After 7 years in our home, we finally finished our front yard landscaping. I went for a mรญnimal Xeriscape type design using a variety of native or drought tolerant plants.

Plant list:
Magnolia Little Gem trees
Jacaranda trees
Mexican Fence Post Cactus
Artichoke agave
Blue Flame Agave
Coastal Rosemary
New Zealand Flax
Red Cordyline
Salvia variety (exact name unknown)
Native grass (exact name unknown)
hesperaloe parviflora

Groundcover – Decomposed granite in Palm Springs gold
Mexican Beach Pebble

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44 Comments

  1. Jennie has a channel! Nice job on this first video, love how you interspersed the views of the landscape with your explanation.

  2. Looks like you hold a cigarette on the cover image ๐Ÿ˜
    Anyway, I watched some minutes, but this topic isn't really interesting for me. The video production seems really good๐Ÿ‘

  3. Congrats on the video release! Well done, looks great & thanks for sharing. Keep the content coming! This video made me want to start up some plants before a future move to a new location.

  4. Congrats on your first video. This one I wish Iโ€™d seen before I moved. This had a lot of things I wanted for my old property I left in north Hollywood Ca. I have acquire new challenge living life n the San Bernardino National
    forest. Looking forward to your next video.

  5. hope your channel grows fast, good job, i could listen to you for hours XD

  6. Looking forward to seeing more of your design aesthetic. Keep it up! Youโ€™ll be bigger than Ben in no time.

  7. Everything looks great and goes well together! The Blue Flame Agave are the clear winners!
    Just finished listening to the most recent OLF podcast and I had to come check out the channel! Here's to the start of something great!

  8. We have lived in our home for 10 years and stopped planting large trees after 3 years and are now regretting that decision. We have a 3 acre residential block and have now, after a long break decided to plant the last of the trees (over 150 trees) we chose some 10 years ago. It would be great to be living with mature trees today and have decided to stay here until my wife retires in 10 years time so we will enjoy this undertaking.
    Loved your first video and hope you succeed with the chanel.

    PS: You should try the Australian grass tree in your garden. A desert plant in Australia. It suits the style you are working towards.

  9. Hey friend! Love your new channel! This was a very informative video and I look forward to future content.

  10. I like what you did and would love to see some views of the whole yard to see the design in larger scale but what I have seen is good. Thank you for sharing your work with us!

  11. Key tips Jenny. That strip alongside the house is pretty two dimensional in design terms. It's a common mistake resulting in a strait jacketed feel. Try to go for odd numbers, not just in plants but in the way you group them & the same goes for larger landscaping items like rocks for example. For example: 1's, 3's, 5's, 7's, 9's, 11's & so on for some reason always feels better & this can also apply in a more formal design, although not always. If you move some of the cacti forward from the house to give it a more curvey S3XY flow it should work better.
    Also minimalistic planting doesn't mean under planting as has happened in in your front garden. Another common mistake with novice gardeners, resulting in a mean, unbalanced look; as though the home owner ran out of cash or they were a landlord too mean to shell out to get the job done properly. There's plenty of excellent garden design books on Xeriscaping which is climate appropriate for your area. Your dark beach pebble mulch under the windows looks great but in your climate you might find that it acts like a storage heater & make the house hotter than it needs to be, whereas the light coloured mulch you've used elsewhere will reflect heat away from the house. Please don't misunderstand me. Not trying to be mean, just helpful. I've been gardening for years & have made plenty of my own mistakes. Have fun.

  12. Definitely check out Xeriscaping which, if I remember correctly, started in California to cope with low rainfall & has spread around the US and abroad to other low rainfall regions of the world. Enjoy your garden.๐Ÿ˜€

  13. I notice in Ben's videos that you have a great personality and voice that is nice to listen to. I just happened to check to see if you had your own channel and you DO! I'm happy you are branching out on your own and very much enjoyed this content. We are also looking to change our landscaping and home design, thanks for all the ideas. Subscribed.

  14. Really enjoyed seeing the different landscaping. I live in Washington so a huge difference when comparing things. I also really hate the non native plants they really do propagate way to fast. Ivy is the worst. 30 years ago they thought it would be great sound barrier around the freeways. Everyone is regretting that now.

  15. The plant you were looking for at 7:34 is indeed a Dracaena (druh-see-nah) marginata. You can usually find them at Home Depot, Lowe's, Ikea, etc. Grown indoors or in low light, they have dark droopy leaves. This is closer to the form that you see at those stores. However, if you plant one outside in bright light, the leaves will begin to grow a lighter shade of green at they will appear spiky, exactly like the plant at 7:34. I love both forms.

  16. I like all the shots of your yard that you have throughout the video. I love the soft rosemary too!

  17. The plant you were looking for in the picture you showed is dracaena marginata. If you were looking in the outdoor Nursery section, you won't find it. It does better as an indoor plant. They don't like full sun.

  18. Awesome! Iโ€™m planning my front yard landscaping in San Diego now, and have a lot of similar ideas to what you created. Please let me know if you have a recommended landscaper, plant nursery, and where did you get those beautiful boulders from!? Thanks for sharing!

  19. Those are aloes in front (red yucca). Put in calif natives it cools off the proper too much gravel stays hot.

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