hardening our hardscape

June 16th, 2010

So we haven’t talked hardscape in a while. Let’s. Remember how I like to dream big? No? Maybe this will refresh your memory…

d-crain corten steps | d-crain.com

d-crain corten steps | d-crain.com

Not so long ago, I confessed an unrequited love for Corten steel in the garden, like those steps backfilled with gravel. Gawgeous. Minimal. Streamlined. Perfect in a modern landscape. [Shot from above and many more examples on D-Crain’s site. And Andrea Cochran’s site. And Lutsko Associates’ site.]

With visions of steel in my head, I did a little research and learned that Corten lasts a long time in a Mediterranean climate — like in sunny California. Less so in New England with its damp, cold winters. The patina from the corrosion is what makes it appealing. But the rust can bleed onto other surfaces, including our brand-new concrete retaining walls. And burying the steel in the ground speeds up corrosion. So is there a way to make steel last longer, considering the investment?

The answer is hot dip galvanized steel. Hot dip? what the heck is that, you say? The steel is “… immersed in a kettle or vat of molten zinc, resulting in a metallurgically bonded alloy coating that protects the steel from corrosion.”

Zinc. Hmm. The American Galvanizers Association claims it’s sustainable — the zinc itself is 100% recyclable and the hot dip process protects steel for 50 years. 50 years! That’s a long time! That pretty much convinced me hot dip galvanized over Corten. So this is where we’ll be using it:

For steel planter boxes in the veggie garden area at the top of the retaining wall that runs along our front driveway…

veggie garden area

The layout (click to biggify)…

raised beds layout and dimensions

For risers on the steps up to the veggie garden that currently look like this…

concrete stair disaster

Ugh. The concrete crew just could not get them right. We talked about repouring them ourselves. But then we decided the raised beds would be made of steel and it just seemed easier to make the risers out of the same material and backfill with gravel. So that’s the plan…

dimensions for steel risers for the veggie garden stairs

Which is perfect, because out back we want a full set of steel stairs at the end of the other retaining wall. Remember when I drew that?…

layout for stairs next to wall out back

Now imagine the chalklines in steel and backfilled with gravel. Looks nice, doesn’t it?

So the drawings went over to Rhode Island Welding a few weeks ago. They constructed the boxes and the stairs and then sent them off to a galvanizer in Massachusetts.

Expect to see the result — soon!

what CAN’T you get on eBay?

June 14th, 2010

A few people have asked me where I picked up the cedar arbor we just put in

remember that new arbor?

ThreeManProducts.com made our Japanese arbor but they do have other styles — most a little too, how you say? suburban? quaint? for our lot. Found Three Man on eBay.

Plusses:

Real cedar.

More affordable than what I could find locally.

Got it fast.

Came with simple directions on how to put it together — and hardware.

Minuses:

My husband hates it; however, he harbors ill will toward all arbors. The good news is I have an idea to mod it up a little and hopefully he’ll detest it less. Must make time to pursue that.

Cannot attest to quality and endurance until it gets at least a season under its belt, so check back next year.

Did I mention free shipping?

other people’s gardens followup

June 10th, 2010

Just thought I’d share. Remember that awesome garden in North Stonington, CT, where we spent the day a few weeks back? This one…

daffodils at blue flag farm

Turns out it’s Blue Flag Farm, which specializes in raising daylilies — 600 varieties! That explains this shot…

daylilies in waiting

Imagine how crazy colorful it is with all those daylilies in bloom…

daylilies in bloom | shot from blueflagfarm.com

daylilies in bloom | shot from blueflagfarm.com

plant geeks only: ornamental grasses

June 9th, 2010

So about my garden style. It could be construed as slightly schizophrenic. I’ve analyzed the plants I’ve chosen and here are the major categories I see: Asian, tropicalesque, desert/rock garden/xeriscape, big drama, chartreuse foliage, blackish-burgundy foliage, blue foliage, plants with great architecture, amazing fall color, plants for birds/bees/butterflies and conifers.

How the heck am I going to make it all make sense, since you can see almost our entire garden from one spot — at least until it’s established? Ornamental grasses. They’re a no-brainer. There are shade varieties, sun varieties, damp and dry varieties. Some have plumes, some have panicles. Some upright, some blousey. They come in all sizes and colors. Are pretty low maintenance. And best of all: they blow in the breeze.

