What to do with a 120ft long back garden

Not sure of the width maybe 20- 30 ft wide and not really sloping but a little uneven in places
 
I'd go with a stand of trees at the end of the garden - fast growing biomas willow or eucalyptus which you could use in a few years for firewood, an area of lawn with some nice flower beds and definitely a herb & veggie patch. Keep the herb/veggie patch close to the house so that you can just nip out and cut a fresh lettuce for dinner or grab herbs as needed - if it's at then end of the 120 foot garden you might tend to forget about it. Stick up a bird box and a couple of feeders to keep them away from your veggies!!
 
I'd go with a stand of trees at the end of the garden - fast growing biomas willow or eucalyptus which you could use in a few years for firewood, an area of lawn with some nice flower beds and definitely a herb & veggie patch. Keep the herb/veggie patch close to the house so that you can just nip out and cut a fresh lettuce for dinner or grab herbs as needed - if it's at then end of the 120 foot garden you might tend to forget about it. Stick up a bird box and a couple of feeders to keep them away from your veggies!!

There's a lot to be said for all of that. A big +1 for the herb patch close to the house. Perhaps around a patio.
You could break up the space with a path and a pergola also as it wouldn't seem as narrow and long then. [broken link removed]

A couple of nice ideas here: http://www.floralandhardy.co.uk/pages/long-thin-suburban
http://www.housetohome.co.uk/articles/advice/Low_maintenance_garden_on_a_thin_plot_120641.html
 
Thnaks for all the useful ideas folks - some very good ones there. House is terraced so everything would have to be dragged through the house but I suppose it would be worth it in the end
 
You could split it with some tall grasses/trees as a break and make a hiden space at the end. Would be a nice oasis of calm where you could hide out on sunny days.
Leo
 
Worth geting a few landscape gardeners/designers to look at it and give you a price, if too dear you could use their ideas and do it yourself ;)
 
Think things out carefully.
Ask yourself the following:

1. Do I like gardening?
2. What can I afford?
3. Have I got sufficient time?
4. Are children going to use it?
5. What can I do for the environment?
6. Think about your neighbours.

When you have thought all these factors out, browse through the gardening books, buy a few interesting ones, (I love anything written by Monty Don). Check out a few websites www.rhs.co.uk is a good one.
Do the work yourself if you can, its by far more satisfying and interesting than just paying huge amounts of money for a garden in which you have no emotional involvement.
 
You could offer to sell half of the garden to your next door neighbour. I lived in a 120' garden and purchased half of my neighbours gardens on either side of me, giving me a huge T shaped garden. The plan was to continue doing this with the neighbours behind but never got around to doing it. Sold it in the end.
 
Sell it as a site?

Thank god its not 2006 or that may have been taken seriously... a nice block of flats in the back garden.

OP Put a seating area in the first 30 or 40 feet and the rest grass and nice small trees and shrubs
 
Thank god its not 2006 or that may have been taken seriously... a nice block of flats in the back garden.

OP Put a seating area in the first 30 or 40 feet and the rest grass and nice small trees and shrubs

My ideal house is a new build in an urban area. Not a block of flats!
 
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