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Guide To Landscape Design For Year

Guide To Landscape Design For Year

Scoop12-07-2025
In the desert, planning ahead is important when it comes to landscaping. Water is a valuable resource in areas where drought conditions can sometimes be inevitable. Desert landscaping can add depth and beauty to your outdoor environment while providing a number of other benefits. For beautiful year-round landscaping, consider some of the suggestions below.
Year - Round Beauty
Integrate a variety of seasonal blooms into your landscape design for optimal year-round color. For example, you may want to include different types of cacti with brilliant blooms at different times of the year. Incorporating rocks, shade trees, succulents, and flowering shrubs can help create a calm, natural aesthetic to please the eye.
Cacti
Barrel Cactus – Displays orange, yellow, or red flowers in late summer.
Hedgehog Cactus – Boasts beautiful red and pink blooms in April and May.
Chain Fruit Cholla – This hardy cactus, also known as the Jumping Cholla, will keep your landscape popping with majestic magenta blooms from April until September.
Saguaro – This iconic cactus boasts Arizona's state flower from late spring until early summer. The showy white blooms are only open at night. Red fruits appear later in the summer.
Flowering Plants
Chuparosa – A favorite of hummingbirds, the Chuparosa is a semi-succulent with bright red, yellow, or orange blooms. This plant typically produces big, showy blooms from late winter to early spring.
Coulter's Lupine – Slender in appearance, Lupine can add a sense of serenity to your landscape with its tall stalks of bluish-purple, pink, or white. This beauty flowers from March until May.
California Poppy – Sporting bright blooms of various colors, the California Poppy can bloom from late winter into the summer. While the state flower of California is typically known for its brilliant blooms of orange, some variants of yellow, red, pink, and white can be found.
Trees
Ironwood – The large, beautiful Ironwood tree can reach heights of up to 30 feet. It boasts blooms of purple or white in late spring and early summer.
Mesquite – Another large desert tree, the Mesquite offers edible beans for wildlife while sporting bright yellow flowers in the spring.
Create Some Shade
Creating shade in your garden is a great way to beat the heat of the desert sun, but a shady reprieve is not the only benefit. Adding trees to your desert landscape will also help conserve water. Plants growing under the shade of large, native trees require less watering. This not only provides for less maintenance, but may help save on your water bill as well. The far-reaching branches of trees like the big, beautiful Ironwood can create an aesthetic beauty that also serves to protect your flowering plants while conserving water.
In the desert environment, water can be a valuable resource. It's important to plan your landscaping around this idea. Envirogreen Landscaping can help you achieve a beautiful, eco-friendly garden with top-tier desert landscaping services.
Once you have decided upon your planting preferences, Envirogreen Landscaping can provide you with a 3D view of your landscape design. This lets you see exactly what your landscaping will look like beforehand.
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