Here are the grasses I have going in the ground, in no particular order — 21 flavors so far:

Fargesia sp. ‘Rufa’ (cold-hardy Clumping Bamboo)…

fargesia sp. ‘rufa’, photo: Noah Bell | bamboogarden.com

fargesia sp. ‘rufa’, photo: Noah Bell | bamboogarden.com

Sasa veitchii ‘Kuma Zasa’ (Kuma Bamboo)…

sasa veitchii ‘kuma zasa’ | jmbamboo.com

sasa veitchii ‘kuma zasa’ | jmbamboo.com

Hakonechloa macra ‘Aureola’ (Japanese Forest Grass)…

hakonechloa macra ‘aureola’ | rainyside.com

hakonechloa macra ‘aureola’ | rainyside.com

Hakonechloa macra ‘All Gold’ (Japanese Forest Grass)…

hakonechola macra ‘all gold’ | awaytogarden.com

hakonechola macra ‘all gold’ | awaytogarden.com

Hakonechloa macra ‘Beni Kaze’ (Japanese Forest Grass)…

hakonechloa macra ‘beni kaze’ | heronswood.com

hakonechloa macra ‘beni kaze’ | heronswood.com

Chasmanthium latifolium (Northern Sea Oats)…

chasmanthium latifolium | northcreeknurseries.com

chasmanthium latifolium | northcreeknurseries.com

Carex appalachica (Appalachian Sedge)…

carex appalachica | northcreeknurseries.com

carex appalachica | northcreeknurseries.com

Carex flacca ‘Blue Zinger’ (Blue Zinger Sedge)…

carex flacca ‘blue zinger’ | northcreeknurseries.com

carex flacca ‘blue zinger’ | northcreeknurseries.com

Helictotrichon sempervirens ‘Saphirsprudel’ (Blue Sapphire Fountain Grass)…

helictotrichon sempervirens 'saphirsprudel' | westonnurseries.com

helictotrichon sempervirens 'saphirsprudel' | westonnurseries.com

Miscanthus sinensus ‘Rotsilber’ (Red-Silver Japanese Silver Grass)…

miscanthus sinensis ‘rotsilber’ | perennials.com

miscanthus sinensis ‘rotsilber’ | perennials.com

Schizachyrium scoparium ‘The Blues’ (Little Bluestem)…

schizachyrium scoparium ‘the blues’ | abnativeplants.com

schizachyrium scoparium ‘the blues’ | abnativeplants.com

Panicum virgatum ‘Shenandoah’ (Shenadoah Switch Grass)…

panicum virgatum ‘shenandoah’ | northcreeknurseries.com

panicum virgatum ‘shenandoah’ | northcreeknurseries.com

Panicum virgatum ‘Heavy Metal’ (Blue Switch Grass)…

panicum virgatum ‘heavy metal’ | northcreeknurseries.com

panicum virgatum ‘heavy metal’ | northcreeknurseries.com

Panicum virgatum ‘Dallas Blues’ (Dallas Blue Switch Grass)…

panicum virgatum ‘dallas blues’ | highcountrygardens.com

panicum virgatum ‘dallas blues’ | highcountrygardens.com

Panicum virgatum ‘Ruby Ribbons’ (Ribbons Switch Grass)…

panicum virgatum ‘ruby ribbons’ | plantdelights.com

panicum virgatum ‘ruby ribbons’ | plantdelights.com

Miscanthus sinensis v. purpurascens (Flame Grass)…

miscanthus sinensis ‘purpurascens’ | bluestem.ca

miscanthus sinensis ‘purpurascens’ | bluestem.ca

Calamagrostis x acutiflora ‘Avalanche’ (Variegated Feather Reed Grass)…

calamagrostis x acutiflora ‘avalanche’ | bluestem.ca

calamagrostis x acutiflora ‘avalanche’ | bluestem.ca

Elymus arenarius ‘Blue Dune’ (Blue Lyme Grass)…

elymus arenarius ‘blue dune’ | northcreeknurseries.com

elymus arenarius ‘blue dune’ | northcreeknurseries.com

Pennisetum alopecuroides ‘Hameln’ (Dwarf Fountain Grass)…

pennisetum alopecuroides ‘hameln’ | bluestem.ca

pennisetum alopecuroides ‘hameln’ | bluestem.ca

Festuca glauca ‘Elijah Blue’ (Blue Fescue)…

festuca glauca ‘elijah blue’ | gatewaygardens.com

festuca glauca ‘elijah blue’ | gatewaygardens.com

Stipa Gigantea (Giant Feather Grass)…

stipa gigantea | casarocca.com

stipa gigantea | casarocca.com

Every one of the ornamental grasses above, whether I’ve had it waiting in a pot or bought it new to fill out the garden, are perennial. At least here in Zone 5.

