We’ve Moved!

 

If you aren’t redirected here is the link:

 

Remodelaholic!

 

THANKS!

Showing posts with label Garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Garden. Show all posts

Beautiful Water Wise Backyard

06 June 2011

Beautiful Water Wise Backyard by Shannon

When I got an invitation from Cassity and Justin at Remodelaholic to guest post on their blog about my outdoor room, I was humbled and honored to be asked! I'm Shannon and I have a little blog Anythingology that documents my DIY projects on a very tight budget and whatever else I'm involved in, re-using and re-purposing stuff I already have, healthy eating, gardening, sewing, volleyball coaching, fun things with the kids, and anything else I'm into at the moment. 




We completed this outdoor project a couple of years ago, but it's ever evolving because I am a changeaholic. Unfortunately the majority of this project was completed before I started blogging so my before pictures are limited.


The black metal gazebo is from Costco. This and the fireplace were are big splurges. The rest of the project was completed for very little money because we did most of the work ourselves.

We live in beautiful San Diego and our home sits on a pie shaped piece of property. The biggest part of our yard is the front yard. We live in a house that has a large great room which includes the kitchen, eating area, and family room, but no formal dining room. We love to entertain and have Sunday night dinners with our extended family. This project has enabled us to enjoy our beautiful weather year round with our family and friends.


My landscape taste tends to lean towards drought tolerant, Mediterranean vegetation and limited use of grass. Water rationing is always a real possibility in Southern California so we took that into account when designing our landscape. While our original front yard was beautiful, it was wasted space and not being used to it's full potential. I talked my husband into letting me draw up plans to make this our outdoor dining room. Life is all about compromise so my existing back patio gazebo got turned into a basketball court. We did all the work ourselves except the building of the wall and the gate. My husband and I did all the design, the plant material removal, the drainage, new sprinkler system, new plant installation, and wheel barreling in all the gravel (seven and a half yards!). We hired a contractor to build the six foot high wall, seat wall and the entry gate in our front yard. I haven't mastered masonry, stucco, or welding yet or I would have done it myself. 

This space became our formal dining room. We added a pre-fabricated fireplace, gravel, new planting beds, a covered gazebo, lighting, new plants, a dining table, and furniture. The dining table was free. I found it abandoned in a church parking lot. It sat there for weeks and I finally called the church to see if they wanted to sell it. They said I could have it for free if I would haul it away. My dad helped me build a new top for it and now it comfortably seats 8-10 people. The black metal dining chairs are from Costco and they were under $20 a piece. 



Here is my latest addition to our outdoor room. An Arteriors 6 light Ironwood Louis Chandelier. 
I picked it up for $40 at Habitat Humanity Restore. To see how I found it go here.


I picked up the wicker end chairs on Craig's List for $20 for the both of them.




I think they contrast nicely with the black gazebo and they are very comfortable.


Most of the accessories have been collected from places like Marshal's, Big Lots, Target, and Goodwill. I am a bargain shopper and love finding a treasure on sale. One of my favorite words is "clearance." I don't care what color most of my finds are because I can always paint it. Don't sit still for too long at my house or you might get spray painted, hot glued, or bedazzled.




The couch, chairs, coffee tables, and ottoman seen in the background are from Costco. I bought them as a set before I had discovered the wonders of Craig's List. They are very comfortable and have held up well over the years.




Here is what our new entry gate looks like.

Here is the view from the front door looking out to the street. It's nice having the privacy. We get zero solicitors now with the installation of the locking gate.




Welcome!
Here is the view from the front gate into the courtyard. To cut down costs I had the gate installed unfinished. I painted it and put our family initial on the center of the gate.


Here is the before.

Here is what the front yard looked like before building the wall and gate. 
Drought tolerant and beautiful, but not really usable. 
Many years ago I painted the gray concrete walkway to look like stone and it still looks great. Painting the concrete was an inexpensive solution to a boring walkway. 
To see how I did it go here.


This was our old eating area on the back patio that has since been turned into a basketball court. In this picture it's staged for a garden tour. Shortly after this picture was taken the fabric top of the gazebo ripped in a wind storm. This patio is either really hot or cool and breezy. At night it was frequently not warm enough to use comfortably in the cool San Diego evenings. I wasn't to sad to lose this space for entertaining. 


I reused the corner supports of the old gazebo to create a partition between the old side yard and new front yard.



Here is the yard when it was newly planted. Small plants are cheaper and acclimate faster than larger plants. I encourage clients to buy the biggest trees they can afford and cut costs by purchasing smaller shrubs. Most shrubs are fully grown in about two years. I built a small interlocking block retaining wall around the perimeter of the gravel to define the space and contain the plants.




Here's what the same plants look like now.




One of my favorite plants is this Pittosporum tennuifolium 'silver sheen.' The leaves shimmer in the breeze.




