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Front Yard Gardens – Progress Update

August 25, 2009 By Laura 8 Comments

Everything we planted in our front yard gardens, is really growing!  We wanted to give you a progress update.

front yard gardens

In our last post, we shared with you the very beginnings of our front yard transformation.  We planned out 3 gardens, built 3 garden beds, had loam delivered, filled the beds with the loam, and got our strawberry plants planted all in mid-May.

At the end of May, after the threat of frost had past, we planted all of the vegetable and flower plants in the beds.   I did not take photos of the extensive work we did that day along the way, because frankly, I was covered in earth and sweat, and wasn’t about to touch my camera. : )

front yard gardens

Here’s a photo of our front yard now, with the 3 garden beds. I think it’s a dramatic improvement to the ‘blahness’ it was, already!  Don’t you?  We even have some green weed/crabgrass growing in our dirt where the driveway was extended!  Since we don’t have plans to plant grass anytime soon, we’ll take anything green!   In the long run here, we’ll likely be putting in more  gardens, little walkways, maybe a small tree or 2 ….who knows what.  So planting grass at this point is not wise, when it mostly will be getting dug right up, soon enough.

front yard gardens Here’s a view from this angle, taken in mid-July.  I’m going to take you from garden to garden here and show you what we’ve got.  All of these photos coming up were taken in mid-July.

front yard gardens

First on the far left, while acing our house with your back to the street, is our strawberry bed.    This is the garden that was done first, a couple of weeks before the others, because we could do that with the strawberries.  So I had done a couple of posts on how the plants and strawberries were coming along.   Rather then re-hash all of that, and re-post all of those photos, I’m just going to link you to those 2 posts.  They will open in their own window, so don’t worry about losing your spot here if you want to take a quick peek.

Strawberry Fields Forever

We Picked Our First Strawberry

Being the first year, the plants needed to get established, so we weren’t expecting an abundance of berries this year.  But we have high hopes, jam recipes, and many desserts on our agenda for next year!

front yard gardens

This is the second garden from the left, next to the strawberry garden.  Or, the middle garden. : )

Aside from the flower, which I will get to a little later on, we have growing 4 varieties of tomatoes:   Beefsteaks, Better Boys, Early Girls, and Cherries.  We also have cucumbers in this bed.

front yard gardens

front yard gardens Just a couple now-outdated tomato photos. More to come.

front yard gardens

In our last bed here, 3rd from the left, closest to the drive-way, we have growing summer squash, zucchini, and green peppers. Plus the flowers.   I had read how helpful having certain flowers in your vegetable gardens were, to their growth and production.  They attract certain bees that help pollinate, as well as other certain insects that are good for the garden and good for keeping other harmfuls away.

I know that sounded a little vague, but I just didn’t want to get into the full explanation right now.  Besides, I’m not sure I can remember it ALL at the moment.   But I can tell you, that everything I knew at the time, and therefore did, seemed to have done exactly what it should , and it all worked!  So that’s got to count for something. lol

front yard gardens Here’s one of our first baby squashes.  I learned real quick that I can’t be all in the squash leaves, working around, with bare arms!  I got a rashes all over my arms almost instantly, and I was going nuts.  Not sure if that happens to everyone, or if I’m just sensitive?  But….I was more careful from there on out.  Kind of like my jalapeno chopping incident, but I’ll spare you the story on that. For now.  (But eventually, these dramatic complaints need to come out. So…be forewarned. : )

front yard gardens

On the corners of some of the beds, I had planted cosmos, that have really grown beautifully.  We let them grow tall, and they are not only lovely, but really beneficial to the garden.

front yard gardens Pretty, huh?  We have this color, and white ones as well.

Mid-August….

front yard gardens

These photos are now from mid-August, and things were looking great!

Look at all of the tomatoes growing!…

front yard gardens

front yard gardens

front yard gardens

front yard gardens

front yard gardens

Here is one more shot of the middle garden, with the white Cosmos.

So as I said, the second half of this this post was mid-August.  A week later, so much had changed, and there were so many new surprises!  So up next, will be yet another garden post, to share with you how things developed from here.   I have discovered a new love of garden photography.  Shocking??  Probably not.

But soon, we’ll be heading inside the house for a bit, to show you a couple of new things that we’ve been doing in there.  I can’t wait to show you!!

