Showing posts with label landscape. Show all posts
Showing posts with label landscape. Show all posts

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Landscaping and Garden Solutions: Keeping it Natural

Every landscape project poses unique and interesting challenges.  This project was no different.  Upon first meeting with the customers, the only elements they knew they wanted were a water feature and a weeping evergreen tree.  The property is located on a beautiful lake in western Wisconsin and is surrounded by nature.  The goal of the project was to create a landscape that was not only functional for the customers busy life style, as they travel quite a bit, but also fit into the natural setting of the property without competing with it.
 
The water feature location was determined based on the space that the home owner used most often.  The deck was a new feature the homeowner recently added and was used quite frequently by the homeowners. 
 

Material selection was also an integral part of the landscape.  Using a stone native to the area was important to both the visual integrity of the design and the project budget.  Dresser Trap boulders were selected.  The boulders were shipped directly from Dresser, WI which is only 20 miles from the job site.

To help transition the landscape from one side of the house to the other, an ornamental planting bed was incorporated in an island in the center of the driveway.  This was an ideal place to incorporate the weeping evergreen trees and include the trap boulders.



The most exciting part of this project is what you can’t see.  Because both of the homeowners traveled very frequently for work, they needed a way to keep on eye on their new landscaping.  During the installation of the irrigation system, outdoor lighting and the water feature automation technology was wired.  The
automation technology allows the homeowner to control the technical portion of their landscape from their smart phone.  The system will allow them to control the irrigation system and make adjustments based on natural precipitation thus conserving water.  They are also notified if a part of the system is not functioning.  The lighting and water feature are also continually monitored.

Contributed by:
Landscape Designer
Mickman Brothers Landscape Design and Installation
763-413-8286
763-434-4047

Mickman Brothers offers Landscape Design and Installation; Lawn Irrigation Design and Installation; Tree and Arbor Services; Landscape Maintenance Services; Lawn Sprinkler Services; Full-Service Garden Center; Delivery and Planting Services; for the Minneapolis and St Paul metro area.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Choosing Perennials for your Yard - Mickman Brothers Landscape Design


Perennials are herbaceous plants that tolerate the cold and will come back each spring.  Perennial plants can be used in a flower garden or they can be used to add seasonal interest to a shrub bed.

Planning out your bed before you purchase plants will help avoid a haphazard look and save you money in the long run.  Designing the bed on paper or consulting a designer will ensure that the bed will be successful.
Consider the characteristics of each plant and the site where the bed is located.  When selecting plants for your bed make a list of the following:
  • When does it bloom and for how long?
  • Mature height and width, (determines scale with other plants)
  • Soil, moisture and light requirements
Group your plants with the same light and soil requirements together first. Then consider color combinations and blooming times. Doing this simple process will ensure the health of the plants, and a full season of blooms.

Contributed by the Mickman Brothers Landscape Design Team

Contact us at 763-434-3346 or
landscape.manager@mickman.com



Monday, April 23, 2012

Choosing Shrubs - Mickman Brothers Landscape Design

Shrubs can provide many years of color and seasonal interest in your yard, but a wrong choice can become a problem over time. Determining the characteristics of a plant first, will help you narrow down the choices and avoid mistakes that will haunt you.

Bella Anna Hydrangea
 It is important that you select the right plant for the space and effect that you want.

 These are primary elements for choosing plants.
  1.  Mature height and width
  2.  Texture and Color (all seasons)
  3.  The plants shape or form (consider the other plants near it)
 Secondary elements
  1.  Lighting- full sun or shade
  2.  Moisture requirements (drought or moisture tolerance)
  3.  Soil adaptability (drainage, ph levels)

Contributed by the Mickman Brothers Landscape Design Team

Contact us at 763-434-3346 or
landscape.manager@mickman.com

www.mickman.com
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Photo courtesy of Bailey Nurseries, Inc.

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Field Trip to Mickman Brothers Garden Center!

Wilson Elementary School Field Trip

Zachary's Letter
As some of you know, I’ve been writing stories about some of my adventures (and misadventures!) and sharing many of them online with you. A couple of years ago I was asked by a since retired teacher at Wilson Elementary in Anoka if I would share some of these stories with her writing class. I was delighted!

Desaya's Letter
Since that time I have visited Wilson Elementary many times to share stories and talk about writing with these wonderful children. It truly does make my day each time I visit and am re-invigorated when I return to work. Once again last week I shared two of my stories with two writing classes at Wilson and was rewarded not only with the enriching experience, but also with individual letters of thanks by each of the kids. The letters above are examples of these notes.  Click here to read Zachary's letter.  Click here to read Desaya's letter.

