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Boxwood Small

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Boxwood Small
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Q1921- Hand carved Boxwood Netsuke  - lovely small frog on snail
Q1921- Hand carved Boxwood Netsuke - lovely small frog on snail
Paypal   US $10.99
P517: Boxwood NETSUKE: lovely small mouse on frog
P517: Boxwood NETSUKE: lovely small mouse on frog
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Boxwood Small

Garden Design Advice for Tucson, Arizona Residents

Are you looking for good garden design advice in Tucson, Arizona? Perhaps some of the best advice is on how to prevent the spread of destructive pests in your garden! This article will provide you with garden design tips that will help you cultivate and protect your crops. Whether you're looking to grow edible plants or beautiful flowers, the following information will be beneficial to you.

Garden Design Advice for Tucson: Raise Companion Plants That Thwart the Spread of Destructive Pests:

Dills for cabbages. The number one enemy of plants belonging to the cabbage family is the cabbageworm. These tiny creatures bore holes into the cabbage plants, making them useless for consumption or trading. Dills are plants that attract Tachinid flies that feed on cabbageworms and their eggs. Dills are known to be permanent solutions to the problems caused by unwanted cabbageworms.

Tomatoes for cabbages. Some moths feed on cabbage foliage as well, creating the same problems as those brought on by cabbageworms. Worse, moths produce larvae at such a rapid pace that a full-blown invasion is almost always inevitable. By growing tomatoes near your cabbage plants will help you deter moths. Is is said that tomato plants emit a particular odor that moths loathe, keeping them (and their larvae) away from your garden.

Chives or garlic for roses. Roses are grown for the beautiful flowers. Pests often ruin these blooms, making a quarter of a year's work rather useless. Cultivating chives alongside roses assists in repelling the usual pests that feed on rose bushes. Garlic is believed to have the same effect.

Beans for corn. A bug infestation in corn crops can be very harmful for the entire garden. Cultivating beans in your garden will help attract useful insects that will prey on the usual pests that trouble corn fields. Armyworms, leaf beetles and leaf hoppers will be all but sad memories with bean plants surrounding growing corn stalks.

Nasturtiums for cucumbers. Cukes attract cucumber beetles - little insects with strong jaws that hack through cucumbers themselves. Nasturtiums, however, repel cucumber beetles, allowing for the healthy growth of cucumber plants.

Here's some information about a popular desert plant that will make a great addition to the area around your garden design in Tucson.

Boxwood Beauty, also called "Green Carpet" or Carissa Macrocarpa, is a fast-growing, ornamental shrub that is wind resistant and can grow in coastal area. It usually forms a dense, thorny shrub, but can also grow into a small tree.

Boxwood Beauty has y-shaped thorns that grow from green branches. The plant exudes a milky, white non-toxic latex material. Its leaves are shiny, dark and leathery. The flowers vary in size, are pure white in color and have the scent of orange blossoms. Boxwood Beauty produces large oval red fruit that is edible and rich in Vitamin C. "Green Carpet" is a popular ground cover.

Boxwood Beauty attracts birds and butterflies to the garden. It can be pruned if necessary.

If you are still unsure about what will work in your garden design and landscaping in Tucson, there are plenty of online resources that can help you. For instance, many local landscaping companies have expertise in garden design and plants that thrive in the area. Hiring a professional garden design and landscaping company in Tucson, Arizona might just be your best bet. They can work with you to pick out the best plants that fit your taste, lifestyle and budget - and they can even help you maintain it!

About the Author

John Waters is Principal of Creative Environments Design Landscape, the largest and most respected landscape design company in Arizona. Let our team work with you to develop a garden design in Tucson that will fit your style and budget. Visit our website to request a free consultation.

I need a small red shrub or bush I can put next to a boxwood that will grow in full shade...any thoughts?

The area gets 1 or 2 hours of sunlight in the morning...that's about it.

Can't think of any red shrub that would tolerate that much shade. How about switching to an annual. Impatiens if well watered and fertilzed, in good soil will grow about 18 inches high, and have a fantastic show of flowers in a variety of colors. Some of the new varieties of Coleus may also be worth checking out. I think there is also a dwarf red-leaved musa (banana} that might work but you'd have to bring it in if you have any winter at all.
Good luck. I have tons of shade, and know it is a challenge.

Public gardens reflect private personalities
LENOX — “In the summer New York was the only place in which one could escape from New Yorkers,’’ Edith Wharton once quipped. Wharton would have known: She was one of the wealthy New Yorkers who took to the hills and the shores of New England in summer, probably bumping into city friends at every stylish soirée. New England - Edith Wharton - New York City - United States - newyork

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