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Filed Under: Gardening, The Homestead Tagged With: cherry-tomatoes-on-the-vine, cosmos, cucumbers, flowers, front-yard-gardens, garden beds, garden photography, garden photos, green-bell-peppers, peppers, squash, tomatoes, vegetable photos, vegetables, zucchini

What’s growing around our house right now – Flower Photography

May 20, 2008 By Laura 2 Comments

Not too much to say today really, but I did take some shots of what’s growing around our house at the moment, so I thought I’d share some of my flower photography with you.  I hope you enjoy them!

Pink Apple Blossoms of the apple tree. The petals are looking a little beat down from all of the rain,
but there is more buds to bloom, and I think they are beautiful none-the-less.

pink-apple-blossom

apple-blossom

Lilacs of the Lilac Tree. Still have lots of bud-opening to do as you can see. They put out such a lovely scent though – don’t they?

  lilacs

Purple Phlox. Such a pretty ground covering.

phlox
Bell Flowers
bell flowers

Pink Azaelias. This Azaelias bush was here when we bought the house.  I look forward to it’s blooming every year.
azaelias

I have to admit, of these photos, only the Azaelias are actually on our property.  The trees and other flowers are actually just on the other side of our property line.  But we manage that property, so it’s all as good as ours.  : )  We sure enjoy it all.

The hostas are in their full glory. The tulips I was so looking forward to had not been bloomed for 2 days before their heads just got chopped off in one bite at the upper stem. Decapitated, with their heads just laying there on the ground, to be clear. It’s happened in years passed (and makes me mad as the dickens!)  Who does it?  Is it the squirrels?  I’m not sure-but I suspect so.

That’s all for today!  Come back soon!

Filed Under: Nature Study, Photography, Photography & Lettering, The Homestead Tagged With: azaelias, bell-flowers-apple-blossoms, flower photography, flowers, lilacs, phlox

6 Tiny Potted Plants

April 15, 2008 By Laura Leave a Comment

tiny potted plants

How cute are these tiny potted plants sitting on the window sill?  Something about little sights like this just stir me somewhere inside, and make me smile.

We got the kids this little kit, to plant some flowers in these little starter potted plants, which we will later transplant into our flower beds outdoors. (They just LOVE stuff like this. All projects, really.)

The first thing they needed to do was put the peat pellets in a bowl, and add one cup of water.  Then they had to wait FIVE MINUTES.  You know…..eternity, for a kid.  This photo below totally cracks me up, because of their expressions of waiting….and waiting….they look thrilled, don’t they?

waiting-for-soaking

Just staring at this bowl…..for FIVE MINUTES…..as they soil soaked up the water and expanded.  After about 2 minutes,  {S} couldn’t take it anymore, and went into the kitchen to stare at the set timer instead. : )  At least with the numbers counting down, he could see the end in sight.

tiny potted plants

FINALLY the timer went off, and it was time to mix it up good.  They all took turns getting the job done well.

kids potting plants

Then Daddy filled up the little pots to the top, while the kids chose the flower seeds of their choice, and counted out 10 seeds each.  {A} and {S} chose Delphinium (Pacific Giant), {O} and I chose Rudbeckia (Gloriosa Daisy), and { J } and Daddy chose Hollyhock (Alcea Rosea).  Then their little hands got to work, planting each seed about 1/4″ into the soil.

little hands potting plants

They were pretty happy with their little potted plants, and very excited to watch them grow.  We put our initials on them to know whose is whose, and of course, to see whose is growing the best.  Will some of us have a more skilled green thumb than others?  Or do some species grow faster or slower than others?  We’ll see!  And I’m sure we’ll keep you posted.

tiny potted plants

Unfortunately, they have to be kept in this little ‘greenhouse’ to grow.  So much for my happy little vision of them lined up on the window sill.  But I’m gettin’ over it.

tiny potted plants

Let the growing begin!

Filed Under: Elementary Homeschooling, Elementary Homeschooling SCIENCE, Homeschooling, Nature Study, Science Tagged With: dirt, elementary-homeschooling-science, flowers, kids-gardening, kids-growing-plants, kids-potting-plants, plants, seeds, soil, tiny-potted-plants

Spring and Budding Promise

April 13, 2008 By Laura Leave a Comment

hostas breaking ground

I know it doesn’t look like much.  Yet.  But it will soon enough!  These are the buds of my hostas and tulips.  Spring and budding promise. I wait for them, in such anticipation, every early spring.  New England weather is so crazy, and everyone knows how much I despise the COLD.  So when I see these buds, it’s proof to me that maybe, perhaps, spring may truly be here. Even if it’s not quite acting like it yet.

