Do you have any demonstration gardens out near places like yoder or ellicott? I'd love to see some successful gardens out here in the plains where the tumbleweeds are. When replacing lawn with natives, do you simply plant the natives directly in the dirt or do you need to baby them? Lots of clay and sand at my place..
I am working on transforming my front yard in Longmont. I put in a rock garden area and planted with succulents and I am now getting ready to put in a pea gravel walkway. Just curious if I need to do a base layer and if so what is best to use or can I put down a layer of pea gravel, compact it, lay some weed fabric down and then finish with more pea gravel. Appreciate any advice you can offer.
Hi! That's great that you are replacing turf with low-water gardens! We don't provide advice on hardscape design but you will likely need to stabilize the path with a base material and tamping before you lay the top surface material. You find some great tips and resources on UA-cam from landscape designers and DIYers. Best of luck with your garden transformation!
So well spoken by all!
Thanks for watching!
Brilliant
I totally agree.
Do you have any demonstration gardens out near places like yoder or ellicott? I'd love to see some successful gardens out here in the plains where the tumbleweeds are.
When replacing lawn with natives, do you simply plant the natives directly in the dirt or do you need to baby them? Lots of clay and sand at my place..
I am working on transforming my front yard in Longmont.
I put in a rock garden area and planted with succulents and I am now getting ready to put in a pea gravel walkway.
Just curious if I need to do a base layer and if so what is best to use or can I put down a layer of pea gravel, compact it, lay some weed fabric down and then finish with more pea gravel.
Appreciate any advice you can offer.
Hi! That's great that you are replacing turf with low-water gardens! We don't provide advice on hardscape design but you will likely need to stabilize the path with a base material and tamping before you lay the top surface material. You find some great tips and resources on UA-cam from landscape designers and DIYers. Best of luck with your garden transformation!
@@DenverBotanicGardens Thank you
Brilliant