Showing posts with label landscaping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label landscaping. Show all posts

Saturday, March 30, 2013

A Little of the Everyday


These are palm trees that stand tall in the courtyard of my apartment complex. Sometimes we need nothing more than a clear view of the everyday to remind us of the beauty of life.

Sunday, September 2, 2012

Desert Splendor

Univision grounds, Phoenix, AZ
These are just a few photos I took this morning. I mentioned before the merits of xeriscaping, and the office grounds of Univision, the Spanish language TV channel, in the South Mountain community of Phoenix is an excellent example of this. I have long been a fan of their approach to landscaping corporate grounds in the Valley. While some plants, like the red bird of paradise, are not necessarily native to the area, all of their plants are tolerant of the severe drought and heat of the area. These photos represent just a fraction of the beauty you'll find on the grounds of their office headquarters.

Prickly pear, Univision grounds, Phoenix, AZ 
Water feature and saguaro, Univision grounds, Phoenix, AZ
Into desert splendor, Univision grounds, Phoenix, AZ

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Wild Beauty

South Mountain community, Phoenix, AZ
I took this photo this morning of a local garden that I have always loved. While so many Phoenicians prefer manicured lawns with shrubbery and small trees butchered into balls and cubes, which I find to be distasteful, the owner of this yard believes in the beauty of letting things be. I love the shagginess of those untrimmed palm trees. There is a certain lushness here, a sense of an oasis thriving right in the middle of the desert. To be sure, I would probably not choose to grow a garden as densely packed with plants as this in Phoenix, fearing to give an attractive hiding place to rattlesnakes and scorpions. Instead, I would prefer a xeriscaping approach to landscaping, using native desert plants that have a high tolerance of drought and heat, but I would leave my shrubbery and trees alone to grow naturally, without manicure. At any rate, I really love this natural, untamed beauty. Things are often most beautiful when they simply are what they are, without apology, and without forcing them into unnatural shapes that are nothing more than illusion.