• Advice/thoughts please. We are looking to tidy up/improve the garden a bit, shed roof and back wall are rotten, 'raised' beds are rotten and falling apart, the borders grow over the grass and make muddy/mossy patches, my partner hates the bark around the beds and in general we want it to look nice!

    We have worked through a lot of ideas and settled on this as our preferred option. Evening sun is in the corner with the pergola (also a decent deck for bbqs etc at the house end). We would gain a slightly bigger shed, biggest job I see is leveling the ground and replacing the bark chips with a brick area. Got the idea of using old bricks as we had about 250 bricks left over from removing an interior wall.

    Any major flaws with the idea/layout? I figure the bricks will still drain if laid on a bed of sand and the joins filled with sand. I now realise we need LOADS of bricks (20-25 m sq) which is a ball ache.


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  • Long read....

    Other than the end bit it looks quite nice. Personally I wouldn't worry about overflowing beds as the grass grows back, but if you don't like it then two obvious solutions are; 1. raised beds as the overflow is raised off the grass. Altho a shadow may be cast which could effect the grass. 2. Make the beds and the grass that borders it more wild. That way you loose the distinction of the bed. Downside with that is if you have a narrow garden it visually closes, rather than widens the space.

    Evening sun is in the corner with the pergola

    I'm a bit opinionated about pergolas, but if it's evening sun are you sure you want something blocking it out? If it was blasting midday sun I get it, but in our country I'd be looking to maximise it. If your OH heart is set on a pergola then try and design it to block the least amount of sun and think carefully before growing things up it. Maybe just a single elegant climbing rose.

    I would consider raising the ground height of the back section to add interest and levels. If that's too much work then I'd raise up that horizontal bed and plant something that'll give you a low screen.

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