Or all a-tumble?
I went out yesterday afternoon to check out how far they got on the rock/gravel garden, and noticed a couple of rocks that had fallen out of line. When Chris got here this morning, I mentioned them, and he said "Oh, we'll fix that!" I very quickly said, "No, leave it! In fact, place more of them out of line. It looks more natural, like they've just fallen there." Which they had, actually.
Things are taking shape.
And I like the shape they're taking.
Don't be fooled. Inside this thin coating of sweetness is a fiery core of total insanity.
Friday, March 23, 2012
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
Gravel Garden Progress
Despite our bad weather, there has been some progress on the gravel garden, and not just in the plant acquisition department. The old section of fence between the gravel parking area was taken down, and the beginnings of a new gate and fence is taking shape.
No, that's not a body wrapped in the yellow plastic, it's the cedar for the new gate and fence.
Unbelievably, today, the first day of spring, it snowed off and on, as several snow squalls came through our region in waves. Yet, just a little way to the north, closer to Seattle, it was apparently sunny enough to get out and garden. It's hard not to be jealous of the rest of the country, which is enjoying record warmth.
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Forms created for footings for the new gate |
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Footings filled with concrete |
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Cinder block piers to be faced with decorative stone, for a gate to hang from |
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Gabions built |
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Ready to be hauled away and powder-coated |
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Gravel being scraped up. Rather than pay to have it hauled away, we gave it to our neighbor for his driveway |
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Soil arrived today, looking a bit rich. We added more sand to it. |
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Rocks! |
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Stock tanks, 22 X 44 |
No, that's not a body wrapped in the yellow plastic, it's the cedar for the new gate and fence.
Unbelievably, today, the first day of spring, it snowed off and on, as several snow squalls came through our region in waves. Yet, just a little way to the north, closer to Seattle, it was apparently sunny enough to get out and garden. It's hard not to be jealous of the rest of the country, which is enjoying record warmth.
Review of Ivette Soler's The Edible Front Yard from Timber Press
When it's too cold and wet and dreary out to do any actual gardening, what's an obsessive gardener to do? Read about gardening of course!
I recently received a free copy of Ivette Soler's book The Edible Front Yard, and I wanted to share with you what a mind-blowing experience it was for me. Although I'm certainly not finished yet with the gardens in back, and work has just begun on the xeric gravel garden at the side of my house, I have been increasingly thinking about what to do with all the grass in my front yard. In my previous garden I grew tomatoes and cooking herbs in the best patch of sun I had, which was in the front yard. It was just a small bed near the house, with plenty of lawn still around it, buffering it from the street. None of my neighbors minded this landscaping faux pas, because I shared the tomatoes with them.
It never occurred to me how much more I could have done, and how much further I could have pushed the garden design envelope. The Edible Front Yard, with its subtitle "The Mow-Less, Grow-More Plan for a Beautiful, Bountiful Garden," is all about pushing the garden design envelope. The book begins with lists of plants like cardoon, artichoke, and rhubarb, that are not just edible, but also ornamental and structural, and a secondary list of what Ivette calls "helpers," such as agave, angelica, catmint, hops and juniper. The lists include advice on cultural requirements and how to use them (eat it, brew tea with it, make an alcoholic drink, etc.). The book goes on to discuss designs and design principles (structure, repetition, form, texture and color), how to assess your own front yard, and how to remove and reuse lawn, plants you already have, and hardscape materials you already have. The final chapters deal with building, working and harvesting (which, given that most edibles are annuals, includes the excellent advice to have substitute plants ready to incorporate into the spot where you've just removed spent plants).
The book is lushly illustrated with large, colorful photos. A favorite was the following, an illustration of the design principle of repetition.
It shows red basils and sages planted in multiples of threes and fives along a gravel path, providing not just edible, but ornamental value, supporting the color scheme of the other plants in the garden, and giving contrast to the spiky foliage of the grasses, agaves, aloes and Phormiums, and the wispy foliage of the fennel. Not only did the book give me inspiration for what to do with my front yard full of grass, but pictures like this one (there were more!) also gave me ideas to use in the gravel garden.
Every chapter either reinforced my thinking on certain subjects, or gave me ideas and made me think more. I like books that make me think.
