Jason and Amanda Joy Wells were thirty-something newlyweds who, two weeks after tying the knot in spring 2009, moved into their first home, a beautifully preserved 1949 one owner home filled with charming character (and lots of potential)...not to mention the giant workshop and all the fruiting trees and bushes in the back yard. This site is meant to document the evolution of this house into their home as well as all of the events, occasions and happenings in and around it.


Wednesday, March 31, 2010

New Plot

I've been watching how the sun settles on the backyard garden plot and realized that we needed a sunnier spot for the vegetables...the current bed will now be mostly for herbs and wildflowers. Next to the workshop is a wild rosebush and a stand of bearded irises that have probably been there as long as I've been alive. They are becoming the centerpieces for the new vegetable garden. I dug up a shovel full of dirt to see how fertile it was and four worms fell out!
I'm about to head back out to make the last push...I've been tilling it (mostly by crumbling the shovel full with my hands) with much care for the THOUSANDS of earthworms that are living there. I've been told that this plot has been a vegetable garden in the past.
My one new piece of wisdom about all of this is: when putting on sunscreen, cover EVERYTHING... not just what can be easily reached.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

An Experiment

A couple of years ago my mom sent me a blog article about re-growing used green onions...so I thought I'd give it a try. The onion at right has been in the water for about 72 hours. COOL. Jason said "I wonder how much more it would grow if it were actually planted in soil?" So I just planted the remains of my last meal's topping...which got me thinking. We've got one of those fancy heads of butter lettuce that still have the roots. We've already gotten a family sized salad and a few sandwich toppings out of it so I thought I'd plant it too.
I'll keep you posted.

Monday, March 29, 2010

Childish Things

We bought a beautiful 16 inch wide ceramic bowl at our local home improvement store over the weekend after Tillie and I made the tiny toad wading pool in the front garden. I was able to spend the morning creating our backyard toad pool. My inner six year old is LOVING this. I used to make toad condos with pools and moss beds when I was a lassie and I see Tillie doing the same thing at six. I love that this particular flavor of strangeness is not necessarily genetic :)
The evenings this week will be hovering in the sixties so we should start seeing the toads coming out...and taking a dip.

Friday, March 26, 2010

My Mad Photoshop Skills


As of today, this is what our house looks like. The white siding is DRIVING ME NUTS. The patchy lawn is DRIVING JASON NUTS. We have alot of work to do for it to look like this:



This is what I envision our house to look like after a few of years.

Baby steps (sigh).

Thursday, March 25, 2010

The Little Things We Do

It's almost time for the toads to come out of their burrows! I went to visit the Wildscaper Lady at K&K Nursery and she gave me some great insight into keeping the toads happy (as well as MANY OTHER WONDERFUL THINGS). Unfortunately we are not ready to create a full-on habitat where the toads can lay eggs and what not...so I made a little wading pool so they can at least take a dip. Tillie did some decorating. She's excited too.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

The Squash Plot

Most of the soil on our property is in spectacular shape...except for the little plot that rests between the sidewalk and our new garden path. It's full of clay. I added some partially decomposed leaf litter and a bag of peat to help it along. Then I decided to transplant some clover patches from the grass free parts of our yard. I'm just winging it...I think I'll join a forum.
In my forum joining search, I came across my new inspiration - Garden Girl. She has converted her Boston property into a giant garden with vertical gardens, raised beds and a mini orchard. I like her style and she's already done what Jason and I are wanting to do, so why reinvent the wheel when we can learn from someone who's already done it...and there's a forum :)
Some other good news...I went to a local nursery (K&K Nursery) in search of some native plants to start our wildscape off with. I mentioned to the fellow who was helping me out that I wanted to keep the frogs happy and his face lit up. He said a woman works there that is wildscaping wise and I was told to have a block of time free whenever I came to visit with her because she LOVES to talk about it. PERFECT. I'm going back tomorrow.

Monday, March 22, 2010

Coming along

Okay, I think I am a seed addict. Every time I go to a store - it's not bags or scarves I look at anymore - but SEEDS...and little garden plants...and pretty pots. I'm hooked. The kiddos were out of school today so we decided to plant seven egg cartons full of seeds to add to the four peat pellet greenhouses that we did over spring break last week.
On another happy note...it looks like all the flower seeds and blooming bulbs I planted in the front yard gardens made it through the nasty weather over the weekend.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Now All It Needs is Plants

I'm glad that we decided to lay the path early...it looks pretty in the snow!

Friday, March 19, 2010

Ouch

Impatience is a virtue that generally causes me much soreness the next day (and Jason too). I'm told we are getting snow on Saturday so we decided to go ahead and make a push to get the garden path laid last night...the stones can cure on top of the ground or in the ground just the same.
It's about a third done and my glutes are really not looking forward to continuing this process, but my mind is saying (in Okie) 'GITTER DUN!'

