Showing posts with label Raised Beds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Raised Beds. Show all posts

Saturday, May 16, 2015

2014 – June GLINDA’S GARDEN DAY


This post “2014 – June GLINDA’S GARDEN DAY” was written by Glinda/AnnieinAustin for the Divas of the Dirt blog.

Glinda here, with a few photos from my garden day in 2014. The project day took place in June, but the project idea was a response to the depressing view of our vegetable garden all winter through spring as we looked out the breakfast room window.


In general, our pepper & tomato plants grow better in containers than in the ground, where greedy roots from neighboring trees steal all the water and nutrients. But our motley collection of big plastic pots was not lovely – worse in winter but bad enough in spring.

The vegetable plot was adjacent to a mixed border but the two areas didn’t mesh right – how could we make them more coherent and connected?


I thought adding planting boxes for iris might work to soften the view and distract the eye without shading the vegetables, especially since I had a lot of dividable iris and they’re usually evergreen here. Ozz built one cedar rectangle and we set it on the grass to see how it looked.


Soon he built the second rectangle and we hauled home a large concrete paving block from the home center. We soaked the area, covered it in black plastic and set the boxes and block in place, hoping a few weeks of hot sun could kill the grass so it would be easy for the Divas to dig out.


By the end of June the weather was solidly summer hot. My friends were coming! A stars and stripes theme would be just right  -it was only a few days before the Fourth of July. Red, white and blue décor joined bowls of blueberries & strawberries and pineapple on the table. Under that mesh guard the Divas of the Dirt would find pecan muffins and blueberry muffins.


The makings for breakfast tacos were set out on the kitchen counter – beef chorizo from Whole Foods, sliced avocados, a few chopped tomatoes from the garden, grated cheese and salsa made by Ozz. On the stovetop, cubed, fried potatoes and scrambled eggs were just about ready. Time for sharing food and conversation!


After breakfast the Divas dived into the project.
But when we pulled off the black plastic it was obvious that the black plastic had not done its job very well! The St Augustine was daunted, but certainly not dead. Digging out the grass was going to be more difficult than expected. We also worked on making the curve of the adjoining bed blend in with the new boxes – scoring a line, moving stones and digging out grass.

Barbie had come to cheer on the workers. Mattie and Karla worked on the new beds and Annie weeded the path.


The work area wasn’t very large so Buffy decided to weed and reset the stepping stones inside of the garden perimeter.


Once the grass was banished, bags of soil and amendments were worked in and the planting began. Some of the tall purple iris (a passalong from Sophia) were divided from the front yard to go on the left, with a small daylily division in the center. The right side would have fragrant peach iris and a small ‘mystery’ daylily start from a garden blogger friend. A large bowl of a small mystery iris was dismantled. Some of it went in the front corners and some of it went home with friends who wanted to try it out.


It was an odd but interesting day. Annie had reached a milestone at work so there were posters & photos. Sugar couldn’t come and Mindy was on the injured list, but conversations are as important as the work! Warren brought Mindy and a couple of Sophia's family members were also there. Everyone could visit while those who were able could dig. Once lunch was ready, Ozz and Warren joined us at the dining room table and Buffy’s sister and nephew arrived in time for dessert.

I never got around to taking photos of our indoor picnic lunch – a simple spread of Mary’s Gone Crackers, croissants, some Artichoke-Spinach spread, chicken-basil salad, small tomatoes and a green salad with avocado dressing. There’s no photo of the double-dark chocolate oatmeal cookies, but this photo from a different day will work – my cheesecakes always look the same!

 

The day was hotter than expected and the job was harder that it should have been, but the Divas of the Dirt pressed on. By the time my friends went home it was obvious that the boxes and step would work well with the existing path. Here’s the view from our back door.


Less than a week later, the iris were settling into their new space, with the square stepping stone adding dimension and an illusion of height, the curve smoothed out and the reset round stepping stones also giving that illusion of going up… everything working to make a harmonious group.


When September rolled around the total effect was quite pleasant.


And this spring? The new wooden boxes had Iris in bloom!



This post “2014 – June GLINDA’S GARDEN DAY” was written by Glinda/AnnieinAustin for the Divas of the Dirt blog.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

2010 APRIL, SOPHIA'S GARDEN DAY


March 2010 was fun, but it was not a Garden Day
Glinda's turn (that's me) was scheduled for March. Stacks of collected rocks, bags of mulch and compost and some new plants awaited a redo and rejuvenation of the Pink Entrance Garden. The other Divas of the Dirt arrived at my house. We shared a Soyrizo, eggs & red pepper casserole, blueberry muffins, corn muffins, berries & pineapple and lots of conversation, but thunderstorms and more than one inch of rain changed the gardening plans. At one point the rain let up enough for us to stroll through the wet garden and some of us headed off to an estate sale, then came back for Chicken Salad and Cheesecake. Some good suggestions came out of our conversations but there was no project for March.


APRIL 2010 - The DIVAS FINALLY GET TO PLAY IN the DIRT!


We wondered if Sophia's April date would also be a washout - scattered storms wandered Austin that weekend but although clouds threatened, it never actually rained at her house - yay! A real garden day at last! We'd arrived as usual on Saturday morning, glad to sip hot coffee and snitch bites from Apple-Cinnamon scones while waiting for the full group to gather (Edit April 23: the scones came from Phoenicia Bakery & Deli on Burnet & shortcake came from Central Market on Lamar). Sophia is a fine cook, but today Roger had taken over the kitchen and produced an Emeril-Inspired Mexican Breakfast Casserole with roasted poblanos accompanied by lovely melon slices.