******************
Timber Press gave me this book for free, but had no influence on my opinion of it. I've been doing a lot of reading about gardening lately. It's been very cold and rainy, and other than the obligatory walk once around the garden, taking note of where the weeds are so that first sunny day, I will know where to concentrate my energies, I've had no gardening to do -- oh wait, does buying plants count as gardening? I want to tell you about many of the other books I've read recently too, some from Timber Press and some not.
And you still have a couple of days to go to Timber Press and enter their edible gardens contest/giveaway, which I posted about here. To go to their website and enter, click here. The contest ends March 23.
I recently received a free copy of Ivette Soler's book The Edible Front Yard, and I wanted to share with you what a mind-blowing experience it was for me. Although I'm certainly not finished yet with the gardens in back, and work has just begun on the xeric gravel garden at the side of my house, I have been increasingly thinking about what to do with all the grass in my front yard. In my previous garden I grew tomatoes and cooking herbs in the best patch of sun I had, which was in the front yard. It was just a small bed near the house, with plenty of lawn still around it, buffering it from the street. None of my neighbors minded this landscaping faux pas, because I shared the tomatoes with them.
It never occurred to me how much more I could have done, and how much further I could have pushed the garden design envelope. The Edible Front Yard, with its subtitle "The Mow-Less, Grow-More Plan for a Beautiful, Bountiful Garden," is all about pushing the garden design envelope. The book begins with lists of plants like cardoon, artichoke, and rhubarb, that are not just edible, but also ornamental and structural, and a secondary list of what Ivette calls "helpers," such as agave, angelica, catmint, hops and juniper. The lists include advice on cultural requirements and how to use them (eat it, brew tea with it, make an alcoholic drink, etc.). The book goes on to discuss designs and design principles (structure, repetition, form, texture and color), how to assess your own front yard, and how to remove and reuse lawn, plants you already have, and hardscape materials you already have. The final chapters deal with building, working and harvesting (which, given that most edibles are annuals, includes the excellent advice to have substitute plants ready to incorporate into the spot where you've just removed spent plants).
The book is lushly illustrated with large, colorful photos. A favorite was the following, an illustration of the design principle of repetition.
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Photo by Ann Summa, used courtesy of Timber Press |
It shows red basils and sages planted in multiples of threes and fives along a gravel path, providing not just edible, but ornamental value, supporting the color scheme of the other plants in the garden, and giving contrast to the spiky foliage of the grasses, agaves, aloes and Phormiums, and the wispy foliage of the fennel. Not only did the book give me inspiration for what to do with my front yard full of grass, but pictures like this one (there were more!) also gave me ideas to use in the gravel garden.
Every chapter either reinforced my thinking on certain subjects, or gave me ideas and made me think more. I like books that make me think.
******************
Timber Press gave me this book for free, but had no influence on my opinion of it. I've been doing a lot of reading about gardening lately. It's been very cold and rainy, and other than the obligatory walk once around the garden, taking note of where the weeds are so that first sunny day, I will know where to concentrate my energies, I've had no gardening to do -- oh wait, does buying plants count as gardening? I want to tell you about many of the other books I've read recently too, some from Timber Press and some not.
And you still have a couple of days to go to Timber Press and enter their edible gardens contest/giveaway, which I posted about here. To go to their website and enter, click here. The contest ends March 23.
Friday, March 16, 2012
Foliage Followup -- March 2012
Well, I didn't do a Garden Blogger's Bloom Day post, because I don't really have much blooming other than some primroses and Hellebores, which I've already posted photos of. But I have lots of emerging foliage, not to mention stuff that is evergreen.
No post from the wet Pacific Northwest would be complete without a picture of moss. Except this isn't moss.
Do you know what it is? It's a large patch of liverwort -- an even more primitive plant than moss. I often find it on the surface of plants I've bought at the nursery, and I scrape it off. Maybe once the dry season starts it will die back. But for now, it loves my wet shade.
Well, that's about it for my foliage. I hope you enjoyed leaf-peeping!
Please check out Pam's blog Digging, where she is showing pictures of an interesting Mahonia, and where other bloggers have left links to more posts with lovely foliage!
