Saturday, March 21, 2009

3.21.09 - 3.22.09

Sigh. Still workin' my fingers to the nub...

We finished the blue side fence this weekend, and I tilled and amended the soil. I moved a couple of rose bushes from the back yard and planted them in the "blue fence bed", as well as 3 jasmine. I also moved the “volunteer” rose bush that I had brought over from under the living room windows. It’s in deep shock right now, but I think it’ll make it. There are two or three “front and center” spaces left for some bleeding heart from my mom's garden to climb up that fence along side the jasmine. It’s going to be so gorgeous, woven in and among darker green jasmine foliage. I won’t get much of a jasmine bloom this spring since I moved them so late, but I think I’ll get one in the fall. In the meantime, the big, bright, heart shaped leaves and the shockingly red flowers of the bleeding hearts will be amazing behind the roses. Sigh. I’m hoping to work in a soaker hose and more plants throughout the week, then add mulch.

I also planted a bunch more dianthus around the fence line. And some coleus. It looks pretty great. It’s going to be awesome when it fills in!









This morning, I ate the first two strawberries out of my garden. They were so sweet and juicy. A lot juicier than even really good store-bought ones. And more tender – less fibrous. Yummers!




Side note...This blog is called Lang Gardens. "Gardens", with an 's' on the end. That's plural. That's 'cause prior to this year, tons of energy had been spent making the Lang backyard something special too. Flower beds, hardscaping, a privacy fence to beat all privacy fences... So here's a little bit about all of that. A few notes about the work done over the weekend to clean things up, but mostly some sweet pics. Enjoy...


Work notes: Weeded about 6 bags of weeds (those big brown recycling ones) out of the backyard this weekend. Have a ton more weeding to do to finish the back and then need to mulch, but it is SO alive back there. I had to stop and look and really make myself enjoy it several times throughout the weekend. It’s hard to see the gorgeous colors when you’ve got your nose literally in the dirt, pulling out weed after weed after weed. It is out of control back there!




It's a riot of color. Trent and I spent a good deal of time this winter, rushing to cover all of the backbeds with thrift store blankets before each freeze. Because of this, everything is raring to go and on fire with color, instead of just starting to wake up. Thanks for all of your help, Babe!



dianthus . geraniums . oxalis . sedum . ice plant . walking iris . spider grass



Hungry, hungry hippo! This is our loverly hippo, acquired the very first weekend of this project, after cutting out the sod. She's gorgeous, isn't she? Just a hair under 200 pounds of solid concrete. Fun to move!




The "Trashcan Garden", after a thorough weeding. Was hoping Nanny the Goat would take care of that for me, but she's pretty peckish for a goat.



Cut in a good 3" trench between my edging plants and the lawn. Makes it look a lot cleaner!


One of the "youngest" beds, just added Spring '08, during one of several Fence Build weekends. Really starting to fill out! Thanks Nico and Maggie and Momma!



hoot!


The "Long Back Bed". Needs a LOT of work, but those geraniums more or less doubled in size since they were planted. This bed was also created in Spring '08. Thanks, Erica! I did this one all by myself!

One of my favorite "dendrons". Can't ever remember if it's a "Phila" or a "Rhodo", but I sure love that swoopy, swirly shape. Loverly!


sure is purdy...

one of just two plants that I clip to keep in shape. I adore the chartreuse baby leaves. Some mini roses and some kind of super fun daisy. more geraniums. rosemary.


that blasted rooster cracks up the car EVERY time I give him the keys. Coq au vin, anyone?



Our pesky "Gnome B Gones", doing their dastardly deeds. Carrying off the Gnome king, scattering the scared villagers. Looks like they each already have a mouthful to boot. Greedy bastards!



Trent's Cowboys helmet in a sea of creeping jenny. An airplane part. A ceramic-vehicle junkyard.










Wednesday, March 18, 2009

3.18.09 - 3.19.09





3.18.09 - I had a pretty rough week at the office, so I did a little "gardening therapy". Went by my favorite clearance-plants hook-up Wednesday night and bought about $8.00 worth of their near-dead plants. Two dog-eared coleus, three large dianthus, and several 6-packs and 4" pots of marigolds. I got them all planted that night. I also got a contractor's flat of smaller dianthus. The marigolds all went in the boxes, near and around the 'maters and peppers. The dianthus and coleus found homes in the foot or so of soil between the sidewalk's edge and the fenceline. The Great Outdoors has strawberry plants for next to nothing, so while I'm filling one of my boxes with them, I'm also going to dot them along the fence line. The box will have a cage-top to protect those berries for me and Trent, and the ones along the fence line will be sacrificed to the birds.
My dianthus collection will surely over the coming weeks, from a couple of contractor's flats of mounding dianthus, to include several cluster-blooming, long stemmed varieties and some mini-carnations, then some more coleus, and finally, a TON of amazing herbs.

