Landscape my yard the easiest way possible
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Sit down and draw up a simple plan of where you want your garden to be. Whether up against the house or outer edges, by establishing a basic plan it should help you from feeling ovewhelmed. Then take it section by section. Decide where you want sod to go, get that done and your frustrations will lessen considerably. Unless you have the finances to get it done all at once, this should be looked at as a long term, enjoyable, and fluid.
2. Check the sun during the day in each section and make notes on your design. This will determine which plants will do best in which section.
3. Make a budget for each section. Decide which section(s) you want to complete first.
4. Buy your anchor pieces for the first section -- the biggest ones you can afford.
5. Then kill all the weeds. If you plan to put in a watering system, do it now.
6. And mulch the other sections while you concentrate of your first section. The mulch will make the other sections look nice and neat while you complete the first task.
Good luck.
You're basically starting with a blank canvas. I'm kinda jealous. Here a how I would do it. Do it in sections. Whatever is most important to YOU, whether it's getting your front done so neighbors have somethung to look at, or getting the back ready for personal private enjoyment
1)clean up- pull weeds (or burn them out) get the space empty. I am a huge fan of burning out weeds. Especially in large areas where you don't have to worry about damaging nearby plants. If you have a very large area and you can't burn or use herbicides (or if you'd just rather not) put down layers of newspaper flowed my mulch. The paper won't allow weeds to grow and it's good worm food, in time it will decompose and turn into great soil.you can also use cardboard as long as it isn't shiny
2)plan your areas- get out some paper and draw a bird's eye view of your yard and decide what you want to go where. ie: lawn, flower beds, etc...
3)section everythingoff- just to get a feel for the look, use something temporary, you can just stretch out a hose, whatever works for you
3)Put down the base- now, that could be grass seed, sod, pebbles
Don't get overwhelmed by it, if a week goea by all you do is clean out the weeds, thats still progress! Even if 6 months has passed and you still don't know what you want to do, that's ok too. Put some potted plants out until you come up with a more permanent home for them. As far as easy plants, that kinda depends on how much sun or shade they'll have. Watch the property throughout the day, go back to your drawing and make notes. Which areas have the most sun or shade? How long? from there you can figure out qhich plants will work best for the space
https://www.diynetwork.com/how-to/outdoors/gardening/17-low-maintenance-plants-and-dwarf-shrubs-pictures