More than the hope they give, I know all that they will flourish to be.  I’ve seen it!  These little pathetic buds are full of promise.  I’ve soaked up the joy they give me at every glance, year after year. I have faith, that it will happen once again.

The hostas actually hold a little family history for us.  My mother-in-law gave us this cluster of hosta, probably over 11 years ago.  She had transplanted some, and didn’t have anywhere to put this one she had left. She had a beautifully gardened yard. The kind you see in Better Home and Gardens.  Just lovely. I loved visiting and seeing it.  But gardening, plants, flowers,…it all just wasn’t my thing.  Seemed like a lot of work to me! So I wasn’t all THAT excited about taking the orphaned hosta.  : ) But my husband was kind of excited.  He broke it up into 5 plants, and planted them around the big pine tree we had on the side of the driveway there.  They never did so well there, I would imagine because of the excessive shade they were in, and the acidity of the pine needles falling.

Eventually we cut that pine tree down, and they did better with more sun. But they looked pretty silly around a stump. And that was getting pulled out.  So since the hostas had grown on me some (no pun intended : ), we decided to move them over the short wall, overlooking our yard.  They did well there, and as they grew a little more each year, so had I.  I began to have a more appreciation for what I call “those domestic kind of things”.  I rather enjoyed looking at my hostas popping up through the ground every year, and flourishing into full green hardy plants.  They are just beautiful every year now.  One might even see me out there raking up around them, keeping their beds clean.

Don’t get me wrong.   My yard still does not look like my in-law’s did. (They have since moved.)  In fact, my yard is a sore sight at the moment.  Where we live, the earth is extremely sandy. We had some major home construction about 2 years ago, for an addition to help accomodate our suddenly-bigger family, and my little green yard has not been the same since.  I will never forget seeing that excavator climb up the hill of my Junipers from the driveway, and gracefully crawl across my yard, completely unearthing everything in it’s path.  I think my mouth just hung open. That was just the beginning, and well, the yard has been secondary to finishing the inside of our home ourselves. But the hostas and tulips are a beautiful distraction from the mess of the rest.

Speaking of, the destruction of construction brings me back to the story of my tulips. I had planted some tulip bulbs over by the tree, around the same time of my half-hearted domestic efforts, many years ago.  I always loved tulips, enough that the thought of having some in my yard gave me enough ambition to actually plant some.  To my surprise, they eventually came up! But in the process of our construction, and the need to relocate lots of sandy grassed-earth, formerly know as our yard, the sandpiles were dumped on the location of my tulip bulbs!  Looking at the pile that was several feet high, I thought “Well, that’s the end of my tulips!  They are buried for good now!”

I was so very wrong.  Amazingly, to me anyway, those tulips made their way all the way up from the ground, through several feet of sand, and broke free into the air, to grow and flourish once again.  Their leaves are a little more tattered, but I can appreciate what they have gone through; their long and difficult journey, to get where they wanted to be.  They truly make me reflect on us, as a family.  We have been through a lot in our family life. Just difficult circumstances and the kind of struggles we wondered if we would ever get through.  But with what faith in God we had, and, well I won’t say patience, but perseverance, we always did make it through.  Just like many people and families in this world, who got through the difficult events that are all part of God’s greater plan, we prevailed. We’ve come out stronger, feeling all the more blessed, and have a bit more clearer perspective on life, than before. Like the sprouts of the tulip bulbs buried many, many yards below the surface, we looked UP.  We reached for the Light, looked to God for some strength and determination.  We believed, and persevered.  And eventually, we reveled in the reward that was ours.  Feeling, and living, and reveling in the glory of God.

So there is beauty in those tattered and nubby buds.  Spring and budding promise. As the photos below from last year testify, just LOOK what we have to look forward to…..

hostas

yellow and orange tulips

yellow and orange tulips

tulip close-up with water droplets

yellow and orange tulips

1 Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us rid ourselves of every burden and sin that clings to usb] and persevere in running the race that lies before us 2 while keeping our eyes fixed on Jesus, the leader and perfecter of faith. For the sake of the joy that lay before him he endured the cross, despising its shame, and has taken his seat at the right of the throne of God.

Hebrews 12; 1-2

 

Filed Under: Faith, Life In General, Photography, The Big Picture, The Homestead Tagged With: buds, Christian-faith, Faith, flower photography, flower photos, flowers, Hebrews-12;1-2, hostas, photography, seasons, spring, thoughts-on-life, tulips

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