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Landscape Idea Home Resources
Introduction
1.
Your Grounds
2. Designing and Planning
3. Designing and Planning
#2
4. Gardener Equipment
5. Construction Problems
6. Construction Problems
#2
7. Soils and Lawns
8. Soils and Lawns #2
9. Trees
10. Trees #2
11. Shrubs and Hedges
12. Shrubs and Hedges #2
13. Flowers
14. Flowers #2
15. Home Financing
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Where To Find The Best Landscape Designer
When you want the interiors of your house designed, who are you likely to call? An interior designer right? But what if you wanted to get your gardens and parks done up? I’m not talking about the square feet kind of gardens here, but those vast expanses that give meaning to word expanse? Would a mere gardener do or are you in need of someone more like a landscape designer?
Most people tend to confuse the landscape designer with an artist who does paintings of landscapes. This is common enough and when the words landscape designer are mentioned, most people would begin to think in this fashion. But we are talking about the horticultural variety of the landscape designer more than the cultural variety!
A landscape designer is a much in demand professional. Maybe it would not be a good idea to use the term professional here. For although what he does is strictly speaking, his profession, a landscape designer is also a creative individual who indulges his knowledge of plants, shrubs and trees to create something that enthralls and inspires. Ever wondered who maintains and comes up with the striking designs of all those manicured lawns you are likely to see at some of the larger estate houses? Well, the answer lies with a landscape designer. Ever wondered who is behind all those shrub mazes and French gardens? The answer is again a landscape designer.
How does one become a landscape designer anyways? Well, you would be surprised to know that there is a course available for people who seek an entry into this profession. It is an expansion of what used to be known as ‘home science’ in an earlier time. While the course covers the fundamentals of gardening and horticulture, it also deals with an element of aesthetics and a fair amount of history. Learning to become one is a fairly eclectic choice and the various modules of the course more than easily reflect this. It is not an easy task to learn to become a landscape designer. But with patience, dedication and skill, it surely is a lucrative vocation.
Most landscape designers, once they have achieved a degree of a reputation, or after they have been commissioned to create some of the more public landscapes, tend to attract fees in the very high range. It is but natural to expect this. People who can afford to have that kind of land in the first place, would be millionaires themselves. And if they care enough to hire a professional landscape designer to beautify it, they will surely pay for the hard to get skill. So, this is a profession where you can literally make hay while the sun shines!
