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How to fix a trouble spot in your garden

Get Charlie's step-by-step instructions and plant guide here!
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We all have those trouble spots in our gardens that we’ve tried to do something with but have ended up just looking drab and uninspiring. Charlie’s here to show you that a complete renovation isn’t always the best answer. A few simple, but smart options like screening off unsightly rubbish bins, a garden bed to hide a plain wall and some funky planters and you’ve got a whole new garden that will entice you back outside more often than you imagined.

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Read on for the step-by-step instructions

Before garden makeover
Before the makeover: a bland backyard (Credit: Sue Ferris)
Charlie Albone's garden makeover
After: a gorgeous chill-out space a relaxed and casual vibe. All garden furniture is from Bunnings (Credit: Sue Ferris)

The shared outdoor space up the back of old apartment blocks can be either the incohesive and random effort of a diligent few or a completely neglected zone, with only the occasional mow of the lawn. Here’s how to pull the whole garden together so the back is as beautiful as the front.

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1. How to screen rubbish bins

Rubbish bin screen
(Credit: Sue Ferris)

Get the step-by-step instructions on how to build a screen here.

2. How to make multi-level corten steel garden beds

Corten steel garden beds
(Credit: Sue Ferris)

Get the instructions on how to build corten steel garden beds here.

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Plant guide

Steel cordon garden beds
Simple and effective (Credit: Sue Ferris)

Plant care can be erratic when garden beds are on common property, so fill them with easy-care plants such as tall, feathery miscanthus, hardy Kalanchoe ‘Copper Spoons’ and native lomandra ornamental grass.

Kalanchoe copper spoons
Kalanchoe ‘copper spoons’ (Credit: Sue Ferris)
Pittosporum miss muffet
Pittosporum ‘Miss Muffet’ (Credit: Sue Ferris)
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Miscanthus
Miscanthus. Build your screen low enough to ‘borrow’ next door’s hedge for extra visual appeal (Credit: Sue Ferris)
Garden beds
Repeat the copper tones in your screen, containers and even plants (Credit: Sue Ferris)

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