DSC08860

My latest front and back garden design and install, this one is in East Austin.

The claustrophobic boxwoods, confined circular beds around the pecan trees and the metal edging were first on my list for the dumpster. This property was made more complicated due to the grade differences. Everything was mounded, the driveway was low, grass areas high and I really wanted to open up the existing linear (and sunken) walkway to the street.

DSC08862

Then it was the turf’s time to go dumpster-diving.

This existing cactus bed had some nice specimen plants and a large sago palm and opuntia that stabbed me repeatedly throughout the course of the installation process.

DSC08921

This metal fence also served no purpose as the wooded fence behind it created enough security and enclosure, this was also removed to further open up the space to create a better flow through the property.

DSC08904

The back garden had an over-sized hot tub (that was removed) and a lot bricks that had buckled as the ground shifted.

IMG_0296

It is a documented fact that the removal of bricks defies all conventional laws of physics. There are always 35x more bricks excavated than were originally in the ground.

Large amounts of decomposed granite was delivered,

IMG_0312

in this case three dump trucks full, this was #1…and that is a lot of granite.

DSC00020

lots of boulders and flagstone.

IMG_0357

Here are some before and after images:

formatted_3

Enlarged cactus and succulent bed, side metal fence removal and new meandering pathways.

formatted_4

Flattening of the grade to create a less segmented appearance, organic flagstone pathway replaces linear concrete walkway to street.

formatted_1

Hot tub removal, back patio and a stock tank planted up with cattails (naturally).

formatted_2

Planting bed definition,

IMG_0345

introduction of a small water feature. The home owner already had this little fountain, it worked out perfectly in terms of scale and volume. I have been sensitive to the audible volume of things in the landscape ever since my wind-chime kerfuffle some years back:

https://www.eastsidepatch.com/2008/05/wind-chimes-and-my-post-oak-a-darwin-award-nominee/

DSC00148

360 unification.

IMG_0326

The future home of…well something?

Back in the Patch:

Remember when I finished this brickwork,

IMG_1762

and the traveling folk moved in?

DSC09888

If you recall I gave them an ultimatum to tidy their camp up or leave,

DSC00283

imagine my surprise when I took a walk up the garden, turned a corner and…

DSC00300

found that my traveling folk had turned all posh with a capital P!

We needed a new tent and it was spring break after all.

DSC00244

They have practically been living in here since I pitched it.

DSC00199

Even our house-elf has taken to the new temporary structure.

DSC00204 DSC00213 DSC00237 (1)

Of course it is hard to avoid technology in the tent when you are still in WiFi distance from the house.

 DSC00267

 Moving along:

DSC00268

My ponds are awaiting the drop of the catkins from this overhead post oak, my net is at the ready.

DSC00172

Salvia has wasted no time with our recent warm temperatures.

fern_adjusted

brimless+cloche1920’s high fashion holly fern unfurling.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Here is a great combination, if you have the space:

DSC00137

Sabal major with an understory of Texas red bud – my “borrowed view”.

Finally:

yeti

Yetis may or may not exist in the Siberian mountains but I do know they exist in the Patch.

DSC00184

Stay Tuned for:

“Candy Apples”

 

images DSC00191

An everything but the kitchen sink time travel machine!

All material © 2013 for eastsidepatch. Unauthorized
intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and
punishable by late (and extremely unpleasant)
14th century planet Earth techniques.

“Brick Circles”

aliens_brick_circle

A fresh delivery of decomposed granite was greeted in the usual way in the Patch.

DSC09964

She ran out to watch the delivery,

DSC00068

eager to set up camp on the summit of the new mountain with her dog,

conniption

who had his now customary conniption faced with the paw-sinking pile.

shovel

Any opportunity to wield a large metallic implement.

Myself on the other hand, after having already moved two dump-trucks full of the stuff this past week,

IMG_0148

I just glazed over, stared up at the peak, and pulled this sort of pained expression:

IMG_0147 Lord of the manor

Still, this was a relatively small pile and we made haste to the delight of Lord Kumo who has a new-found fondness for getting chauffeured around in a wheelbarrow.

DSC00110

In fact it is so hard to keep him out of it it is annoying. I half expect him to gesture a royal paw as he trundles down the pathways in his one-wheeled vehicle. He already has on the white gloves after all.

images DSC00114

The granite was being used to back-fill this brick circle I laid out a couple of weeks back.

DSC00119

Now to go around, level some of the bricks and wait for the granite to cure,

DSC00118

and the stock tank full of cattails to grow, which they will, very quickly.

DSC00131

Moving along:

Engineers-in-Prometheus

The growth on this post oak leaf looks very H.R Geiger.

DSC00006

Who knows what lurks inside these aquatic looking vessels?

Prometheus_movie_031 DSC09976

Of course this could be just a load of old galls?

Sid-James-and-Barbara-Win DSC00126

Lots of early butterflies emerging this week, these two giant swallowtails floated around in synchronization before landing on this Buddha’s belly bamboo.

DSC00096

DSC09962

Even though it was a poor blooming year for this mountain laurel tree, my copper canyon daisies have looked like this all through the winter. I cannot remember them ever blooming so long and so consistently.

DSC09987

Daffodils are also out,

DSC09994

and, to the delight of the cardinals, I even have some bunches of ripe loquats.

datura

My daughter thinks these emerging datura structures make ideal fairy houses,

datura_fairy

if she plays around with this plant she may actually start to see fairies.

DSC00105

Oleander paratroopers disembarking their vessels.

One of them must have got blown off track…

DSC09991

punching a hole in the roof of my shed as he landed.

Finally:

“The Curse of the Japanese Yew”

Homer_Simpson

“Why Yew little…”

I officially give up.

DSC00010

Eight plants, multiple locations and vendors, all start off looking well, some living well over a year…then the inevitable:

DSC00008

Aw come on!

I have seen Japanese Yews growing around Austin, but not for me for some reason. As much as I want them to work as a shade shrub this always happens. These particular two are in fertile soil with a soaker-hose, yes a soaker-hose, the only additional irrigation I have in the Patch apart from my “everything but the kitchen sink” collection “system”(Oh yes I pulled out all the stops to make these plants work!).

Am I the only one that is hexed with this shrub?

witch

“Mumble…mumble…yews…Japanese…mumble, (some hissing and unfortunate drooling)…Patch, (head flies back…wild laughter).

 Brrr, on that cursed note I will leave you with this:

couch-swing

I bet that tiki torch adds a nice atmospheric touch at night.

Not that I am one to talk with my wind-chimes:

Stay Tuned for:

“Posh with a Capitol P!”

 

All material © 2013 for eastsidepatch. Unauthorized
intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and
punishable by late (and extremely unpleasant)
14th century planet Earth techniques.

 

1 2 36 37 38 39 40 170 171