Hello,
What does it cost to completely clear a 400m2 (4,300 sq ft) garden? About 5 trees (assuming they can be felled) and a lot of undergrowth. How much should I expect to pay for heavy equipment, disposal, and possibly new soil?
An old house is going to be demolished in the garden. Only 400m2 (4,300 sq ft) of the plot is in such bad shape that it needs to be handled by a professional company.
What does it cost to completely clear a 400m2 (4,300 sq ft) garden? About 5 trees (assuming they can be felled) and a lot of undergrowth. How much should I expect to pay for heavy equipment, disposal, and possibly new soil?
An old house is going to be demolished in the garden. Only 400m2 (4,300 sq ft) of the plot is in such bad shape that it needs to be handled by a professional company.
P
pagoni20206 Sep 2021 09:45haydee schrieb:
Leave it if you don’t need the space. In the “jungle” here, so many birds live.
Recently, I counted 38 tits and sparrows, a pair of pigeons, and a pair of jays, as well as dunnocks and wrens.
From time to time, a common buzzard passes by.
Swallows and blackbirds only come by to feed.
Otherwise, review what you have and keep what is still healthy. Mature trees are nice and help create a pleasant climate in summer. Maybe there are also perennials and other useful plants for you. This is naturally the preferred option; often, with a little imagination and minimal effort, something unique can be created that a landscape gardener would only be able to do expensively and usually less beautifully or originally. My suggestion was only for when removal is absolutely necessary. On our property, nothing that has been there for a long time is removed; it is integrated into the garden design.
Just the possibilities for old trees that aren’t hanging on a steep slope like mine.
Seating areas, swings, treehouse, hammocks, slackline. A friend simply hung some round slings for the kids.
Plus the yield from the fruit.
Any plant that has survived 20 years without care is resilient and later requires hardly any work. Wild blackberries should be removed, but the old lilac is worth keeping.
Seating areas, swings, treehouse, hammocks, slackline. A friend simply hung some round slings for the kids.
Plus the yield from the fruit.
Any plant that has survived 20 years without care is resilient and later requires hardly any work. Wild blackberries should be removed, but the old lilac is worth keeping.
FuxxBau schrieb:
By "jungle," I just meant how much nature has reclaimed the garden. So, the overgrown garden?!
I would post this as a landscaping project on MyHammer and then compare offers. There are simply too many regional differences.
However, I would first consider if there is anything you want to keep: it takes about 10 years for a garden with newly planted plants to truly develop. That’s why established gardens are valuable not only because of the purchase price of the plants, but also because of the time saved. That is priceless. So, see what’s growing there, maybe upload some photos here before you let a landscaper with an excavator and tractor start working.
FuxxBau schrieb:
With "jungle," I just wanted to describe how much nature has reclaimed the garden. And now it’s giving itself to you, which is great. Every extra point of bee attraction benefits the flowers you want in your garden. Even the most scraggly bushes help prevent soil erosion. That holds your property together better than a bunch of retaining wall blocks.
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