As some of you may know, last year we moved into a new house. After a grueling move following 6 long weeks of intense renovation (pictures coming soon), we were more than a little burned out. It has taken 8-9 months to muster the courage to tackle the yard.
This winter we began our landscaping adventures and I thought you all might want to see some of the pictures.
|
We started by planting a vegetable garden. As you can see, we had plenty of help. |
|
We built 4'x8' planter boxes out of rough cut 12" boards and filled
them with one part top soil and two parts cotton gin compost from a
local guy who sells it by the truckload/trailer load. We got all we
needed for our 3 garden planters for only $40. |
|
Carter loves the owl.
|
|
Lettuce,
cabbage, pepper, cucumbers, squash, tomatoes... An antique swing I
picked up for $75. A fresh coat of white paint works wonders. This is
where I sit while Julie does the weeding.
|
|
And herbs...
We took advantage of an old stump close by, filled it with dirt and
planted African basil, strawberries, sage, rosemary and thyme.
|
|
Strawberries! |
|
We also planted some parsley by the trunk of our pecan tree. |
|
Plants are growing, now on to other things... like a window box I
built and planted with impatiens (perfect annuals for shady areas). |
|
We found
this old birdhouse when I pruned the Satsuma Trees in February. It got
relocated near the workshop where it can be appreciated- not only by the
birds but by us too.
|
|
Speaking of
Satsumas, I also relocated this formerly dying Oak Leaf Hydrangea
beneath one of our Satsuma trees and violently pruned it. After all,
what did I have to loose? As you can see, it is VERY happy now in it's
new home. I hope it blooms this year.
|
|
This
hydrangea is already blooming. By the way, if you want your blue
hydrangea to have pink blooms instead of blue, just add a little
limestone around it. I like mine blue.
|
|
Blueberries! We planted 9 plants- 3 different varieties that should be ripening soon.
|
|
I also built this and planted a climbing rose on it.
|
|
New Dawn is
its name... very prolific, fragrant, disease resistant, and it blooms
from late Spring until late Fall! By Fall it should cover the 9'
trellis.
|
|
A guy was
selling these unfinished adirondack chairs on the side of the road. I
couldn't believe how inexpensive they were! I painted them blue and
distressed them. The oak trees helped me distress them even more. We
will eventually pave this area with natural flagstone and add a fire
pit... another project for another time :)
|
|
I know what you're thinking... child labor laws. |
|
|
|
|
More herbs tucked along the driveway. |
|
Give the boy a sprinkler and he's happy for hours. |
|
Can you imagine a flagstone pathway here? |
|
Two planters with creeping Jenny and lemon cypress frame our front door. |
|
Check out the bird's nest in the hanging planter on the back porch. |
|
Potato vine, creeping Jenny (can you tell I love this stuff), red impatiens... |
That's all for now. Stay tuned for more...
LOVE it!!! Can you come do our yard next?
ReplyDeleteI had so much fun reading this. Looking forward to the more.
ReplyDelete