Later plans include mulch and a cedar edging to help keep everything in its place...
yep, that's a farmer tan!!
3.19.09 - ‘K…Here are my plans for today/this weekend:
Leave here and go all the way south to TGO to get more strawberry plants (34 of them, I think). Bring ‘em home and get them into the ground.
Go into backyard and thin the creeping jenny that’s taken over about ¼ of one of my beds and bring those plugs to the front to add to the dianthus and strawberries around the gate. The cj will make a PERFECT edging. It will help keep the soil from running out of the yard and onto the sidewalk and looking all crummy, and will be gorgeous against the darker greens of the dianthus and strawberry foliage.
I’ll also try to get the last of the lumber for the blue fence and get started on that. We’ll finish installing that this weekend, and I can start moving plants from the backyard to that area.

I think I’ll be able to get my last 4 boxes filled with soil ( and weed cloth, and the grid) and start getting those planted. I have soooo many seedlings of flowers that I can’t WAIT to see growing! One or two of the remaining 4 grids will be for food, the rest will be for flowers.

Plant watermelons and maybe cantaloupes alongside the blue fence. Under the rose bushes and other plants. I mean to maximize the HECK out of my property lines!
Run also going to run a soaker hose along that bed AND (and this is the REALLY cool part) will splice that into a hose, which I will bury under the pavers that will eventually go along the side of the garage (replacing the grass) in that alley leading to the back gate. The hose will come out of the ground somewhere inconspicuous, where I can just clip the garden hose to it and turn it on. The water will pass through the buried garden hose, to the soaker hose! This won’t be complete for some time, but in the end, it will be a LOT easier to water this way, than to run the front yard hose across all of the front garden (without doing any damage) and over the driveway to the soaker. I’ll do that for the time being, but it’s already a hassle getting that long hose around without it going over or through a box. I have to be really careful.
And that's all she wrote, folks!


Sunday, March 15, 2009

Playing Catch Up

Late February through 3.15.09


So I'm a little behind on the blog. Sorry 'bout that, friends. There's a lot of visible progress, but not a lot of new steps or exciting shenanigans to document. Mostly, the last few weekends have involved installing a decorative fence on the "driveway-side" of the house, and filling the boxes, with soil mixture and plants. I'm not sure of the exact dates of the following, but it all went down in the last 4 weekends...


...Once the edging was laid between our house and our neighbor's, Trent helped me start the fence. He dug post holes while I painted posts. We sunk them into the ground, using tricks learned from David to ensure the posts were not only straight, but in line with one another. Last year when we were building the back fence, David showed us a magic trick with string and a level to make sure that the faces of posts make a straight line, and also to make sure that the tops of posts are cut off level with one another. Thanks David! Couldn't have done this without that little trick.
posts in the holes, waitin' for concrete...

damn, but these bags are HEAVY!


after we leveled them and made sure they were in line with David's "string trick", we screwed scrap wood to the fronts to keep them in place while the concrete cured...

the family that builds fences together, STAYS together...
The next weekend, I brought home, among many other things, enough lumber to complete one of the three panels of the fence. Primed, painted, and installed. Trent held 'em up while I screwed them in. The plan for this fence originally involved the panels being 3 different heights, with the one nearest the house at 5', the middle at 4', and the one nearest the street at 3'. We also ended the fence high on the lawn, so that Trent could see around it while backing out of the driveway. Well, we ended the fence sufficiently early that the stepped approach to the fence wasn't needed. We used 8' posts, so once we had them sunk into the ground, we had right at 6' of vertical support remaining. Trent suggested we not cut them shorter (except for evening then out). I wasn't completely sold on the idea, but was cool with it. Once we completed the first panel, I was more than "sold". I was thrilled we hadn't cut them shorter!! From the front door, looking over to the new blue fence, all faces and bodies on the other side were obscured. Most of the mess was too. If we had cut it down, we would have seen heads bobbing along as people came and went next door. Yay, Trent! Excellent suggestion!


after i tacked the boards in whilst Trent held them up, Trent went back in and put in the rest of the screws so i could go back to planting. what a sweetie.


When not priming or painting or installing lumber, I was busy planting my boxes. I started with the two deep ones on the right side of the yard (if looking at the house from the sidewalk). These boxes are deeper for root veggies and things that need deeper root systems, like tomatoes and peppers. They also have vertical supports with netting along the back and the left side. I'll train the 'maters, peppers, cukes, and melons up this netting as they grow.


This weekend (3.14 and 3.15) consisted of painting the lumber for the second panel, and planting more boxes. My civic holds EXACTLY enough lumber for one panel at a time, so I'll buy the last of it this coming week and we'll finish painting and installing this coming weekend. AWESOME!


two panels installed, one to go!

