Flower Garden Progress; done for the day!

It was much more pleasant working outside in the cooler temperatures!  We were heading well towards 30C today.

One of the first things I wanted to do when I went back out was to empty the second tire planter and move it out.

20180521.flower.garde.planter.rim

This one still had the other half of the tire attached as a base.

Also…

20180521.flower.garde.planter.rim.ants

It was on top of an ants’ nest.  The rim was full of ants, some carrying eggs, trying to find their way back to the nest.

I left the planter right where it was.  I can get it out tomorrow! :-D

For the garden itself, I focused on trimming, pruning and cutting.  There were a few rose bushes at the fence line that I was going to leave, but determined that they were not deliberately planted there, so I took them out.  I pruned the apple trees a bit, and cut away deadwood from trees and bushes alike.  I cut away lots of those vines, and so on.

Then this happened.

20180521.flower.garden.broken.shears

One of the problems we’ve found since moving here, is that so much of my parents’ stuff is gone.  The good, working stuff, that is.  Tools, equipment, supplies…  This was a fully functioning farm and, after 40 + years of farming, my parents had pretty much everything anyone could need, and then some.  What we’re finding now is basically the left behind junk.  Like these old pruning shears.  My husband was able to sharpen them, but they were clearly not going to last long.

Still, I didn’t expect a chunk to actually break off like that!

We’ll have to add “pruning shears” to our list of purchases.  Or, should I say, bump it up higher on the list.

So I made do with a small hand saw.  There is a large collection of old saws (and axes) here, with most of them being quite large.  I remember using smaller saws that would have been perfect for the work I was doing, but I have not seen any of them, anywhere.  Instead, we are using my older daughter’s hand saw, that she bought for herself a few years ago.

It did the job.  That’s the main thing.

Here is the garden now, from the south west corner.

20180521.flower.garden.west.side.after

Clearing that west fence line was the most work.

Here is the garden from the north west corner.

20180521.flower.garden.north.side.after

There is still a stick in there, that is supposed to me marking something my mom planted, but I don’t think there’s anything there anymore.  I’ll check more thoroughly when I start raking, tomorrow.

The fence posts are going to take a bit more effort to remove.  I can wiggle them from side to side quite a lot, but can’t pull them out.

All in all, a very good day’s work!

The Re-Farmer

 

 

Progress: working on the flower garden

Today, I decided to get started on the flower garden off the Old Kitchen.  When my mother came by a couple of days ago, we talked about what was there, what she wanted, and what I was thinking of doing.  I now know that the vines, while deliberately planted, turned out to be invasive, so she wants them gone.  There are several bushes she wants to stay, but the greenery below can go completely.  The fence will also be removed, but she doesn’t care if any new fence gets put up again later.  It can stay down.

I had already started clearing the area a bit.  Now that I know my mother is good with the greenery being gone, I have decided that I will start doing “lasagna garden” type layering to build up the soil, while at the same time killing off the invasive plants.

I intend to keep the rhubarb, which will be fairly easy to work around, and the chives are on the outside of the fence line, but whatever onions are growing among the crab grass will be buried, too.

First order of business, then, was to remove the fencing.  My daughters would continue to clean around the yard, but instead of taking the raked leaves to the big garden, I asked them to pile it near the flower garden, and I will use it later.

20180521.flower.garden.gate.section

The first section to work on was the “gate”.  I’d used a stick to prop it open, because it kept flopping.

When I moved the bright yellow thing hanging there, it was actually the first time I’d looked closely at it.  I had just thought it was some sort of decoration.

20180521.flower.garden.hummingbird.feeder

Turns out, it’s a glass hummingbird feeder!

I really like it.

No idea why it was left hanging there, instead of being taken inside for the winter.  Now that I think of it, it may well have been hanging there for years.

20180521.flower.garden.rocking.horse

This is the toy rocking horse I’d found buried in the leaves and other dead foliage, when I had first started cleaning the area.

20180521.flower.garden.first.fence.section

This is the opposite end of the fencing by the gate.  It just sort of ends, sticking out past the clothes line platform.

