Decades ago, designing landscapes, I noticed expensive neighborhoods are noisy & lack many natural fragrances.
Noise of remodeling with hammers, air-compressors & maintenance mowers/blowers is ubiquitous where the money is. Mono-culture lawns too.
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Designing a landscape near
Agnes Scott College, at a charming historic middle-class bungalow, I revelled in the fragrance. It was Tara Turf. No deed restrictions demanding Bermuda or Zoysia. Their lawns are fescue, moss, clover, ajuga, violets, & etc. Smelling deeply of nourishment to my DNA.
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On the few occasions I can get to my Conservatory for a nap I know it won't be interrupted with mower or construction noise. Ironic pleasure, yes?
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"I absolutely hate the sound of machines in the garden. Mowers, Rotovators, hedge cutters are all a kind of torture. I want peace.
But there are some sounds that I do love to hear. By late July the young buzzards mew and noisily complain in the fields by the river as their parents leave them to learn how to hunt. A quiet garden allows the year to be measured by these sounds." Sarah Don
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Garden & Be Well, XO Tara
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pic via
Cote de Texas. Who knew noise in the landscape would be a bittersweet topic. Much of the noise has gone away in this economy. A few years ago a client lived next door to new construction. It was a large home entirely sheathed in stone. It took a full year to chip the stone.
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Many neighborhoods now put limitations on mow/blow & construction days/times.
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The worst 'noise' day ever designing a landscape I had to hear a client's neighbor berate, bully, cuss, & threaten his young son for over 2 hours. I wonder how that little boy turned out, he must be past college now.
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More irony? My business makes the noise in neighborhoods. Hammers, saws, Caterpillar.......