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Home Landscaping
Landscaping Burglars Hate!
Strategies, plants, and devices that enhance
security
A man strolls down your front walkway
in broad daylight and knocks on the door. Although your neighbors notice
him, they aren't suspicious. When nobody answers, he walks around to the
side gate and lets himself into the enclosed rear garden, where he
enters your house by way of a forced back door, window, or garage. Once
inside, he heads for your bedroom to rifle through drawers, closets, and
mattresses in search of jewelry, cash, and other valuables. A pro
burglar will be out of there--with the loot--in less than 10 minutes.
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Fortunately there are a number of
steps you can take to make your yard a more formidable deterrent to
criminal intentions. In evaluating security needs, it's helpful to think
of your landscape in terms of public and private areas.
Protect the public part of your yard
Your
main entry--and probably your whole front yard--is considered a
semipublic area, if only because the law allows anyone free passage from
the street to your front door unless you've posted your property with No
Trespassing signs.
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Keep
the landscape open and park-like, with low shrubs (under 3 feet) and
trees pruned high (7 feet or more off the ground). Intruders will
have nowhere to hide if you, neighbors, or police show up
unexpectedly to ask questions.
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If
you choose to have a fence in front, it should be a see-through type
like a picket fence, so it won't give a burglar cover.
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The
area between the driveway and the house should also be open and well
lighted so crooks can't prowl around parked cars and perhaps steal
them or their contents.
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Mount
lights on eaves to wash light across the exterior walls of the
house. At night this silhouettes intruders, making them visible from
the street.
Safeguard the private areas
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Your
rear yard--or any part of the landscape that's cut off from public
view by fences or walls--makes up the private area. While you want
privacy so you can enjoy a peaceful nap in the sun, secluded spaces
are also potential entry points for criminals. Here's how you can
discourage them.
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Grow
thorny plants like agaves, barberry, cactus, Natal plum, and yucca
under rear windows. But keep them trimmed below the windowsills, so
you could quickly jump over the plantings to escape a house fire.
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Remove
any tree branches that afford easy access over walls or to
upper-story windows.
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If
your rear garden is fenced or walled, cover the barrier with a
thorny plant like a climbing rose or bougainvillea. This gives you
greenery and flowers to look at but provides a painful deterrent to
would-be intruders.
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If
you don't have a fence but have the space, consider planting a hedge
of dense, spiny shrubs like hedgehog or porcupine holly (Ilex
aquifolium 'Ferox'), pyracantha, or one of the many shrub roses.
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Install
self-closing gates and keep them locked. A padlocked gate in a
hard-to-scale fence or wall makes it tougher for burglars and
thieves to get in and get away with larger items like bicycles and
computers.
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Lock
up the garage or tool shed. You'd feel really silly if a burglar
borrowed your ladder to break into an upstairs window. Garages are
favorite entry points for intruders. Consider installing an
automatic garage door opener, which effectively locks the door. Most
new garage door openers have built-in security codes that are hard
for crooks to crack electronically.
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Install
floodlights to illuminate rear doors and windows.
Electronic security devices
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Well-positioned
floodlights activated by timers or motion or light sensors force
criminals to do what they hate most: work in the light. Buy
floodlights with built-in motion sensors ($20 to $62 at hardware
stores) or hook up a motion sensor (about $16) to an existing light.
When the sensor detects repeated motion within a preset radius (12
to 70 feet is common), it completes an electric circuit for 1 to 12
minutes and then turns itself off again. That circuit can turn on a
floodlight, activate a sprinkler system (which irritates burglars),
or sound an alarm. But remember that stray cats and passing possums
may also trigger the alarm (some sensors can be set to focus above
the height of small animals). Mount sensors out of easy reach, so
thieves can't easily turn them off.
The next line of defense
Think
of landscaping and exterior Security devices as your first line of
defense. Your second line begins at the walls of your house and should
include dead bolts on doors and secure window latches. Consider an alarm
system monitored by security services or your local police department.
Front yard
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If
you want a fence in front, choose a picket or metal-rail type that
you can see through.
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Prune
tree branches high for clear vision across yard. Remove limbs that
act as ladders to upper windows.
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Keep
plantings low to reduce cover near the entry and driveway.
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Install
lamps that wash light across house walls to silhouette intruders.
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Install
path lights with motion or light sensors, or with timers to turn
them on if you forget.
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Mount
motion sensor--activated floodlights on the garage.
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Use
manual or electronic locks on the garage door.
Backyard
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Train
thorny vines or climbing roses over fences or walls. Or plant a
hedge of spiny shrubs.
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Plant
prickly shrubs beneath windows, but keep the windowsills clear for
escape from fire.
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Self-closing
gates should have locks.
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Barking
dogs attract attention that burglars prefer to avoid. Many breeds,
from large rottweilers to miniature schnauzers, bark vigorously at
intruders.
Around the house
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Secure
interior window latches. Consider a motion detector and a sensor
that detects breaking window glass, linked to an alarm system. For
sliding windows and patio doors, install track looks or use bars or
rods to jam tracks.
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Furnish
all exterior doors with dead bolts.
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Install
a burglar/fire alarm system.
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