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Landscaping Info |
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Glossary |
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Landscaping trees
Trees help create the green and pleasant landscapes to be found in many places.
Trees provide a seasonal variety to a landscape. When trees are used to landscape, the goal is not simply to have a collection of great landscape trees in the yard, but rather to have at least one specimen per season. Any well-planned landscape will contain at least one flowering landscape tree that provides color and beauty. Magnolia trees are among the well-known flowering landscape trees.
The dogwood tree is a versatile landscape tree that earns its keep during more than just one of the four seasons: it blooms in spring and offers colorful foliage during fall. Maple trees are beautiful as autumn trees and because of their great sizes provide a lot of shade. On a cloudy autumn day, these trees light up a landscape beautifully. Blue Spruce trees and birch trees are ideal for winter - for their unusually pleasing bark.
There are some trees called ornamental flowering trees. These produce different kinds of berries. They also serve the dual purpose of making birds come to their foliage. Considering planting evergreens? You will get annual foliage from them. Many other species of ornamental trees are in high demand for the abundant shade they give - all have their individual value in landscaping.
Not only do landscaping trees provide beauty, they are also functional. Landscape trees are widely planted to create a "living wall" or privacy fences to screen a home from the prying eyes of neighbors!
More Terms Explained Here...
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