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This Sempervivum is called simply 'Black' -- it is positioned where two different creeping sedums converge. |
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This bright orange ornamental grass is really thriving in its spot, despite very little water last year. Another good candidate for the new garden. |
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The bright new foliage of Spirea 'Magic Carpet' matches the grass really well, they are in the same bed. But I think the spirea will be staying where it is. |
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Hypericum 'Albury Purple' lives up to its name. |
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The new foliage on a nearby returning Lupine is quite purple too. |
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This rather large clump of rose campion has never bloomed, although it is going into its third year. Maybe this year. I do like the fuzzy texture of its leaves. |
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I love the tight rosettes of this tall sedum, which resembles Autumn Joy in form, but the flowers are much too bright. Possibly it's the one called "Neon'? |
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The new foliage of this Monarda is always tinged with purple. |
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Variegated columbine foliage is so cute! |
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The new foliage of Agastache 'Golden Jubilee' always come up heavily tinged with purple, then turns completely chartreuse. |
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It's hard to find leaves of Dianthus barbatus Sooty' that aren't chewed on, but I managed. |
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I have five or six enormous clumps of Nepeta 'Walker's Low' that will get divided up and replanted in the gravel garden. The neighborhood cats like it, but it has thrived despite their ardor. |
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I hope this cute little columbine coming up amidst some rocks survives. |
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Is this flower or foliage? Hmmmm...not quite flower yet, I think, on this Euphorbia. |
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This blotched Arum 'Jack Sprat' was a new purchase this time last year. This clump is looking nice and healthy, not so for others elsewhere, they've been chewed on, probably by slugs. |
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I love the form and coloring on this Cyclamen hederifolium. With leaves like this, who cares if it flowers? |
No post from the wet Pacific Northwest would be complete without a picture of moss. Except this isn't moss.
Do you know what it is? It's a large patch of liverwort -- an even more primitive plant than moss. I often find it on the surface of plants I've bought at the nursery, and I scrape it off. Maybe once the dry season starts it will die back. But for now, it loves my wet shade.
Well, that's about it for my foliage. I hope you enjoyed leaf-peeping!
Please check out Pam's blog Digging, where she is showing pictures of an interesting Mahonia, and where other bloggers have left links to more posts with lovely foliage!
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
There'll Be No Work on the Gravel Garden Today!
Because it's a snow day!
We woke up this morning to a surprise amount of snow. I knew there was a threat of it in the forecast, but I thought it was going to just be occasional snow showers. It's been snowing pretty heavily.
I think the garden will survive this time. It's not like the ice storm in January that wreaked such havoc. And it gives me longer to continue picking out plants for the new garden.
It's supposed to turn to showers by the afternoon, and then rain for the rest of the week. I'm keeping my fingers crossed that the weather forecasters got it right.
We woke up this morning to a surprise amount of snow. I knew there was a threat of it in the forecast, but I thought it was going to just be occasional snow showers. It's been snowing pretty heavily.
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Douglas firs in the snow |
I think the garden will survive this time. It's not like the ice storm in January that wreaked such havoc. And it gives me longer to continue picking out plants for the new garden.
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The view out the front door. The tree on the left is the one that lost its upper half in the ice storm. |
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The birds are all over the feeder. These two stalwarts held out even when I stepped out onto the back porch. |
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Bird tracks under the feeder |
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The Euphorbia 'Red Wing' that I bought at the plant sale last weekend, with a dusting of snow on it. |
It's supposed to turn to showers by the afternoon, and then rain for the rest of the week. I'm keeping my fingers crossed that the weather forecasters got it right.
Monday, March 12, 2012
Timber Press Veggie Giveaway
Timber Press is having a giveaway for veggie gardeners!
Go to their website and enter your email address and you might win a prize package that includes:
- 35 packets of organic heirloom vegetable seeds from Peaceful Valley Farm & Garden Supply (an $87 value!)
- A bare-root fruit tree, also from Peaceful Valley
- The Beginner's Guide to Growing Heirloom Vegetables
- Fruit Trees in Small Spaces
- The Edible Front Yard
- The Kitchen Gardener's Handbook
- Sugar Snaps and Strawberries
All you need to do is enter is an email address, and then click "I'm ready!" The contest ends March 23! I entered my address, even though I haven't sowed a single edible seed yet. I'm having a slow start to my edible growing season so far. I don't know why but I just can't seem to work up any enthusiasm for it. Despite the fact that I need to increase my consumption of vegetables.
I've been thinking of joining a CSA this year, instead of trying to grow my own veggies. Our last summer in Massachusetts, we were in a CSA, which we shared with a neighbor, and we got a ton of wonderful, healthy vegetables.
On the other hand, maybe if I win the Timber Press promotion, it'll kick-start my veggie-growing.
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