Importance of having trees in your Landscape Garden

Trees in Landscape Garden

 Trees support healing, create jobs, and provide protection from the elements.

Landscape gardening and garden designing are also defined as the process of beautifying a plot of land that includes a house or other structure. Landscape gardening involves the planting of lawns, shrubs, and trees in order to create naturalistic scenes. This is an amalgamation of science and art.

Aesthetically pleasing locations

The trees are stunning. They can help to define your driveway or make your yard stand out (with the help of landscape lighting). They also signal the passing of the seasons, with beautiful flowers in the spring and brilliant foliage in the fall. Any landscape garden can benefit from trees.

Air and water filters found in nature

Large sponges, trees are. On their leaves and bark, they absorb pollutants (and odors) and filter particulates from the air. Trees convert carbon dioxide into clean oxygen for us to breathe through photosynthesis. Over the course of a year, an acre of mature trees can produce enough oxygen for 18 people.

Windbreak and shade

In the summer, the shade of trees on the south side of a house can significantly cool it, with estimates of 30% lower air-conditioning bills compared to an unshaded house. In the summer, the temperature beneath a tree can be 9 degrees cooler than the air above the nearby blacktop and up to 25 degrees cooler than the air above the nearby asphalt. When we search for tree shade in the desert-like expanse of an asphalt parking lot, we intuitively understand the value of shade. Placed on the northwest side of a house as a windbreak, evergreen trees (broad-leaved or conifers) can save up to 20% on winter heating costs.

Energy Conservers and Producers

Trees aid in environmental preservation. They have the ability to cool our homes, streets, and cities by up to 10 degrees Fahrenheit. During the hot summer months, this temperature reduction allows homeowners and city governments to save money on cooling costs. We also save fossil fuels and other resources by using less energy to cool our homes and businesses, which could potentially pollute the environment.

Wildlife Refuges

Trees make excellent dwellings. They are home to a variety of wildlife, including birds, bees, squirrels, and Monarch butterflies. Children are another type of "wildlife" that benefits from trees. During the summer, tree houses and tire swings provide hours of entertainment. Two shade trees can create a great hammock spot for napping and read for older "wildlife."


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