Monday, October 25, 2010

end of season...

I've noticed that some people cut their hostas (and other plants) down way before now...I happen to like the colors that the hostas turn at this time of the year.  When we start raking in a couple of weeks, the hostas will be much easier to pull out - plus they've had all their nutrients stored (or at least that's what I believe).
In this photo is a Japanese Maple and a Burning Bush...you can hardly tell them apart, they are so close in color right now.
In this shot you see Cosmos in the front, followed by Dahlias, Burning Bush, Japanese Maples (these ones turn orange) and the Magnolia tree.
Finally, these are some nice yellow mums that I had purchased in the spring as a decoration for my brothers 50th Birthday Party that we held at our house.  They added a nice little pop of color in the early spring, when only the early tulips were blooming. 
I replanted them in the front of the house.  The weather was so drought like that I thought they were goners...but they survived and they are blooming!  When the buds start, they are a reddish-orange, but the flowers are a nice bright yellow.

Still need to plant a bunch of bulbs and purchase and plant a bunch of boxwoods...then it's resting time until next February/March.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

a month ago...

It's starting to get cold here.  I knew that we'd have an early "drop" and it seems that I'm correct.  It's surprising how many leaves have fallen already.

We've had such a dry summer, but fall is pretty wet so far.  In fact, our grass is starting to grow back.

Anyway, here are some pictures I took a month ago of some of the blooming flowers.  I'm hoping to see more of this for the rest of the month...as in "no frost".

It's about time to plant some bulbs.


Thursday, August 19, 2010

we don't need no water...

Let the MotherFcuker burn!

I'm speaking of my grass...and really my plants in general.

We have not had rain here at the house for SO MANY DAYS!  It's rained all around us, but not in our little Village.

The grass is all burned up - especially all the new grass we planted in the spring.  Even one of my trees; the paper birch has lost half of its leaves - they turned yellow (which they normally do in October) and they fell off the tree.  I'm making a prediction - Fall Colors will be early this year.  

The ground is so dry that there are cracks that are literally 1/2 inch thick. Everything is screaming water, Water, WATER!!!!!!

We check the weather channel everyday just hoping that something would be coming our way - but even when it looks like there might be rain, it never does.  

Since we've been home from our trip to Seattle, it's only rained on July 17th (Romeo Garden Walk) - it was a freak storm that lasted about an hour and then it was blue skys and very humid afterward.  Then it waited until we had our Annual Pot-luck and rained for almost an hour then - that was July 31st.  One more time it spit some raindrops and that was around August 8.  Other than that - Nothing!

Everything is suffering.  I do some watering, here and there, but as I've read recently, the nice lush green grass of yester-year is growing out of fashion to the Green Movement.  So, people are letting their grass go dormant in the summer.  I'm doing it too, not that I like the look, because I DON'T!, but I also wouldn't want a huge water bill (especially since I only work 3 days a week - not good on the pocket book).  I've only cut the grass once since we've been back from vacation; so once in 6 weeks.  I just don't want all of my scruffy looking plants to die too.

Oh and another thing that's happening that never happened before - we have MOLES!  They are really screwing up what is left of the lawn.  We've purchased a stake that beeps every 30 seconds that is supposed to drive the moles away.  It's not working yet.  They say to give it several weeks, but summer will be over by then and I would only assume that the mole problem goes away with it.  I'm going to purchase the mole chasing windmills - I know they worked for my mom.

I hope next year we have a much wetter summer.

UPDATE: Just had RAIN!!!  Along with a tornado warning and sirens.  Now the AC is not blowing because the power tried really hard, three times to go out.  Oh, and again it only lasted less than an hour.  Not enough to do much for the grass and plants.

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

indignant...

I don't want to get all bitchy again about how the contractors are stepping all over my plants...but they are!

They are hard to avoid, I suppose...

But, in knowing how I am, I warned Vince (the cement contractor) when he came out to do the estimate, that I get snippy when I see that my plants are not being watched over by the workers.  He told me that they will be very careful around them -  as he kicked one of my tulips without knowing...

I don't think you can tell men that they need to watch out for the flowers.  Especially manly-men like contractors.

I was in the kitchen yesterday watching one guy walking up in my boulder garden (which I really thought was safe) to the upper portion of the yard.  He was moving a hose and threw it down the other side clipping  one of my hydrangeas.  I immediately went with my impulse and stormed out the door.  By that time, he had come down and grabbed the hose and saved the flower - lucky for him.