Planting their flowers!
Each of the kids was enthusiastic about a visit to Mickman Brothers, so yesterday we were treated to a field trip by the kids to our company with 120 wonderful 4th graders.  They came at two different times and we broke them up into 3 groups of 20 children each, led by either Sara Laning, Wanda Shelmidine or me.  It took nearly an hour for the tours which included each child planting an annual ‘plug’ into a 4” pot. One can only imagine what kind of a ‘fire-drill’ that turned out to be! Each child was able to choose the type of flower they wanted to plant and they did a wonderful job transplanting and ‘watering in’ each of their plants to take home to their parents. What fun!

During the tour we all talked about the jobs each of us do at Mickman Brothers and how much we enjoy ‘doing what we do’. Our trade association, the MN Nursery and Landscape Association supplied pens and book markers for each child encouraging them to go online to thelandlovers.org to learn more about career opportunities in the Green Industry. A couple of the kids told me they’d like to grow up and have a job just like my daughter Mariah (that they met during the tour) who is an Urban Forester graduate from the U of M.

Thanks again for the wonderful teachers and staff at Wilson Elementary for making this all possible. It is great to meet and know some of the many individuals that make our school systems rewarding in so many ways!

John S. Mickman
President
www.mickman.com

Monday, April 18, 2011

Where to apply Preen - Mickman Brothers Landscape Maintenance

Mariah Mickman demonstrates how to apply Preen Garden Weed Preventer in a perennial landscape garden. Early Spring is the best time to apply Preen, it does not harm your perennial plants, as they are already established. It does not kill existing weeds, it will prevent new weeds from sprouting - eliminating the need for hand weeding! Preen prevents weeds for up to 3 months!  Call Mariah, Landscape Maintenance, or our Landscape Design department with any questions, 763.413.8296 or mariah.mickman@mickman.com.


Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Pruning Ornamental Grasses - Mickman Brothers Landscape Department

Mariah Mickman shows us how to trim back our ornamental grasses after the long Minnesota winter!  The ornamental grass looked great in our Winter landscape garden, but it needs to be pruned back to allow for new growth in the upcoming gardening season!  Contact Mariah or any of our Landscape Designers for more about cleaning up your landscape gardens or updating your current landscape design, mariah.mickman@mickman.com

Monday, April 11, 2011

Snow Mold - Mickman Brothers Landscape Maintenance

Mariah Mickman gives advice on how to handle Snow Mold on your lawn after the Spring thaw.  Our Landscape Maintenance and Design departments hope to assist you in preparing your yard for a fantastic growing season!  Call Mariah at 763.413.8296 with any Landscape Maintenance questions, or mariah.mickman@mickman.com!  

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Mickman Brothers installs Target Field irrigation for the Minnesota Twins


A green haven under an open sky

Originally Posted Wednesday, March 24, 2010 by ABC Newspapers |
by Eric Hagen
Staff writer

A Minnesota Twins outfielder sprints, then dives to catch a fly ball.

He slides on the grass carpet more real than the Twins have seen at home for almost 30 years. He triumphantly pushes up and hops to his feet, the ball in hand. The crowd, shading their eyes against the sun, go wild when they see that the home team got the out.

This is one of many images Minnesota Twins fans will see this year when the
club moves to Target Field. A Ham Lake company is playing a major role
in keeping the field a vivid green.

Mickman Brothers was the contractor for Target Field irrigation system,
which ultimately cost about $80,000, according to Jeff Sutter, a
Mickman Brothers employee for over 25 years who supervised the
irrigation project.

In its over 30 years of installing irrigation systems for residential
and commercial properties and athletic fields, Mickman Brothers has
worked on larger projects, but nothing as high profile as Target Field,
Sutter said.

“It’s just been a really proud thing to be a part of that whole stadium,” he said.
The system will do more than provide water for the field. Recycled
water will be used to wash seats in the lower half of the first level
of the stadium.

According to Sutter, a cistern under the field will collect water
drainage after it has been treated by a filtration system. This stored
water can be pumped to the whole perimeter of the field.

From here, Sutter said Target Field maintenance crews could hook up to
the system with hoses and wash the lower-level seats. Other seats would
be washed using water from a different system.

Getting it done
Sutter began working on this project during the spring of 2008 after
Georgia-based Fields, Inc. notified Mickman Brothers that it had won
the bid.

