Garden design in Diepholz: Matthias Bleifuss has had a gravel garden for 15 years. But he has to go now. Otherwise it will be expensive.

At the corner of Hauffstrasse and Heinestrasse in Vechta, Lower Saxony, it looks as if a gravel works had set up a branch there: white, light gray and anthracite-colored gravel areas cover the areas in front of the single-family houses, which do not deserve to be called front gardens.

Garden design in Diepholz: Matthias Bleifuss has had a gravel garden for 15 years. But he has to go now. Otherwise it will be expensive.

At the corner of Hauffstrasse and Heinestrasse in Vechta, Lower Saxony, it looks as if a gravel works had set up a branch there: white, light gray and anthracite-colored gravel areas cover the areas in front of the single-family houses, which do not deserve to be called front gardens. The few evergreen coniferous trees do not change that, on whose thin trunks and branches there are spherical branch structures that resemble the pompoms of cheerleaders. Only one plot of land on the street deviates from this scheme: there, bare lavender plants and other perennials still stretch up in winter.

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