Then I walked around the house and noticed that they had "placed" one of their metal grids (for reinforcement inside the concrete) on top of one of my rose bushes.  I picked up the metal and moved it freeing up the branch which popped back up, thankfully.

I wonder how many plants this team will end up maiming?

Monday, June 21, 2010

harvest...

Here is the booty that we harvested this weekend!

Yes...4.

Tasty little morsels.

Sunday, June 6, 2010

peonies...

This year the peonies only lasted a short time.  First of all it was really drought-like here for some time which made one of the peonies just burn up.  I think it was only able to produce 4 or 5 flowers to it's full extent.  Then along came the rains...and it's still raining.  Rain is not very good for flowers once they are bloomed.  They have a tendency to get weighed down.  With peonies, their stems are so long, it's hard not to have some flowers that end up on the ground because the stems bend so far.
Well, yesterday I took a shot from the ground up of one set of peonies and it turned out pretty good...just wish I could see this beauty when I'm looking down at them...not when I have to lay on the ground and look up at them.

Friday, June 4, 2010

strawberries...

I decided I'd plant strawberries this year.  I ordered them from Gurney's.  They came while we were out of town and by the time we were home - most of them were dying, if not dead.

I contacted Gurney's and they sent out a new batch, but these looked to be in worse shape than the ones that were dying when I got home from vacation.

However, they didn't die - much to my surprise.  And this week we've noticed something pretty cool!

Sunday, May 30, 2010

the latest project...

We had friends come over tonight.  They've been friends of ours for the past 7 years.  We invited them over to have a BBQ on our new deck over the garage.  As I lead Roberto up to the deck, walking on a couple of carefully placed boards that were in the middle of a sea of newly laid grass seed, he said "This has been a perpetual job - you are never done...never, never, NEVER!"

That is the truth, it seems.  We b!tch about it all the time...we are NEVER done.  We've been working on this house and yard continually for the last 5 years (well, it will be 5 years in about 15 days).  In the middle of jobs, Jerome likes to remark about how the neighbors aren't out working in their yard - they must be out having fun.  Well, if you know Jerome, he just can't go out and "have fun" all the time, it would drive him nuts.  He also can't stay inside "lazing around" (another thing he likes to remark about when we are in the middle of a project; he presumes that a lot of people do this), he has to be doing something nearly at all times.

Well, with that being said, here's some shots of the latest project we've been working on...in the yard that is never, never, NEVER done.

When we first moved in, this location in the yard held two ponds.  The ponds had fish, which is nice and calming - but this was not a very good location for a pond.  It's right under several trees; one being a messy Magnolia.  The Magnolia leaves never seem to compost and so we decided that we'd move the ponds from under the tree.  So far we've only managed to remove the ponds and rocks and fill the holes with dirt.

These stepping blocks were left here by the previous owner.  They were all over the yard when we moved in.  We picked them up and stored them for the past 5 years.  Two weeks ago, we decided that we'd make a shaded sitting area under the tree.
We framed out the general area using 2X4's that were left over from the garage construction.  We used the 3-4-5 rule of measuring for a 90 degree angle (If you have a triangle with one 4-foot side, one 3-foot side and a hypotenuse (diagonal) of exactly 5 feet, then the angle opposite the hypotenuse will be exactly 90-degrees...it's nice to be married to an engineer!) We made sure that the 2X4's were level so that we could use another 2X4 to measure the height of the blocks; making sure we were always level all the way across.

We used a couple of paver bricks as spacers to keep the same distance between the blocks.
Once we were done laying the blocks (we brought in a bunch of dirt to raise the area in order to keep everything level), we filled the area in between the blocks with more topsoil - sort of like grout.  Then we watered the area so that the dirt would settle and then brought in more top soil.
We had decided that we would try to plant grass in the area between the blocks.  We'll see if it works, since this area almost never sees sunlight.  We haven't had the best of luck with grass in this area.  The second year we lived here, we had the whole yard sodded (paid big bucks), by the next spring, grass only grew in certain areas.  In other areas, it seemed like it just didn't take.  You could still pull up the rolls of sod nearly intact.  And the Magnolia leaves killed off the grass underneath it.
We purchased several bags of Scotts PatchMaster, which has grass seeds mixed in with a paper mulch.  One bag is supposed to cover 300 sq. ft.  Once the paper mulch gets wet, it makes the seeds more stable and they don't fly/blow/wash away.  We've used it on the area that was trenched up last year to bring the electricity to the garage.  We are so far pretty happy with the results.  If it doesn't work under the Magnolia tree, in between the blocks, then we will consider using moss.
After I was done laying the grass seed paper mulch between the blocks, we needed to seed the rest of that area, since it was totally torn up when the garage was built.  Here's Jerome making sure the sprinkler gets all the newly laid seed.
This is not the only area that will need to be seeded.  We are doing it in smallish sections.