The system was installed over a two-month period from late June to late
August 2009 on top of a couple of inches of sand sub-grade and the
field drainage system, according to Sutter.

Placed above the irrigation system was a four-inch layer of pea gravel.
Above this is heat system tubing that will help the grass roots grow at
an optimal rate. Above the heating system is 10 inches of root zone
material, which Sutter said includes 93 percent sand and 7 percent
peat. The Colorado sod is placed on top.

Three days after the irrigation system was in place and the sod was
installed, Sutter said the field started to be watered. The pipes were
drained Dec. 1, 2009 and the system was winterized.

After remaining dormant during the winter, the tarp was taken off and the irrigation system was turned on by Sutter March 12.

Once the tarp was removed, Sutter slowly turned the control valves in a
Target Field control room to gradually fill the pipes with water. As
the pipes filled up, he turned up the pressure to normal operation.
Although the system is up and running, Sutter will not be a stranger to
Target Field’s groundskeeper. He will stop by when the system needs to
be drained before winter and filled before spring.

The groundskeeper is in charge of ongoing maintenance and turning the sprinklers on and off during the season.

Sutter said if they want any modifications done to the system to make
it easier to operate, Mickman Brothers will make the changes.

Entering Target Field
While Sutter had seen the artist renderings of Target Field, nothing
could compare with seeing the structure in person and he said the
public will be very impressed.

“It’s going to be overwhelming when you set foot in there,” he said.
The first game at Target Field will be played by the University of
Minnesota baseball team against Louisiana Tech tomorrow (Saturday,
March 27) at 1:05 p.m. Tickets can only be purchased at Target Field on
the day of the game.

Sutter plans to attend the first pre-season game the Minnesota Twins
play at Target Field Friday, April 2 against the St. Louis Cardinals.
This game starts at 5:10 p.m. and a Saturday, April 3 exhibition game
against the Cardinals starts at 1:10 p.m.

The regular season home opener against the Boston Red Sox is Monday, April 12 at 3:10 p.m.

Copyright 2010 ABC Newspapers

Wilson Fifth-Graders Learn Natural and Historic Lessons


Wilson fifth-graders learn natural and historic lessons

Originally Posted Thursday, September 23, 2010 1:58 pm by ABC Newspapers
by Eric Hagen
Staff writer

If only trees could talk. They would have some amazing stories to tell. For about a week, students at Wilson Elementary in Anoka walked by and touched a dead stump of a red oak tree that had lived through two world wars, women’s suffrage when women got the right to vote, man landing on the moon, 9/11 and much more.

On a Thursday morning last week (Sept. 16), almost 100 fifth-graders witnessed the planting of a tree that is about as old as they are while they heard about the important role they play in the environment and how more people are needed to plant them.

Twenty years from now, the Sienna Glen Maple will be fully grown at 50 to 60 feet tall, said John Mickman, who co-founded Mickman Brothers in Ham Lake with his brother Chris.

Principal Diane Henning said whenever the kids come back to visit, they will feel like they were a part of something.

“It will help them to have ownership because they’ll be here when it’s happening,” Henning said. “It’s helping them understand that they’re part of the community.
Elementary students from all over the state of Minnesota took some ownership in the planet on the same day. Volunteers from 70 companies associated with the Minnesota Nursery and Landscape Association visited elementary schools to encourage the youth to plant trees.

This specific initiative is new and called Green for Life. It received the attention of the governor’s office. Gov. Tim Pawlenty drafted a proclamation specifically for this statewide effort.

Besides encouraging environmental friendliness, this was an effort to excite kids about the horticulture industry.

“We felt that at this age none of the kids have a clear idea what they want to be when they grow up,” said John Mickman, who mentioned that two kids came up to him after his presentation and said they wanted to work at Mickman Brothers when they grow up.

Students were not merely bystanders for the 45-minute planting and presentation. While the maple tree was planted, John Mickman talked about all the ways trees help people. They make the air easier to breathe because they convert carbon dioxide into oxygen and clean polluted air. The root systems help stabilize soils, which helps with erosion concerns. Trees also serve as a wind break and more appealing noise barrier for humans.

John Mickman has worked closely with over 90 students at Wilson Elementary for the past year ever since the now retired fourth grade teacher Janet Vratkovich contacted Mickman after reading the Mickman Brothers newsletter. The students have visited the Ham Lake businesses garden center and Mickman has taught the students a lot about the industry.

The students, who are now fifth-graders, did not forget John Mickman over summer vacation. When he came to the school last Thursday, they yelled out his name and happily greeted him.

Copyright 2010 ABC Newspapers