The great part about grass is how easy it is to make MORE OF IT. Take Japanese Forest Grass  — late last summer I sliced my single clump in half. When spring came, I had two large clumps. I sliced those two into fourths and those eight clumps are already big! Btw, just saw that same forest grass at a local nursery for $25 a container. Talk about easy math.

Will share more plants in other categories in the days ahead. You can hardly wait, right? Right?


squirrels with murderous intent

June 9th, 2010

So I continue my rush to get everything in the ground as the heat of summer shuffles toward us on its heavy, sweaty feet. Always, always I plant with the furries and winged things in mind — and what do they do, the little ne’er-do-wells? They slay the newly planted! Well, okay, not usually. But they did yesterday.

A fledgling datura was coming up as a volunteer in one of my pots so I popped it in the ground…

plant disasters... datura alive

The next morning it was dug up and shrivelly…

plant disasters... datura dead

Sadface.

Not a single castor bean plant reseeded itself this spring — they’ve had a tough time being forced into pots for the last few years. So I finally got my hands on some actual plants the other day just a little over a foot tall…

plant disasters... castor bean alive

One of them has been reduced to a pathetic nub of a stem…

plant disasters... castor bean stem

The top of the plant was snapped off and halfway down the hill. I doubt they chewed the top off as every part of the castor bean is highly toxic. I only know it was the squirrels because my crafty neighbor, Frank, tried to capture it all on video.

Cute little f**kers. They should watch this and be afraid. Very afraid.

no, reely!

June 3rd, 2010

As proud owners of an almost-lawn, we inevitably had to break down and buy a lawn management tool. Boo. So I ordered the new Fiskars Momentum Reel Mower from ecomowers.com last week. Yay. DING DONG! FEDEX IS HERE!

it’s here! it’s here!

So why the Fiskars Momentum, you ask? Well, it’s just a new-fangled reel mower so it’s kind to the environment. No gas. No oil. No spark plugs. No fumes. No noise. Adjustable mowing height. And we have a fairly smallish lawn so we thought it might make sense. We’ll see how it fares on our slope — will let you know. Video of how it works.

Minimal assembly required…

easily flummoxed by instructions

Five minutes and one Bronx cheer later…

bronx cheer

We have a mower! Pretty cute… for a mower.

blade closeup

ooh la la!

Wanted to buy local but just couldn’t find one in stock. Maybe because it’s new? Or because it’s just that time of year? Or because I didn’t do an exhaustive enough search? Bought online but ecomowers.com applied carbon offsets to the shipping. I like that.

Excited to give the mower a try — once our lawn is the reel deal. Still in the fledgling stage and still a bit patchy out there after the rain washed an eyebrow-raising amount of our seed down the slope. Good thing more grass seed just arrived on our doorstep today, too!

from my perspective

just in time for father’s day

June 3rd, 2010

David’s father came up from Brooklyn for a visit, which around here is akin to signing up for our forced labor camp. With Father’s Day right around the corner, there’s no better time than NOW to put dad to work. The project: shed doors for our new retaining wall out back.

David built the doors out of cedar a few weeks back in his makeshift driveway workshop…

bettridge woodworks, right in our driveway

And this past weekend, Tom and  David hung two of the four doors. Power tools and bonding ensued…

way to put dad to work

That’s Wendy taking a break from garden servitude…

in at last

OOH! AAAAAH! They turned out quite nice, dontcha think?

a closer look

Still to come: the other two doors, hardware, outfitting the closets with storage. And hugs, duh.

awwww

trellis jealous?

