11.08.2020

Back Yard: Lawn and Garden

2020 has been a hell of a year.  Hans' job moved him to full time work-from-home and I've bounced between 25-50% WFH.  Back when we thought the breakdown of society was eminent I asked Hans to help me get a vegetable garden area started.  I had a lot more time at home during the summer.  After saving up for a necessary home repair we had a patio put in.  After that the last missing piece was replacing the rest of our yard with actual grass.  I was thankful when Hans suggested that we not mess around with seeding this time and instead buy some sod.  At the end of August I started calling around to local plant nurseries for prices.  After borrowing a rototiller and wheel barrow from a friend, we obtained all of our supplies at got to work!


Hans helped me put together a simple fence made from 
wooden garden stakes and chicken wire.

Before I put flowers in the tall planter boxes we had a small spring crop of 
radishes, lettuce, arugula, and peas.

If you squint, the "grass" doesn't look too bad.  There were several holes leftover from the old deck so I had to move some dirt around and fix the ankle busters.

The junky ground around the new deck from last year was really sad to look at.

Veggies coming along!  Once the tomatoes finally sprouted I had to thin them out severely.

Shortly after this photo was taken our patio was put in.
See previous blog post!

Once summer came to an end I cleared away the spent vegetable plants and replaced them with some perennials and annuals from the same place that did our patio.

Since we were about to rototill the rest of the yard we used the time while we were waiting for the weeds to die off to make a small paver pad for the shed and waste cans.  This was much harder to do than we anticipated and it made use very glad that we paid someone else to do the patio.  After framing out the area with boards we laid stock hardware store pavers and swept sand into the crevices.  It didn't have to be perfect because the whole thing was going to be covered later.  We also replaced some broken fence boards.

Looking good!

Bye-bye, weeds and cruddy lawn!

While Hans did the much tougher work of running the rototiller I rented a pick-up truck, went to the nursery to get some good top soil, walked it around the house by wheel-barrow (thank GOODNESS we had one to use), and went back for the sod.

Look at that!  The first picture is from the day we put down sod 
and the second picture is about a week later.

It looks seriously nice now.  And mowing is so much easier!
I'm looking forward to enjoying it all summer next year.
I gotta invest in a bocce set.

All ready for next year's garden!
Can you see the small compost pile?  Oh, do I have plans...

7.23.2020

Back Yard: A Year of Projects

We are so close to having the back yard done!  Just so you can have a frame of reference for what we started with:


Things that we had going on:

  1. Original deck (circa 2004) which was sinking, rotting, and slowly being claimed by carpenter bees.
  2. Rusted and nearly dead AC condensing unit
  3. 100% weeds and crab grass
  4. Above-ground downspout tube that ran along the entire southern fence (on the left in the above photo).  Quite the eyesore.
  5. More space than all of our neighbors and LOTS of potential...
Two years ago we roto-tilled the yard and attempted to reseed but sadly we did all of this right before a month of rain (that's what it felt like anyway) and the new grass seed was nearly completely washed away.  The weeds came back so we're back to square one on the lawn.

BUT

Last year I found a company that was willing to build a new deck for us.  It's kind of a long story.  The basement emergency escape window is directly under our sliding glass door and the current building codes say that our deck structure has to have a trap door.  It's really annoying but then again we can how many people do you know who have a trap door?  We'll just call it a quirk and move on.

This year our AC needed a repair that was expensive enough to justify replacing the outdoor condenser and furnace.  They were basically at the end of their respective lives and waiting for this moment to arrive.  This presented us with the perfect opportunity to move the AC new unit closer to the house and make room for a new patio.  

With Hans working from home full time and me working 50% at home, we're saving quite a lot of money on gas.  We have also adapted to a new lifestyle of less casual dining out and even less entertainment activities.  I decided that the time was right to go ahead and have a patio installed.  The end result is that we have a deck that's 70% smaller than the original but we've gained quite a lot of upgraded outdoor space!  In the fall we're going to re-seed the grass area again (wish us luck) and in 2021 this year's new vegetable garden is going to get an upgrade in the spring.  Enough exposition.  Let's see some pictures!

 Hi, Kobuk!  Goodbye, old deck!

Framing out the new structure, and completed new construction (2019) 

Right before the patio job (2020).  Gotta paint the new siding that we installed.
The old deck ledger board left some pretty big holes in the old siding. 

Post-excavation 

Who's ready for a margarita party?!