I made this moss covered mirror for the entry just inside the gate several years ago. I hot glued floral foam onto an old mirror and covered it in moss. Then I wrapped the whole thing in chicken wire and used a staple gun to attach it to the wood frame. I attached tillandsias because they require minimal water.
The mirror reflects the roses in the opposite planter. Drought tolerant planting doesn't mean you can't use plants that have higher water requirements, you just need to group them together to conserve water.




The plant pallet is predominately varying shades of green and white except for two red Mr. Lincoln roses that flank the fireplace.


Who says you can't grow roses and succulents together?



I love the Aeonium arboreum succulents for there vivid apple green color and because they mimic the shape of the roses. They grow like weeds. Just break off a piece and stick it in the ground to make a new plant. They thrive in the filtered sun light.




I picked up the table at a thrift shop and painted it black. It's meant to used indoors, but I like it paired with the more rustic mirror. I swap many of my home furnishings back and forth from inside to outside. The brass chandelier was a freebie from a client that was throwing it away after a recent remodel. More spray paint and the original can light went bye bye.



We had a hummingbird make a nest in the crook of one of the arms this year.




I picked up this little fountain on clearance at Target and attached it to a piece of lattice to make it look bigger. The lattice is from Lowe's and it was natural redwood. I spray painted it black.







I would love to see your outdoor spaces and how you entertain.





Thank's for checking it out!





Read more...

The Great Outdoors: Garden Style

31 May 2011

Justin has been working like mad on our backyard this year!  And I had to show you the post he wrote for our family blog about our garden.

Do you all like gardening?
It is such fun!  Here is what Justin said:

I have been having a blast with my garden/back yard this year!!  It all started in mid February when the weather was very comfortable to be working and playing outside.  I am especially loving this year because of my little Etta is walking and able to play outside with me.  She is such a great helper.

I have organized the back yard quite a bit this year building a new deck,  more mature plants and starting a new path to the chicken coop, from free bricks that I got from a friend.  We like- LOVE FREE!

So anyway, this year we purchased our vegetable plants at The Home Depot, since it is so convenient.  We purchased the plants around the first weekend in March, just after the last frost (luckily).  This was about a month earlier than we did our for the first year that we tried planting and had little success, because we were too late, and the heat scorched our plants before they had a chance to produce veggies.

We purchased the following plants that are doing great and thriving:

Vegetables
(4) tomato plants: Patio, Grape, Roma and Celebrity
(2) zucchini plants
(2) yellow crookneck squash
(2) cantaloupe
(2) egg plant (first time to try these)
(4) strawberry plants
(2) burpless cucumber plants
(1) package of pumpkin seeds  (I planted two different clumps on the side yard in back.)
(1) watermelon (planted in pot thinking it would do well, but has not grown at all.  It makes me sad.)

Herbs in pots on the patio table
(1) basil plant
(1) sage plant
(1) rosemary plant


 Preping the garden in February with my little helper.

 Newly planted garden in early March.  (Etta LOVES riding in the wheelbarrow)

 Etta eying the strawberries.

 Etta attacking the strawberries.

 Garden at end of March.

 Herbs on patio table.

 Garden in early April.

 Garden in May.  Harvesting zucchini and tons of squash at this point.

 Etta is showing off her Texas sized zucchini to her neighbor friend.

 Some of the first harvested veggies during the last week of April.

Veggies that I picked today and last week.
(We just picked 5 eggplants yesterday too!)

We have given away about 15 other squash and zucchini to our neighbors and friends.  
It's a great way to get to know your neighbors, as long as they like squash of course.

HAPPY GARDENING!

What are you planting?  Are you having good luck?
What other plants do we need to try growing - next year (or this fall!)?


Read more...

Stone Soup Garden

02 December 2010

Stone Soup Garden
contributed by Yarnnation

One of my best friends turned 30 this week.  She had decided to flee the country for this momentous birthday, depriving me of the opportunity to throw her a big party.  She only made one mistake.  She gave me the key to her house. . . (insert slightly evil giggle here.)


Sarah is one of the most giving and generous people I know.  She "is the gooey, sticky...stuff that holds" our group of friends together. (name that movie. . .) She often spends so much time doing things for other people that she is left with very little time  to do anything for herself.



When Sarah and her husband Jon bought their house a few years ago, along with a slew of things to fix on the inside of the house, they also inherited what Sarah has called the "Northwest Living Encyclopedia of Noxious Weeds."  Sarah has spent hours nursing the nearly dead rose garden in her front yard back to health.  Her huge back yard, however, sat relatively unchanged, a giant intimidating jungle.



Until we (Tabitha, Kristin, Kristen, Sonya, Denise, Amanda, Melanie, Rachel, Elle, Meghan, myself, and our 17 children, all under the age of 5)  showed up. . .


From SSS

Never underestimate what a group of women (and the occasional help from a husband) can do.



At the end of the day, Sarah's yard looked like this.

