Beds & Borders Landscape Design, an Eden Prairie based contractor, can solve your landscape puzzle no matter the shape or size. We specialize in urban landscaping with concepts ranging from outdoor living rooms, fire pits, rock/rain gardens, retaining walls and patios. Our reputation speaks for itself as the professional family of experts at Beds & Borders invests every drop of sweat into your project producing impeccable work, maintaining utmost cleanliness and executing value-driven design to back our good name.
A Desert SW Landscape in Minnesota. It can be done! I often get asked to create Desert SW landscapes. Minnesotan snowbirds must really have an affinity for the look. I sense they want their yard looking like that of what they have found to be in their winter haunts. Given our plant and stone.
A Desert SW Landscape in Minnesota. It can be done! https://t.co/Idoa4HVr0V
Climate Friendly Zone 5 Trees for Minneapolis Now that our warming climate is here to stay, landscapes in Minneapolis can safely use many zone five trees. It is important to remember that zone 5 trees are to be used in the city. Most delicate plants, such as the ones mentioned below, would not.
Climate Friendly Zone 5 Trees for Minneapolis https://t.co/ZGAHkxRukb
Fragrant David Austin Roses are a Must in your Minnesota Landscape As an intern at Linders Landscape Center in Falcon Heights Minnesota, I honestly did smell the fragrant roses (David Austin) each morning. I remember clocking in and on the way to the design studio, I went slightly out of my way to.
Fragrant David Austin Roses are a Must in your Minnesota Landscape https://t.co/jtSjfARGYb
Wild Hair Plants Wild hair is the name of the game in this blog. I love using plants in the landscape that have interesting textures and colors. When combined together they provide us with some of the best choices in the landscape world. I thought I would share a few that, to me, resembled some.
Bushes on a Stick are In! Landscape trees on a stick are perfect for making an impact in the landscape. Horticulturists recognize these bush/sticks as a tree on a standard. In layman's terms, these are basically bushes glued to the top of a tree stem through a graft. The reason they are so.
How Covid-19 changed the Landscape Industry in 2020 https://t.co/gOj40IjN8z
New Year’s Resolutions: Tired Design Revitalized with Old School Plants. https://t.co/D6bJhINDty https://t.co/CvrKm5PJQc