Once the blue fence is finished, I'll be able to dole out the plants from the backyard that are desperately in need of more sun. I already have a rose bush planted alongside the new fence. It was a volunteer from the flowerbed under our living room windows. I had to rip that rose out, and there were about half a dozen volunteers in addition to the original root ball. AMAZING what nature can do. I gave most of them away, and just kept the healthiest volunteer. That got transplanted to the blue fence area. I have 2 other roses that are going to be moved up front, as well as a lot of random sun-loving plants. Jasmine, a rock rose that's been struggling for years, some grasses, lantana, two fading xioras (sp?). Mom's started some bleeding hearts for me that are going to look STUNNING growing up that blue fence. I'm also reserving the lowest portion of the area for yellow watermelons. It's the perfect spot for them! Any other sun bathers that need to be moved from the back yard will go in the strip of land between the sidewalk and the street. It's a no-man's land, owned by the city, but I don't want to mow it anymore, so it got de-sodded with the rest back in November. The plants that will go there are mostly my clearance "Lazarus plants". The plants all look AWESOME now, but I paid pennies for them. So, if the city has to rip them up to address a gas line issue, all will not be lost.

look carefully in the center bottom of this pic and you can see the "volunteer rosebush" all planted and in shock. yay, shock!

Planting boxes involves mixing soil. The soil mixture recommended by the literature I read (Square Foot Gardening by Mel Bartholomew) is not pre-bagged, store-bought stuff. Oh no, that would be too easy. And economical. No, I decided to drink the SFG Koolaid full heartedly and make "Mel's Mix" for all of my boxes. One batch (which fills 2.5 shallow boxes, or 1.5 deep boxes) includes 4-6 bags of different kinds of mature compost, 1 big brick of sphagnum moss, and 2 ginormous bags of vermiculite. The idea is to mix a moisture-retaining but well-draining, nutrient-rich mixture that isn't so rich that it'll burn sensitive new plants. It's no small effort mixing this stuff up, but it's well worth it. So far anyway. I mix it on a tarp near the intended beds, then shovel it in. Once filled, I plant, mark, mulch, and water.

The first set of deep boxes is now 100% planted. I had left some spots unplanted the first time I worked it so as to stagger the harvests. Now those are all filled in, as is the first of the shorter boxes to be filled with soil. I actually added the soil to two of the shorter ones, and planted one and a half of those. Then I added the soil the second set of deeper beds, which also have the netting for climbing plants. Can't freakin' wait for all those goodies to ripen!



mixing soil...not the funnest thing to do...

boxes filled with soil, now planting!

ditto!


wish i could say i grew that gorgous chard from seed, but i did not.



planted, labelled, and mulched

The shallower box that I completely filled today is planted mostly with the seedlings I labored over in my kitchen all these nights. There are two swiss chard plants and over a dozen strawberries that I bought at nurseries, but the rest were all hatched at home! I have chard, spinach, garlic, thyme, sage, dill, a billion kinds of basil, arugula, spicy mesclun, sweet mesclun, nasturtiums, and about a elebenty-seben kinds of mint (pineapple mint, orange mint, sweet pear mint, chocolate mint, apple mint, pennyroyal, catnip, candymint, spearmint...a couple more).


this is the more recently filled of the two sets of deeper boxes. netting installed and planting started.

my honey, waitin' for me to come sit down with him and have a beer. yay, beer!


little fuzzy, but that smudge of red in the middle of the smudgy green is the first bud on my from-seed marigolds

buds (above) and blooms (below) on my Brazos blackberry canes. probably won't get fruit this year, but next year for sure.

I also spent some time in these last several weeks working on the weird little flower bed under the living room windows. It's always presented sort of a challenge. At one point, I had extended it out into the lawn, but then the grass got back in and blahdiddity blah blah. It's always been sort of a hassle. Some straggly rose bushes of nondescript red fought with very determined weeds for space, food, and light. I almost NEVER watered it. I liked having something thorny under these windows as a deterrant to intruders, but this little nook never really worked for me. I knew I had to rework it, but I wasn't sure just what to do with it.

Once I pulled out the rose bushes, the plan became clear! The space won't be replanted until after we paint the house later this year. In the meantime, I'm building a very low retaining wall (just two retaining bricks tall) to define the bed. It's just going to be a straight line as defined by the existing parameters of the house. I'll dig out most of the soil, lay abundant weedcloth, and fill with a "succulent-friendly" mix. I'll put one of those giant agaves in, and surround it with other smaller succulents. My lovely SIL's grandfather gave me a gorgeous aloe (or maybe it's a smaller agave?) that will find its "forever home" right here! The agave will be imposing enough to deter intruders, but if we have to exit through a window for a fire or something dramatic like that, it won't be as bad as exiting through rose bushes or a prickly pear. The area gets a ton of sun, though it will be filtered once the 'maters and stuff are growing up the netting in the grow-box directly in front of this bed. I still think it'll be plenty sunny enough for the agaves. And I won't worry too much about whether the variety we get "pups" or not, as the area it's growing in will be very enclosed. I think it'll be gorgeous! No pics yet. Just have an ugly little trench where the retaining stones will eventually go.

Ok kids, I think that's a wrap!

smooches,

E