After breakfast we went outside where a new project awaited us - if it went quickly we planned to weed, add plants and compost the front flower & shrub borders, too.
Sophia had a problem area in the front of her house near the garage - one shared by many of us who garden on small suburban lots in established neighborhoods. This spot gets quite good sun (that can be rare in our tree-laden yards) but it also has soil where nothing seemed to grow. And underneath the soil were buried utilities making digging & amending soil quite tricky.


Sophia and Roger wished for vegetables but previous tries at growing them in the back yard were disappointing. Could small raised beds for edibles in the front yard be a solution? Our April project was to give it a try. Sophia had found pre-cut-and-drilled kits for the frames at Home Depot and cotton bur compost for the front flower garden at Hill Country Nursery. A few days before our meeting Sophia and Diva-Annie drove down to the Natural Gardener's soil yard and filled bags of Hill Country Soil mix to fill the vegetable frames. She also went a little nuts buying vegetable and flower plants all over Austin!
Sugar volunteered to use the electric screwdriver as she and DivaAnnie began to put the wooden frames together- this went quite smoothly with many hands ready to slide the corners together and hold the sides stable.
All visible vegetation was weeded from the surface and lightly dug over then the frames were set in place and layers of newspapers arranged over the ground. Buffy & Mindy have been using this biodegradable-barrier technique for years.

Bag after bag of Hill Country Soil was carried over and dumped in - it's amazing how much soil these 4 X 4 frames hold!

Under Karla's direction we used twine to divide the area into squares.
Sophia had so many plants! The cast for this Veggie Play was changed several times as we tried to decide which plants had the best chance of success. The herbs could trail over the corners.


The second frame had larger squares for tomatoes and peppers

After a lot of rearranging the beds were planted. We filled other large pots with soil & compost to hold some tomato & pepper plants that wouldn't fit into the frames
. The two fennel plants went into the flower beds (the swallowtails find them no matter where they're planted) and Mindy thought Sorrel could grow in a patio container in semi-shade. Go little beds, go!



We checked out the rest of the front yard - most of us had lost all our bulbine plants in the harsh winter, but Sophia's bulbine was not only alive - it was blooming!

Sophia wanted the spiky plant in the pot (maybe Cordyline?) moved to shade but she didn't want us to disturb the stump of her Blue Clerodendron. It looks dead but in other years it's come back late so there is still hope.

We left the Clerodendron alone and moved other plants around. Mindy added one of the leftover herbs - Comfrey - to the bed.


The parking strips planted last year were quite established looking - just a little weeding and swapping plants around was all they'd need.


Sophia had a new flower ready for the long parkway bed - she'd fallen in love with Supertunia® Pretty Much Picasso™ and brought this Proven Winners introduction home from Countryside Nursery. If more PMP's can be found this plant will be appearing soon in other Divas of the Dirt gardens!

We moved the potted foliage plant to the large shady bed under the cedar elms and began weeding and adding compost to the whole area. We may never get rid of the hated Asiatic Jasmine but we keep trying and maybe we are winning! The photo below is from 2007, when the vine had taken over.
Sophia regrets listening to the person who told her to plant it a few years ago - Asiatic jasmine can be useful in formal or commercial applications where confined by concrete, but in a woodland setting like this it's an aggressive, invasive plant.


Sophia bought several beautiful Japanese Painted Ferns and many colors and patterns of Caladium for the front shady bed.
Another request was that we'd prune the enormous redtip photinia in the center of the photo above... we warned the redtip that We'd Be Back, and answered the summons to lunch.


Phoenicia Bakery rolls and rosemary bread were perfect with deli ham, capicola and turkey -lots of cool stuff like olives & cornichons and multicolored bite-size tomatoes, tabbouleh and an incredible fruit salad with coconut - Roger's take on Ambrosia Salad.

We thought the fruit salad was dessert - but Sophia then presented a Chocolate cake from Central Market with three flavors of gelato!

We went back outside. Sophia's two large Mutabilis roses were still in bloom and she was happy to see new growth on the Bauhinia - another favorite plant that had been looking iffy after winter. Karla & DivaAnnie made a beeline for the redtip, soon joined by Sugar. The vague instructions from Sophia were to make it look like a tree in a Japanese Garden. (Redtips really ARE Asian trees which are forced into shrub forms). If it died in the process - too bad... she'd buy something better. Soon limbs were visible where there had been a blob of green. Up in the front corner Mindy & Buffy had already divided and reset the daylilies - not the best time to do it, perhaps - but work must be done when there are hands ready. Mindy liked the way the existing Purple oxalis looked with the silver ponyfoot and Lambs ears - she decided that the Purple Shield originally intended for the Caladium & fern bed would give a lot more pop in the front corner. She and I teased some of the Lambs ears out and reset them to extend the silvery band.

Persian Shield/Strobilanthes dyerianus is a popular plant in our Diva gardens but most of us had lost our Persian Shields over winter. Sophia found this one at Shoal Creek Nursery - complete with blooms, which seemed quite unusual!
A new vegetable/herb garden and a refreshed front yard were how the Divas of the Dirt said Happy Spring to Sophia and Roger... and guys... when you start getting some yummy produce, just remember that we helped!