose to use for this purpose. With these tools a relationship of trust and understanding is built and add to the landscape’s success.

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29

Plant SelectionIt is very easy to start off on the wrong foot when planning your landscape project. You stop in at the nursery or garden center and see all those wonderful choices. All the color, texture, and blooms can be intoxicating. You hastily make impulse purchases based on what catches your eye. You bring it home and plant it. Somehow it does not look right. You like the plants all right but what’s wrong? Further down the road many of your plants are struggling for survival and others quickly outgrowing their location. This happens with homeowners as well as with some landscape contractors.

There is a method to invoke to avoid many of these problems. That is the process of planning and design. With home values skyrocketing do you want your home’s curb appeal left to chance? A design, whether done by you or a professional, is important in helping you make important decisions about what you want and of course plant selection.

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Posted in: Shrubs & Plants
23

Most people will spend time researching a major purchase. If they are buying a major appliance they will often choose a higher priced model that was manufactured by a reputable company over a “bargain” brand. They will pay 30 – 50% more for this item. They do this because they know it will out perform and out last the cheaply made unit. They see the value in it.

So why is it that from my perspective so many people contract the low bidder landscape contractor?

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16

When I was a kid I always wanted to do what my friends were up to. I would run to my parents and ask if I could also do as my peers. My parents would often say no and I would quickly say but everyone else is doing it! To answer me they would say “if your friends jumped of the Brooklyn Bridge would you”?

This familiar childhood problem can be compared to how most people select the landscape for their homes. They see their neighbors and friends installing a project and they purchase a similar style project at their home.

Our homes already are losing their individuality in these vast developments of modern center hall colonials.

Why would we want our landscapes to be so similar as well? Or if we do have a different style home why should its landscape look alike as well. There is inadequate public appreciation for the value of design and planning in enhancing the quality of life in our communities.

Your landscape should reflect your personality and lifestyle.

Don’t get caught in the “keeping up with the Jones’s” trap. Why not do a web search (or an old fashioned library search) for the history of landscape architecture. Study some of the greats like Frederick Law Olmsted, Beatrix Farrand, Ellen Biddle Shipman, Fletcher Steele and other major influences in garden design. If you read about these people you will come to understand it is not all about a serpentine paver walkway and a collection of varied plants mounded in rock and mulch. They studied spaces, views, textures, shadows, and other nuances that created an experience when you enter their gardens.

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Posted in: Design
08

Watering WiseAs the weather finally turns to the hot summer time weather a landscape (especially a new one) must be prepared to survive the extreme heat and dry conditions we generally have in July and August here in New Jersey. Many new and even established landscapes develop a host of problems from these conditions and our mismanagement. Water and how we apply and use it will determine our success.

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02

Traditional Masonry block walls still have a useful place in the landscape. They can be veneered with brick, stone, or plastered to accomplish a variety of colors and textures. Understanding the basics of this type of wall system will help you whether you plan on building your own or hire a professional to install one for you. The following is a basic guide and as always you should refer to your municipality for any permit or engineering issues with your particular project.
 

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Posted in: Walls
22

Professional landscape services are more popular than ever. With the huge building boom in recent years in New Jersey, two income families and the outdoor living craze. It is easy to understand why. Many people have come to realize the value of professional landscape services in their property values and life styles.

The result is the tremendous growth of the landscape industry in New Jersey.

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16
If you take a close look at the majority of landscapes installed in New Jersey you may start to notice a pattern. What you will notice is your eye jum...

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Posted in: Design
12

The Mad RushThe wave of phone calls to my office usually starts during the first warm week of March. Virtually all these prospective clients are astounded to hear we are booked for the next 8 to 10 weeks.


I often relate to friends that owning a landscape firm in spring is like owning a toy store at Christmas time.


There are more similarities than you may think but the main one is people get caught up in the spirit and often make poor choices they must pay for later. 



The problem is you need to plan a little more ahead than March or April. Anyone from New Jersey knows if you want to rent a nice house down the shore you reserve it in January if not a whole year before!

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Posted in: Design
08

Over the years I have been blamed for a lot of things in my career as a landscape professional. From broken gate latches to damaged light fixtures it seems the landscape contractor is automatically guilty. Now don’t get me wrong sometimes we inadvertently will cause some damage while performing our services but my observation has been to blame us first without any consideration of other factors.
 

Let's take the broken gate latch for our first example.

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Posted in: Clients
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