Flower Gardening
Drawing a Landscape Map
Plan Before You Plant
Before you design or improve your landscape, the first step is to inventory what you have. The best way to do that is to draw a landscape map of the site, accurately recording the size and location of your landscape's permanent features.
Photography by Suzanne DeJohn/National Gardening Association
Project Steps
Draw a Rough Map
On a large notepad, sketch out your yard, including buildings, large trees and shrubs, property lines, fences, utility lines, paved areas, patios, pools, and other permanent features. Don't worry about accuracy yet. Using a compass, find the direction of north and mark it on the map.
Measure Permanent Objects
Measure the features, such as house and pool dimensions, tree drip lines, spreads of shrubs, and lengths of fences. Add the measurements to the rough map. Also measure and locate windows and doors, as well as outside faucets, lights, and electrical receptacles.
Establish Accurate Locations
Using stakes and string, mark a straight line along a property boundary, starting at one corner. Keeping the tape measure at a 90? angle from the boundary, measure the distance from the boundary to the nearest corners of the house, trees, and other objects on your map. Measure from other boundaries, too, to confirm accuracy.
Transfer Measurements to Graph Paper
With a ruler and pencil, transfer your measurements accurately to graph paper. Use 1 inch to represent 4 feet for small yards, 1 inch to 20 feet for larger sites.
Make Trace-Paper Overlays
Tape the base map to a table or board. Lay sheets of tracing paper over it and make additional maps, each with a different theme, such as sun and shade patterns, slopes, views, gardens, and traffic patterns. Each map becomes a layer that adds detail to the base map but remains separate for clarity.
Article provided by the National Gardening Association