Do you have a beautiful Zen garden outside your home? You have invested a lot of time and energy in the realization of your garden and you are proud of the result achieved. You can be proud of it, because the result is indeed very successful. And it's not your friends who tell you otherwise when they come to visit you at home. You receive compliments and make people envious.
A Japanese Zen garden, you don't see it every day. And it's not given to everyone to have one at home in their garden. On the one hand, because it requires a certain mastery of everything related to gardening, planting, plant maintenance... And specifically the Zen garden. We do not plant just any plant, anywhere in our garden. You have to follow a well-established plan for the rendering to be perfect. And not only at the level of the plants, but also of the arrangement of the pebbles, and other living natural materials.
It is not enough to plant a few well-determined plants in advance and in a well-established order for the bet to be won. You will have to be patient to see the final result. The plants will have to grow to a certain height before being well integrated into their environment, a question of balance and harmony. And in terms of harmony, the Zen garden knows a lot. To tell the truth, it is the very principle of the Japanese garden. To be sure to lay out your garden properly, it is best to call on gardening professionals.
Creating a Japanese Zen garden is good, but you will also have to learn how to maintain it. Learn how to prune shrubs at the right time. Japanese maples, for example, are pruned at specific times of the year. Again, you will need professional advice.
You will also need gardening tools to successfully cut and size your plants and other shrubs. No question of neglecting the quality of your equipment. To make your garden maintenance easier, you will also need a garden cart. Thanks to such a garden trolley, you will be able to load all your green plant waste into the dumpster in a single step. You will no longer need to bend down to pick up branches and other dead leaves that have fallen to the ground during pruning. A considerable saving of time which will also allow you to get less tired.