From SSS

For several months I had been compiling materials on Sarah's back lot (and lying through my teeth to her about what I was planning on doing with them - no, there are no Jews in my attic!) Nearly all of the materials were recycled and came off of craigslist.org, freecycle, one our our houses, or one of our neighbors' houses. 

From SSS

We did what ever it took to keep the kids out of trouble and out of the way.  Movies, water tables, snacks, and even getting them to help with the work were all strategies we employed.

From SSS

From SSS


Never get in the way of a mama with a sawsall. . .
From SSS

or hedge trimmers. . . just some sound advise.  We may or may not be releasing pent up agitation that accumulates during the child rearing process!

From SSS


The end of day three.


From SSS


Yes, working with babies around may slow you down a little bit, but look what you get in return! Aren't they adorable? 


From SSS


And, when they are feeling up to it, the preschools were actually pretty helpful.


From SSS


The end of day four.

From SSS


By day five the yard was beginning to take shape.

From SSS


And some of the kids were starting to fall apart. 


From SSS


By the end of day six the patio is complete, the raised beds are installed, and the potting bench is in place (if not yet secure.)


From SSS


On day seven the lot of us earth loving North-westerners showed up with plants and more plants, all from our own well loved gardens. It amazed me that we easily filled up most of Sarah's garden.


From SSS


The end of day seven with just some clean up and a few finishing touches before Sarah returns the next day.


From SSS


THE FINAL REVEAL. . .


From SSS

Do you recognize the chairs? Yep, they were for Sarah all along!
The fire pit is some kind of old metal planter or bowl. I got them off of Craitslist and even the man who had them didn't know what they were for sure. I painted this one with a high heat epoxy paint to make it safe to build a fire in. The bricks are from my neighbor's chimney he recently tore down.  The little table was a roadside rescue by Kristin and I made the top out of left over materials.  


From SSS

The white panels are an old school garage door that one of Amanda's neighbors was getting rid of. This window was in the free section at the the ReStore. The wreath I found at Goodwill.  It was tightly bound and I released it from it's ties after painting it to get that look.


From SSS

The ladder came out of Sarah's basement. I made the shelves, which are easily removed and replaced so the ladder is still functional, from reclaimed wood that was s cedar fence in its previous life. The items on the shelf (which look better from a front angle, but were purposely left somewhat sparse so Sarah had room to add her own favorite things) all came out of our attics, basements, and gardening sheds.


From SSS


The super cool glass jugs also came out of Sarah's basement, a relic of her beer brewing days.  The pieces of metal that they are resting on are vintage gas stove burners from the ReStore, painted to match the color scheme. 



The table, the beautiful, beautiful table, was another roadside rescue of Kristin's (the woman is amazing, I tell ya.)  It was in sad shape, but the cedar had aged to the most beautiful color.  We tightened up the rusted old bolts as best we could (which was pretty good, if I say so myself) and then sanded and sanded and sanded and sanded the top.  I applied tung oil to the top after that to protect it and bring out it's color and detail.  The legs were painted to match the chairs and then distressed to match the age and style of the table.  The bench was given the same treatment.



Tabitha came up with the "Stone Soup Garden" and it just fit so perfectly.  We created this "birthday card" to hang in the garden, each of us signed the back of it.



From SSS


There are five raised beds.  They were made from the same reclaimed cedar fence.  The trellis is the frame to an old daybed that had lost its hardware long ago.  The photos in this picture are of each of our kids holding letters that together read "Happy Birthday Auntie Sarah."



From SSS


One of my favorite parts are the old painted storm pipes planted with succulents.



From SSS


These very cool wreaths were also discovered hiding in Sarah's basement.  The frames came from Kristin's house.  We spray painted them and they add just a perfect little pop of color to the wreaths.



From SSS


These windows were pulled out of a house in North Seattle that is currently under renovation.  I saw the post on craigslist about 9:00pm one night.  I knew where the house was because I had also picked up some broken concrete a few weeks earlier from the same house.  I knew they would be gone in the morning so I pulled myself off of my couch and drove over there right then to pick them up.  The bunches of herbs hanging from each window came from Meghan's yard.



From SSS


The patio was made using "urbanite" or broken up concrete.  We stained the concrete to give it more of a stone like look.  After filling in the spaces between with gravel and sand we put a layer of dirt on top of everything, and planted steppable ground covers.  As our lovely Seattle rain works its magic the pavers will emerge and the ground covers will fill in to create a beautiful natural looking patio.



From SSS


Yes, Sarah, your friends are crazy, but in a good way!  We love you to pieces.  Happy Birthday, dear friend.


From SSS


From SSS

Read more...
Related Posts with Thumbnails
Emealz - Easy Meals for Busy People!
Home & Garden Blogs Home & Garden Blogs - Blog Rankings

Blogging  tips, tutorials and SEO

From Here to Eternity

  © Blogger template On The Road by Ourblogtemplates.com 2009

Back to TOP