« View Post
Photos

Oops! Leave without saving?

If you leave this page, the information you have entered will not be saved!
Are you sure you want to leave this page?

Leave this page Stay on this page

Hometalk.com

  • Sign Up
  • or
  • Log In
  • Professionals
  • Community
    • All Members
    • Professionals
    • Bloggers
  • About
    • About Hometalk
    • Blog
    • FAQ
    • Guidelines
    • Resources
    • Support
    • Press
    • Contact
    • Terms of Use
    • Privacy Policy
  • Following
  • All Topics
    • Cleaning & Organization
    • Crafts
    • Design & Décor
    • DIY Projects
    • Gardening
    • Home Maintenance & Repairs
    • Outdoor Living
    • Painting
    • Remodeling
    • Repurposing & Upcycling
    See More Topics »
  • Questions
    • All Questions
    • Open Questions
    • Unanswered Questions
  • Clips
Post & Ask
Join Now Log In

Hometalk is where people share and help with everything home & garden

Hoffner Nursery & Landscaping

Professional | Orlando, FL
Services: Design, Lawn & Garden
52 Followers 89Likes 4 Shares
  • Overview
  • Posts1
  • Q&A87
  • Comments117
  • Following61
  • Write a Review
  • Send a Message
  • Request a Quote

Company Overview

We are a family owned and operated Nursery and Landscape Company. We provide all aspects of Landscaping and Landscape Construction to the central Florida community

Services

Landscaping, Lawn & Garden, Design

Areas of Expertise

Landscape Design & Instillation, Pavers, Lighting, Irrigation, Waterfalls and Ponds

Service Area

Central Florida

Contact Info

(407) 658-1460

http://hoffnernursery.com

Insurance

Liability $1,000,000.00

In Business Since

1999

Professional Associations

BBB


Recent Activity


  • outdoor seating

  • beautiful bedrooms

  • Architecture

  • Living room

+ 9 more
  • Hoffner Nursery & Landscaping
    Followed 13 boards on Feb 13, 2013
Aquascape Inc. KMS Woodworks Woodbridge Environmental Tiptophouse.com Steve G Douglas Hunt Donna Dixson
  • Hoffner Nursery & Landscaping
    Followed 6 people on Feb 13, 2013
Lynn C.
  • Hoffner Nursery & Landscaping
    Followed 1 person on Jun 15, 2012
911 Address Signs Regi R Jamie M Mosquito Curtains, Inc. Terry H Landscape Studio
  • Hoffner Nursery & Landscaping
    Followed 6 people on Jun 05, 2012
  • millstone fountain 2

Water in the garden, add a water garden to your garden this spring.

Erica Glasener
Erica Glasener Atlanta, GA
4 Comments | Post Comment | 1096 Views
  • Hoffner Nursery & Landscaping
    Commented on Mar 02, 2012
    This is a water feature we installed on a recent project, it has a catch basin under the ...»
    pavers and is a closed system we do install auto fill valves on all water features.

  • Share 18
  • Like 8
  • Clip 6
Clipped to:
  • Yards..Garde...
  • Spring is in the air!
Artistic Paver Mfg. Shari
  • Hoffner Nursery & Landscaping
    Followed 2 people on Mar 02, 2012

Design & Décor: Pond pump size -- need to pump 12-15,000 gph with HIGH HEAD

I am in advanced stages of planning a water garder in orlando florida.unable to decide the pump as i am unsure of actual TDH -- i would have a 5000 gallon and a bog which needs to a ...»
pump to water from the bog to top of a aquascape biofall grande -- the challenge is the waterfall is 70-75 feet away and 7 to 8 feet high -- the land follows a natural decline allowing a beatiful strem from the fall to the pond but distance and height from the bog to fall is messing up the pump head --- can someone suggg a cost effective way to overcome this.??

Gaddis F
Gaddis F Orlando, FL
8 Comments | Post Comment | 245 Views
  • Hoffner Nursery & Landscaping
    Commented on Feb 28, 2012
    I would suggest contacting Jim at Pondtastic 407-601 POND he specializes in ponds and has many ...»
    years experience. It is one thing to read the specifications of a pumps flow rate and head high abilities and another to know how that will look in your waterfall. They are on 441 in Orlando.

  • Share 0
  • Like 0
  • Clip 0
  • Before. Existing cracked concrete deck
  • Before: the reno coping was installed right on top of the existing coping. You still can see the old concrete deck below it.
  • After: Finished deck showing pool border with reno piece installed and the drop down face covering the old coping.
  • After: pavers installed on the top of the old cracked concrete deck. Pavers installed over sand. They will absorb small shifts and will not crack.
  • After: Pavers over old concrete deck without removing the old concrete slab.
  • After: The result is perfect and it saves time and money as you don't need to remove the old concrete slab. The pavers are installed over the deck laid down over sand with no grout. That will allow the pavers adjust to natural terrain shifting.
  • See 3 more photos

Renovating a pool deck without removing old cracked concrete deck

Yes! Pavers can be installed on top of an existing concrete deck, even if the deck is cracked. Pavers are installed over sand, therefore the new deck will absorb small shifts without ...»
cracking the pavers. The renovation coping piece has a drop-down face that will cover the old coping, so you don't have to remove the old coping, just cut it back. The reno coping is then install over mud right on the top of the old pool border. The rest of the deck will be set on send. Just lay the pavers leveled with the reno coping. Check out some before and after pictures.

