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Preface
1. Bow Evolution
2. Transition Period
3. Bow Selecting
4. Target Shooting
5. Aiming
6. Scoring Archers
7. Rounds
8. Archery Club
9. Field Roving
10. Tournaments
11. Bow Hunting
12. The Bow
13. Ammunition
14. Bow Hunter
15. Hunting Bow
16. Moving Targets
17. Bow Vacation
18. Bow Sight
19. A Safety Code
20. Bow String
21. Tackle Box
22. Novelty Shoots
23. Map Hunting
24. Needle Points
25. Cooking Venison
26. Food & Cover
27. A Survey
Resources
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Home Landscape Planning And Design
As a part of my individual regular training for landscaping, I make the time to stop by yards and gardens created by homeowners and do it yourselfers. There are usually many personal aspects to every garden that differ in degree of style, budget, and imagination. Of course, the prime deciding factor that I've noticed between amazing landscaping ideas and not so great ones is how much planning goes into each landscape or yard.
It is clear that the preperation process and getting a vision might be difficult and frustrating for beginner landscapers. But, regardless of how much time it takes, don't neglect this phase. It's critical to the final appearance, continued growth, effectiveness, and functionality of your landscaping design. Take the time to plan. Keep the following advice in mind. They will be beneficial for getting your ideas and vision on paper and ultimately to the ground.
When you begin the design process it might be helpful to focus on the abstract as opposed to specifics. Many expert landscapers prepare their designs this way. As opposed to getting caught up in particular plants or flowers that you want to put in your landscaping plans, think of the color, size, texture, shape, and function of plants needed in specific areas. Specific plant types can be researched and picked once the planning is completed.
Try drawing or copying your dream landscape into your area as though you've got a flat blank dirt lot to begin with. Look through landscaping pictures and copy the entire design in your yard if you need to. Adjust it, convert it, or try something else. The idea is to plan without limitation and then convert it and work with what you have already.
A common design obstacle is being unable to look past what's already there. While it's great to integrate existing views and elements that are attractive, your landscape design projects aren't confined by a lot more than space, budget, and resourcefulness. It's usually advantageous to see past what you have already and begin with a clean design in mind.
Do not fill your head with each aspect of your landscaping plan. Instead, pay attention to accessibility, shape, purpose, etc. Instead of thinking about specific supplies needed for decks, pathways, walls, patios, fences, and other hardscapes, think in terms of convenience, shape, size, purpose, access, and necessity.
The last tip is to keep it simple by keeping elements to only a few and repeating them. Also, you could try making a focal point in every major area. This can be simply a bird bath, entry door or gate, or even a bed of flowers. Keep focal points to no more than one because too many will compete for focus and confuse the view.
