Tuesday, July 9, 2013

the jungle that is our garden

gardening is hard work. many days lately i feel like all of nature's creatures are engaged in a circle of life that is working for everyone but me...

basil - it's just never looked right this year, no idea why

spider mite damage? what the heck bothers mint??

oregano pale and covered with mite damage


not sure what's going on here, and i forget what this flower is called...but it doesn't look fantastic, does it?

attack of the rose slug

rose slug again?

too much rain for yarrow


too much rain for thyme

that white residue, my friends...that white residue is slime mold, which pops up after every rain now

our eastern red cedar dropped lovely galls like this one on the flagstone path for a week

tent caterpillars?

i wasn't thorough enough killing the grass before planting our backyard privacy grove, and now i keep having to re-smother and re-mulch...can't keep up with that darn zoysia!

can you make out the white bumps that look like lint on the hosta flower stalks? wooly aphids EVERYWHERE

spider web perfectly positioned to feast on wooly aphids - nice.
and always...always...the chameleon plant grows and flourishes despite my constant sprayings with poison ivy killer.


but then there are sights like the following that keep me in the game.

day lilies


brake lights red yucca - 2 more are blooming. must get a whole cluster next year, they bloom for weeks!

day lilies, nandina, red twig dogwood and baby blue spruce all flourishing

that's fragrant pathways gardenia in the black planter - smells delicious on the way in to the screen porch 

just finished weeding...for 5 minutes

love this corner of the yard



more foundation garden loveliness

front path





in love with that hydrangea that's bigger than our shed

revived herb garden with marigolds to help keep bugs away

love this blue hydrangea

lenten rose



home.

caladium

screen porch floor

our carport-turned-screen porch is complete!
right after the construction finished i painted the floor with chalk paint, and it was an improvement but having lived with the space for a while now, we still wanted to add concrete pavers. partly to make a warmer, cozier floor but also to fill a gap left between the foundation and the walls of the porch (can't put the wood directly on the concrete for moisture concerns). we were getting wayyyy too many bugs in what is supposed to be our bug-free outdoor oasis.

old carport floor - before chalk paint and after chalk paint

so a couple of weeks ago i bought 400 pavers from home depot, laid them out with some help from my good friend anne (thanks anne!) and phil cut the odd pieces for corners and edges...then i spent about a day pouring and sweeping polymeric sand into the joints, cleaning the concrete surfaces and and spritzing with water until the sand was saturated. it took about a week for the sand to dry and harden fully in this humid weather, but we started walking on it right away. no harm done.

wetting the polymeric sand - did this about 10 times at 10 minute intervals

tada! diy paver floor

diy paver floor overlay

rustic floor with pavers


so yes that's right.
we laid pavers DIRECTLY on the old concrete foundation of the carport. i couldn't see how a sand bed would work since our screen porch is on floor level already, and it all just sounded like way more work than necessary. the concrete's been there since '55, and now it's covered with a couple inches more of concrete - not sure what moisture problems that could create since the whole thing is porous. guess we'll find out! in the meantime it was cheap, easy and looks sooooo much cozier than that old slab.