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Hardscaping

(this is NOT our garden...yet)
Jason and I have been itching to do some hardscaping but after researching the cost of stone we thought we'd have to put it on the back burner until we had a grand to spend...until I saw the picture above. It looks like chunks of concrete shaped rocks. We thought we'd give a try at making a faux rock path - that winds through our kitchen garden - to the compost bin (see drawing in previous post).

We bought $10 worth of Quikcrete (240 lbs), sand and some little rocks. We thought about building some wood forms until we found a couple of 4x6 ft shallow boxes that would make a good container. After covering the boxes with plastic garbage bags, we mixed up the concrete with a bit of ocher pigment and poured the slabs about 3 inches thick.


We let the slabs dry for two hours and added some rough texture with a stick.



Then we mellowed it out with some crumpled plastic...a grocery bag works great. NOTE: wash your hands immediately after working with this stuff or, better yet, wear gloves.



We threw in a few rocks for added texture. They will be pulled out later to leave divets.




After letting it set up for 24 hours...



...we set the form up on its side and let the slab fall out to break it up into peices then laid it out to cure for three days.



We'll be laying the pathway over the weekend...I'll share the results!

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

The back yard garden


Here is the design for our cottage-companion-kitchen garden.

Our friend Amy lent us a gardening book called "You Grow Girl", which was birthed out of the website: yougrowgirl.com. This is where I learned about companion gardening, which is: placing plants together that help each other out...like tomatoes and marigolds.
Traditional cottage gardens used this knowledge and planted everything close together to reduce weed proliferation. Certain flowers, herbs and vegetables living snug-ly together help nourish each other, repel pests, discourage certain diseases from taking root and encourage beneficial pollinator and predator insects to come hang out and feast. The best benefit (as an artist) is IT'S PRETTY.
I'm heading off to the garden store to pick up a few goodies then to plant seeds in little cups :)

Sunday, March 7, 2010

First Blooms

And so it begins...

Saturday, March 6, 2010

An (ALMOST) Finished Project

At long last the scooter was ready to ride! I took it on a spin and gave it back to Jason to finish up the tweeking! Finally...

Friday, March 5, 2010

Great Water Collection and Filtration Ideas

Jason and I are wanting to move our renovating outside this season since most of the inside of our house is done. We live in a city that has some serious flooding issues and discovered a type of landscaping called "rain gardening", which is a shallow, constructed depression that is planted with deep-rooted native plants & grasses that slows down the rush of water from hard surfaces, holds the water for a short period of time and allows it to naturally infiltrate into the ground. A rain garden can be thought of as a personal water quality system because it filters the runoff from your roof and lawn, recharges the groundwater and conserves municipal water resources by reducing the need for irrigation.

I've been researching water collection containers, such as 'rain barrels', and came across a discreet and multifunctional system called a 'rain bench' by Second Rain.
It is connected to the downspout drain and collects water that can be used to water the garden! The kits cost about $70 per 60 gallons of storage. Jason and I are thinking about building some raised beds in the backyard with these benches built into the bases with a soaker hose hooked up to the water supply below.
I emailed the folks at 'Second Rain' about my raised bed idea and here is the message I received from them this morning:
"Thanks for the request, and this is exactly the kind of innovation that what we are excited about developing and sharing with others.

It is feasible to build a raised bed right on top of the rain bench. In fact, we have also been finalizing the details for a bench cap that would direct all water that falls on it through a filter and into the upper overflow fitting of the bench right below it.

What this means is, not only can you build the raised bed on top of your bench, but it can be set up so that any excess water that you use to irrigate this bed would flow back into the rain bench for reuse, increasing your water conservation further.

Cheers,
Scott Gear"
I love it when I have an idea that might actually work!

Thursday, March 4, 2010

More Garden Talk

Yesterday was such a GORGEOUS spring-like day that I could not think of anything I'd rather do than work in the garden. The bulbs we planted a few days before had not died so I decided to transplant a few dozen other bulbs that were scattered all over our property...as well as a handful of daffodils from Dock's yard that are just on the edge of blooming.
I scattered flower seeds around the bulbs that should start taking off once the bulbs are finished doing their thing.... poppies, chives, sweet basil, lavender, cone flower, chamomile and a few others. I forgot to mark where I scattered the seeds so it will be like Christmas when everything starts coming up next month and blooming over the summer months.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Spring is When...

Spring, for me, is when the bulbs start poking out of the ground. This is the first spring at the Wellstead and it has been exhilarating to see what's been popping up out of the ground around our house. Many of the plants that are cropping up are iris bulbs that Helen (the previous owner) planted many years ago...so we decided to add to the early spring bounty that will be blooming in a few weeks. We planted - in our sun garden - a few different types of tulips, daffodils, and hyacinth as well as dwarf cannas and and an elephant ear bulb that will come up in the summer.
Next up will be filling the shade garden with hosta and caladium bulbs, a couple fern roots and some lily of the valley and impatiens...as well as about a dozen spider plant clumps that were left over from our replanting session on Sunday. We planted a couple of spider plant clippings last year and they did surprisingly well.
The thing that I've found most exciting is seeing many of the perennials I planted last year beginning to sprout :)