If you enlarge this picture, you'll see the boards that I led my friend Roberto on when bringing him to the deck this evening.

We are not done with this project.  We still have to remove the wood frame and pour the quikrete  around all four sides - hopefully this will keep it tight...at least the outer blocks.  We bought the quikrete at Lowe's on Saturday night with the hopes of doing it on Sunday...this didn't happen,...but it will this week.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

working hard, but it's hardly working...

Since the garage was built last year, this year poses some extra challenges with the landscaping.

We had the contractors push in the boulders a little and with that, we now have a much steeper incline.

We spent the whole day Saturday and most of the day Sunday working on this and other topsoil related projects.  And on top of that, some mulch.  Everything is having a hard time staying on that sharp of an incline.  But I'm smashing it down with my full weight...and we won't go there.

Sunday we had a torrential downpour; sheets of hard rain.  The gutters must have been full because the rain was just falling down our windows like we were in a car wash.  At one point we went outside to fetch a piece of plywood to cover our window well on top of which the gutter water was pouring down.

That's when we saw them.  Some beautiful waterfalls coming down in two places in our yard, eroding the soil around a couple of huge boulders and plants on one side and on the other side, eroding the hill that we use to get our lawnmower up to the upper level of the yard.  Not sure you can tell from these pictures.  We must have lost a yard or two of topsoil and a bunch of mulch too - down the driveway and into the street.
We spent the next day trying to come up with a diversion for the water if this strong of a storm were ever to happen again.  Even planted a bunch of Vinca Minor and Ivy in those areas. Haven't been home during a storm since, but it sounds like tomorrow I may get my chance.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

today, while taking down the christmas lights...

Yes, I said it, we're just now taking down the Christmas lights and other various outdoor decorations.  What can I say, we're late.

In fact, over the weekend, we actually had the Christmas lights turned on for a while.  It was for a photo scavenger hunt we were on and it was extra bonus points if we took a picture of a house with the Christmas lights turned on.  It was our lucky day that we hadn't taken them down yet as we did eventually get first place in the scavenger hunt that evening.

As we were leaving the house to gather more things on our list, we realized that we had kept the Christmas lights on...oh well, call the fashion police.
Anyway, as I was saying...while we were outside today taking down the holiday items, look at what 
was in the yard, blooming!!!

Last year I hadn't noticed this much growth for another week.  Is this a sign of an early spring?

Here's a shot of Smokey helping us with the very dry and dead cedar roping.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

spring has sprung...

The tulips and other flowers are growing like crazy on the south facing side of the house.  I think I'll have flowers on this big one in no time.

Monday, February 22, 2010

we are 10 days behind...

Yesterday, quite by accident I noticed some tulips coming through the soil.  I wanted to post the pic so that people wouldn't think I'm a big fat liar.

This morning we woke up and it was snowing...still is.  I'm really happy I took the shot yesterday, cuz now they are under 4 inches of snow.  I took my ruler out just now and measured.  I'm debating on what time today I'll start up the snow blower.

There are two schools of thought; wait til the snow stops and you only have to blow once - OR - blow now and the next time you blow, it's easier cuz there's much less snow.

Friday, February 19, 2010

my other blog...

By the way, for those of you who read this blog, you may be interested in reading my other blog.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

this time last year...

I was checking out the blog for around this time last year to see what was going on.

According to my post on February 11, 2009, we were already seeing tulips poking out of the soil.  Crazy.

It's not like that at the moment - there's too much snow piled up, so if the tulips are growing I'd never know.

Last week I brought in some Forsythia and Azalea branches for forcing.  We have several Forsythia bushes along the front of the house, parallel to the road and there are two in the backyard (actually, I guess that would be our new neighbors yard now...) - and we have an Azalea on either side of the house.

Yesterday evening after work, I noticed that some of the yellow flowers are already blooming.  I love that!  It makes me feel like spring and good weather are right around the corner.

Sunday, January 31, 2010

orchids...

While on vacation during the holidays - Terry and Marina gave us this orchid and I just wanted to post what it looks like these days - I haven't killed it yet...