We had some gorgeous lighting from storms today, so I took some updated photos of the garden. I think it’s fun to see how it changes over time, and in most of the photos I shared yesterday my plants seemed so small. I also took pictures where the “after” was missing.
Stepping stones installed:
My battered shade garden:
Trumpet vine progress:
Wide shots of the yard:
Small features and beautiful morning rain:
Our little rain gutter creekyarrow, grasses, rudbeckia, and lavenderMorning shrooms!strawberries, leeks, mint, sage, and buddleiaThe kids’ gardenIncoming raspberries!Columbines, dwarf spruce, echinacea, thyme, alpine strawberries, sea holly, snow-in-summer, and moreChocolate flower, partridge featherrudbeckia, poppies, bee balm, mystery snapdragonmystery sunflowers, rose shrub, agastache, bee balm, and magnolia saucer treeGroundcherries came back strong!Morning sun over the forsythia and lilacssteam coming off the fence!Bindweed everywhere, it never stops. I pull it every 2-3 days, and it comes back all the same.older bee balm, winecups, grass, and mystery sunflowerTall buckwheatLike ornaments on a holiday displayThis cuke is looking goodBuddleia, alpine strawberries, soledad, and liatriscalendula overload, with parsley and asparagusI love my hot pink buckwheat variety
Here’s some photos I didn’t share yet of the landscaping work. I dumped them in no particular order, sorry! They sort of go backwards in time, so scroll backwards for a happier viewing 😉
Latest addition – Arctic Blue Rose (supposed to be drought tolerant)Rudbeckia are poppin’!strawberries plantedColumbine, penstemon, dwarf alberta spruce, and moreBig planting day photo finishI love columbines! Accidentally knocked this bloom off, so I had to memorialize it.first berry!Ice plants are awesome!Ben and I planted the front porch borderCoral bells (I’m obsessed) and boxwoodSo. Much. Bindweed.Big planting day photoColumbines, dusty miller, petunias, thymeSam learning from the professionals how to plant a treeMy magnolia saucer! I yearned for this tree. I hope it blooms next year!First day on the jobedging done!the pros did the brick, I did the flat linerCompost!!!yard shaping, a blank canvas
This is just a collection of our garden visitors. It’s so fun seeing who comes! Some are more welcome than others 😉
sphinx moththey love the four o’clocksbutterfly?beefuzzy beechubby beebig boy beeblack bee?sleepy beebee bee beehummingbirdhummingbirds love the agastachedragonflyladybugbaby bunnysomething ate my groundcherries!skunk villain
After getting most of the yard done, I continued to tear out grass. We carved out a space for the kids to own. Jack planted lettuce, peppers, and a watermelon that’s M.I.A. I think a rabbit ate the sprout. Sam planted strawberries and a kangaroo paw plant. We sprinkled clover all over too.
blank slate
Under the locust I wanted a little shade garden and short-cut pathway. Using up the last of our fence posts and some landscaping spikes, Sam laid out a “rustic” path and together we Jack we installed it. I planted some adorable coral bells, sweet woodruff, columbines, forget-me-nots, lupine, leadwort, and creeping myrtle.
I don’t have a more complete photo…but you get the idea 🙂
A family of skunks have been digging for grubs in the garden, and caused a lot of damage to the plants. Combined with the late July heat, the plants are looking a bit ragged. I have high hopes that they will recover and we’ll have a lovely shady border in a couple years.
One of my favorite parts of the big landscaping project was expanding and refining our vegetable plot. We had two 3×3′ shallow raised beds in the grassy lawn on the east side of the house. I wanted to have more planter beds, and to replace the grass with clover.
We took out a half-height fence that divided the front and side yards. I used that fence to build new planters. Mom donated some old cedar posts for me to use too. Lastly, I took apart my old beds to make a larger, taller bed with stabilized corners.
I got a new circular saw and it did the task better than my jigsaw. I used decking screws to assemble the beds. Sam helped a lot! He was great with the drill.
I also really wanted trellised arches in my garden. I wanted an arbor to replace the fence, with a trumpet vine (like Grandma Cook had) and lilac bushes flanking the portal. I didn’t like the shape or quality of any arbors online. I toyed with the idea of making a Japanese-style arbor, inspired by tori gates. Ben loved the idea and encouraged me to make one. For this project I bought new wood. Again, with Ben’s encouragement, I chose a bright red sealer to color and protect the arbor. I had plenty leftover, so the planters were painted to match. Finally, I installed the arbor to the existing posts that were a part of the old fence gate.
It turns out I LOVE carpentry. New hobby unlocked!
Most recently the kids helped me make stepping stones so that I don’t feel bad crushing the clover every day.
I started the vegetables inside in trays. Nimbus kept eating the sprouts, and it took me a couple tries with different contraptions to keep her out.
The trumpet vines are coming in very slowly, but hopefully in a few years I’ll have a beautiful archway.
The clover took off like mad. I sprinkled in some buckwheat, and I’m delighted by the combination.
How it startedHow it’s goingA morning check on my beautiful place!
I have 3 kinds of carrots, 4 kinds of green beans, cucumbers, shishito peppers, jalapeños, mini bell peppers, banana peppers, pea pods, 2 kinds of lettuce, and 4 kinds of pumpkin. I LOVE my pumpkin arch. I got a cattle panel from the Tractor Supply store. I installed 4 T posts and zip tied the panel to them. The pumpkins are super happy and the effect is so whimsical. In amongst all the vegetables I have rosemary, oregano, nasturtiums, marigolds, and calendula. On the ground around my planters I also have alyssum, sage, regular strawberries, alpine strawberries, leeks, parsley, asparagus, chives, thyme, spearmint, peppermint, a blueberry bush, and two raspberry bushes.
Buckwheat are so cute!The okra didn’t work. 2nd time trying I don’t know what I’m doing wrong. Maybe next year.Green beans are my favorite garden veg to eatI made lunch with mostly garden vegI love taking selfies with my archKillin’ pests
This year we did a huge project that we’ve been wanting for years – transforming the front and side yards to a xeriscape garden. Ben had a friend with a new landscaping company, so after meeting with them in the fall to go over plans, they started tearing up the yard in the spring.
I didn’t take any real “before” pictures. It was bare lawn, with a half-height fence between the front and side yard.) Here’s some pictures as the workers started tearing out grass and installing a brick edge.
Today I started the RN Refresher program at Red Rocks. I’m dipping my toes in returning to bedside nursing care.
I think it will be a good way to gain confidence and rebuild my med/surg nursing skills. It’s a small class (11 students) and, very lucky for me, the campus is close to home. I was able to come home for lunch break and changed into our scrubs, after they recommended we wear them to class for the skills lab. We have a full day class every Thursday through October, then ten 12 hour shifts of clinical work through mid December, and then we are done! It sounds like a relaxed course, and I’ll be super ready to return to working in a hospital if that’s what I want at the end of this.
Scene – Jack has been complaining and exaggerating about his school schedule since getting home late on his first day of 8th grade. Hyperbole increases on the phone with his grandmother.
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