May 27th, 2010

My plants are pining for vining and just can’t wait any longer. So in addition to the arbor that just went up, David whipped up a trellis for our oddly shaped concrete retaining wall out back. Remember that massive thing?

the retaining wall

Measures about 6’10 high at one end and just over 2′ at the other end. The usable wall face is roughly 14′ wide. The crazy insane slope and our pickiness made it impossible to find the perfect trellis, which essentially meant make one. David picked up copper tubing at the hardware store — the heavier walled Type M.

Then he broke out the graph paper…

mad genius calculations

I can only assume the question marks in his mad genius calculations are an indication of chaos theory. After that, he moved on to real-world application…

david engineering those right angles

He soldered the tubing together one joint at a time to create a frame for the trellis. Dudes dig fire…

soldering the joints together

After that, he drilled holes into the concrete to attach the trellis frame to the wall. Not easy…

concrete drilling

Keeping it level was a challenge but it all worked out…

lots more drilling

David DIYed some brackets out of the same copper pipe. Clever boy…

DIY brackets

Then drilled holes through the pipe and used 3/32″ steel wire to oh-so-patiently create his trellis grid…

steel wire spool

threading the wire

bolting the wire in place

And look — DONE!

detail shot

Simple. Ish. Minimal. Love it. And to adorn his new creation…

trellis with rubus calycinoides planted

Rubus henryi bambusoides (also called Rubus henryi var. bambusarum). From China, the leaves resemble bamboo…

rubus calycinoices closeup

… although it’s actually a bramble, like roses, raspberries and blackberries (all related). Tiny thorns. Small pink flowers. But it’s really all about the foliage. Planting this is kind of an experiment as I’m not sure it will be hardy here in New England, although it appears that Arnold Arboretum may have had some success growing this. We’ll see. Should it not return next year, I can always move my Akebia quinata Shirobana here. Nothing kills an Akebia.

gnome, part deux

May 26th, 2010

Remember a few days back when a tall, handsome garden gnome showed up in our yard and knocked together that arbor? Well, he returned, worked his gnomey-is-to-nub-me magic again and now the arbor is installed. Yay!

Graham worked up a sweat digging post holes 3′ down…

post hole digging

Note his precise motions into the hole. There was much repetition…

post hole digging, mo deepa

Holes primed, it was time for insertion. Of Sonotube. G-rated…

sonotube in the holes

David added longish bolts to the ends of the arbor posts…

long bolts added to arbor posts

Graham whipped the concrete to a froth. Of a sort…

concrete mixing

Then, um, the holes were filled to the top with the stuff…

concrete in the holes

The boys set the arbor into the mixture. There was hardening…

setting the arbor in place

not going anywhere

And then everyone smoked a cigarette…

a job well done

Meanwhile, in the wings, my vines have been waiting…

passionflower in waiting

One of my passion flowers (passiflora cereulean) has already started to bloom. Look at that! Like a daisy in a grass skirt! Butterflies, bees and hummingbirds LOVE these. Native but not perennial here in New England, it seeds freely and returns year after year.

Also planting hyacinth bean vine, which starts looking really good in the heat of summer. The dark purple beans in the fall are what I really love. A nice companion for the passion flower and another great butterfly attractor…

hyacinth bean vine | dirtdoctor.com

hyacinth bean vine | dirtdoctor.com

And last but not least, as I’m always one to cram way too many plants into one spot, I have an akebia quinata ‘Shirobana’…

akebia quinata shirobana foliage | pendernursery.com

akebia quinata shirobana foliage | pendernursery.com

akebia quinata shirobana flowers | ubcbotanicalgarden.org

akebia quinata shirobana flowers | ubcbotanicalgarden.org

Only flowers for a few weeks, as I recall from my last garden (3 years ago!), but the foliage is bright green 3/4 of the year and has that Asian look I’m going for. I suppose if I were to plant just one vine it would be this one. Just really, really pretty and people always ask what it is.

So anyway, I’m thrilled to get the arbor up. And the next morning, no regrets.

the next morning, no regrets

big whoop

May 26th, 2010

cardoons!!

I’m sure nobody else cares but WOO HOO! AW YEAH BABY!! I stumbled across cardoons in the Briggs Nursery greenhouse a few days ago. Finally, a fruitful end to a quest I assumed was hopeless. Big whoop, yes. But it’s MY big whoop.