Artistic Paver Mfg.
Artistic Paver Mfg. Miami, FL
17 Comments | Post Comment | 4185 Views
  • Hoffner Nursery & Landscaping
    Commented on Feb 22, 2012
    Nice work
  • Share 7
  • Like 5
  • Clip 4

Gardening: I broke down and purchased a heat mat and grow light to start my seeds. Should I invest in a thermostat as well?

I'm germinating the seeds in the house. Didn't know if it would cook the seeds.
CAROL H
CAROL H Harlem, GA
6 Comments | Post Comment | 159 Views
  • Hoffner Nursery & Landscaping
    Commented on Feb 22, 2012
    For most Vegetable seeds I will typically look to keep the green house in the 85-90 degree ...»
    range, you should get the quickest germination rate and the percentage of seeds germinating.

  • Share 0
  • Like 0
  • Clip 0

Gardening: How To Control Weeds Like A Pro !

WEED CONTROL IN RESIDENTIAL

LANDSCAPE BEDS ...»

Let's learn how to control weeds like a pro; it's much easier than you think. How do quality professional landscape maintenance companies control weeds so easily when homeowners struggle? Although I am an organic landscaper and nurseryman at heart sometimes our needs for convent quick methods outweigh my desire to do things in an organic manor. We must remember most weeds we are trying to control in our landscape beds are parental weeds they are constantly producing seeds, so our problems are not the weeds we see, it's the tens of thousands of weeds seeds waiting to germinate, and they must be our main concern. First step is consistency if you don't do weed control at least every other week you will always have a weed problem. If you want to be virtually weed free with 15 minutes work read on.

Most of us are familiar with Round – and it will be one of the products we are discussing. Professional landscape maintenance companies will typically be using two products to control weeds, they are post-emergent and pre-emergent. The post-emergent product is round-up, this is a product that will kill most weeds that have already sprouted and a pre-emergent will stop seeds from germinating. We would use Round Up (Pro) and Ronstar mixed together in the sprayer, we were killing the weeds that were up and growing and preventing weed seed from germinating at the same time.

Let's first learn about the use of post emergent (Round-UP), this is a product designed to kill weeds that will absorb the product through the leaf, and then translocate through the plants and kill the root system, this is in contrast to some post emergent products that will only kill the green leafy material but leave the roots intact only to have the weed return from root stock. Round –Up being systemic ( working from the inside of the plant) does take some time to work, in the growing season it can take from 5-10 days to see complete results and during the winter months 7-15 days in not unusual. This is because the plants are dormant during the winter months and not growing or growing very slowly, because of the slow growth rates in the winter months it takes the plant much longer to move the product to the roots than in the growing season when the plant can translocate the product to the roots much more quickly. When spraying Round Up you will only spray to the point of runoff, once you have applied more product than will stay on the leaf you are wasting time and money by spraying the ground (remember Round Up must be absorbed by the leaf to work and can't work any other way). If you have a large weed problem you will be doing more of a blanket application, but once you start to have things under control this will be more of a spot application, spraying each individual weed. Once you start controlling the weed in the landscape beds consistently you should not have weeds everywhere but a weed here and a weed there that can be spot sprayed. If we do this weekly or biweekly we will be killing the weed before they can become mature enough to propagate and produce more seeds that will have to be controlled in the future. Once we have begun to control weed consistently not allowing them to produce more seeds you will get to a point where most of the seed producing weeds are gone and the majority of the seed have germinated and killed, you then will have the weeds under and control and life is good. Round Up is not a kill all product and was not designed to be a kill all product, if you have weeds or plants with waxy leafs or froms that Round Up can't penetrate, you will not be able to kill them or must use a weedeater to break up the leafs or froms so the Round Up can penetrate the plant. Some plants like Asparagus Fern can't be killed with Round Up no matter what you do. This is something you learn with experience so error on the side of caution you can destroy your landscape with very little round up.

Pre-Emergent (Pre-m) products set up a barrier in the soil killing weed seeds as they germinate. As always read the label but most Pre-m products can be used on the turf and in the landscape beds. Pre M's come in liquid and granular products. You will have to go to a good nursery or commercial landscape supply company to get Pre M's by them self's but the benefit is worth the time to find them. Liquid Pre M's can be added to you round up sprayer and applied at the sometime you are applying Round-Up, the problem is once the weeds are under control you should be spot spraying each weed not spraying the entire landscape bed. A Pre M needs to be applied evenly over the entire area for the results we are looking for; this usually means using a handheld spreader and using a granular Pre M. Once again read the label but most Pre M's can be applied over the top of existing landscape plants, so doing a blanket application is simple and easy. Timing is everything; this is the time (in central Florida) to apply a Pre M to your landscape beds and turf, you want it applied before the conditions get correct to start the tens of thousands of weed seeds germinating in your turf and landscape beds so you can stop most of the problem before it starts. Many companies have these products in their product line and most homeowners don't know it, for example Scotts Crabgrass Preventer (an awesome product) is fertilizer and a Pre-Emergent mixed together for you, you are fertilizing and preventing crabgrass seeds (all seeds) from germinating, Round –Up extend is Round-Up and a liquid Pre M mixed together, the same as we have done commercially for 30 years.

Weed control does not have to be difficult I believe the most important aspect is consistency, just get out there and DO IT!

Hoffner Nursery & Landscaping
Hoffner Nursery & Landsca... Orlando, FL
10 Comments | Post Comment | 697 Views
  • Hoffner Nursery & Landscaping
    Commented on Feb 21, 2012
    Be careful this procedure is for landscape beds NOT turf.
  • Share 4
  • Like 6
  • Clip 6
Loading
Back
to top
Feedback