Do Your Landscape Projects Right The First Time

There’s never enough time or money to do it right, but there’s always time and money to do it again. This is my interpretation of a favorite quote from the Biggest Little Farm, and it is the topic for an important discussion about performing work in the garden and landscape.

One of the joys of my current work is that I spend time with all sorts of people who simply want to become better gardeners and create more beautiful spaces. Some gardens are big and costly, while others are more modest and implemented efficiently. What I often preach is to do it right the first time, because the cost of choosing the least expensive, or less qualified, option almost always costs more money in the long term.

Trees
With trees, we are often dealing with multi-generational plants that deserve the best care. These are living plants that can be stressed or even damaged from poor care and incorrect pruning. While certified and experienced arborists cost more than the usual suspects out there (many of whom send teams with no licensed or certified arborist), the cost of removing poorly cared for trees and replacing them far outweighs the incremental costs of hiring a top arborist.  Do you go to the Dr who laser corrects your second eye for free or the Dr with the most experience.

Hardscape
Masonry, or hardscape, is often the most expensive part in the landscape, and the cost pushes people to look for the less expensive option.  This might mean using concrete products over natural stone, or using contractors that spend a season or two in a town and move on before their poor work starts falling apart. The reason that good masonry work is more expensive comes down to the experience of the artisan doing the work, and the labor and materials involved in the project. Cheap patios are cheap because a company may only excavate out 6″ and put down stone dust and the pavers.  In a few years, it will start to heave or become uneven as the soil shifts. Proper excavation is much deeper and creates layers to allow for drainage and a firm foundation. Less expensive walls and terraces will start to degrade within a couple of years and need fixing.  With masonry, you absolutely get what you pay for. That doesn’t mean you have to get the best and most expensive mason, just a competent one who has been around and doesn’t take short-cuts to decrease costs.

Lawn Care
Lawn care is another area where hiring a quality company with an agronomist on staff or an expert will result in a healthier lawn.  Many problems come from having your maintenance company take care of your lawn. They won’t perform soil tests and often use products available at their wholesaler that dump herbicides and insecticides in every application. They often try to work themselves out of problems by overfertilizing, and this is like putting the lawn on steroids.  I work with companies that test and do what is right for the soil and the lawn, often with a minimum of chemicals.  A healthy lawn is the best way to minimize weeds. While a good lawn company might cost more, it will ensure that you don’t have to start over, and your lawn can be healthy with minimal chemical intervention and your garden can be filled with beneficial insects.

Plants
Plants are one last area where finding well grown plants is the healthiest option. There are plenty of short-cuts to quickly grow plants to sellable size. The big box stores sell cheap plants by finding local nurseries to contract grow plants for them, but the only way to do this and make any profit is to put them on steroids. Losing plants to disease or insect damage costs money, so they are amped up to protect them and fertilized to grow quickly. They then come to your garden, weakened by being artificially supported. Go to quality garden centers and nurseries who source well-grown plants. You will save money in the long-term and have healthier plants that adapt better to your garden. Also, buying bigger is not always better, especially with perennials. A small perennial will reach mature size in three years and cost much less than buying large sized perennials.

There are ways to save money and get good work, or ways to perform  expensive work over multiple seasons to work within budgets, but at the end of the day, the cheapest option often delivers sub-standard results over time.

There’s never enough time or money to do it right, but there’s always time and money to do it again.

Make the right choice for the long-term even if it costs a little more!

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Published by Barking Dog Gardens

My first career was in Advertising in NYC, but after moving to San Francisco 25 years ago, I made a life-altering change and went back to school for Ornamental Horticulture. Over the years in San Francisco and Boston I have worked in multiple nurseries, had my own design, installation and maintenance businesses on both coasts, managed a 30 acre historic private estate in Brookline, and managed one of the top fine-gardening companies in New England. I was for years a Massachusetts Certified Horticulturist(MCH). Most recently, design and consulting work has led me to focus my passion on working individually with people and showing them how to make their gardens and landscapes beautiful through inspiration and proper care. My experience allows me to advise on any aspect of the landscape from trees to stonework to perennial borders to lighting and irrigation. While there is much I do not know, I have a network of experts who can help with any topic. I find that few things in life are more humbling than tending to the living organism of a garden.

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