I honestly can’t think of why any fencing was added there.  It was attached to the platform in places, so it’s not like it was added before the platform was rebuilt.  It serves no purpose that I can think of.

20180521.flower.garden.blocks.bricks

While working on the gate, I quickly discovered I needed to watch my step; these broken blocks and bricks move when you step on them!

There is a downspout near there, currently with a rain barrel under it.  I am guessing these were added because the area would become muddy.

We’ll have to figure something else out, later.  I don’t know about right by the Old Kitchen, but in the garden itself, I might look into putting some stepping stones or some other decorative, yet useful, elements.

After removing the gate portion, I found a challenge.

20180521.flower.garden.gate.section.tree

The self-sown trees can actually grown around the wire of the fencing.  To remove the fencing, I had to free it by cutting the trees.

That was another reason the fencing needed to go, here.  There was no way to clear away the self-sown saplings.  They have to be cleared away, or they will destroy the clothes line platform as they get bigger.  Plus, of course, they’re close to the house, and the roots would cause problems, too.

20180521.flower.garden.gate.side.section.after

First section clear!  Yay!

I’ll come back later to cut away the remaining bits of saplings and do other clean up.

Here is how things looked from the inside of the garden, as I started.

20180521.flower.garden.side.area.before

This is the south side section.

Note the wooden post, at an angle, supporting the metal post.

That comes up, later.

20180521.flower.garden.middle.before

This is what the middle looked like.  All that greenery on the bottom is invasive plants.

It was now time to work on the side section of the fence, which started at the corner of the clothes line platform.

But first, I needed to be able to get to it.

I’d talked to my mother about the trees in the re-purposed tire planters, and the bush that was in the way of hanging anything from the planter.  She was good with me getting rid of the planters, and the saplings in them were self-sown.  While she didn’t say it outright, it was clear she wanted to bush under the clothes line to remain, but she was okay with it being pruned.

20180521.flower.garden.planter.trees.cleared

The saplings in the planter had shallow enough root systems, that I could pull them up fairly easily, except for one in each planter.  The toughest one had to be sawed at the tap root.

Then I pruned the bush under the clothes line.

20180521.flower.garden.prunings

Very stabby little branches!

20180521.flower.garden.pruninged

I will have to work on it again, later, to get rid of the dead branches and stuff, but for now, I just needed to get it cut back enough to clear the rail, and access the fence post at the corner.

After starting on removing the fence from the post, I quickly realized I needed to get the planter next to it out completely.  It was in the way.  So, I dumped out the soil and discovered…

20180521.flower.garden.planter

There was still a rim attached!

How utterly strange!

20180521.flower.garden.planter.roots

A couple of longer roots that had been giving me trouble could now be seen.  One, I had been able to break.  The other, the one to the right, had to be sawed.

Something else to go back to and clean up, so no one will trip over them.  Plus, once it’s all cleared and cleaned, we will be mowing there.

I finally was able to reach the post and start removing this section of fencing which was, for the most part, nailed in place with U nails.

Lots of U nails.

At the very bottom of that first post, however, there was one nail sticking out.  I tried several times to pull it out with the claw of my hammer, and it wouldn’t budge.

I did, however, knock off some dirt and rust, which is when I could see it was no nail at all!

20180521.flower.garden.side.fence.notanail

Yeah.  No wonder I wasn’t able to get it out with my hammer!

I am really appreciating the tool set my older brother and his wife gave us for Christmas.  I went into it quite a lot, today!

I got the fencing off up to the corner, where I found this.

20180521.flower.garden.side.fence.corner.post

It turns out that the section I had been working on ended at this post.  It was held in place with twisted wire, which went through holes in the metal post.  The fencing on the end section was folded around the post, then pieces were bent back to form hooks that held onto the continuing fence.

And that supporting wooden fence post at the top?

It was held in place with a large nail, through a hole at the top of the metal post, which was then hammered to a right angle to hold it in place.

In the end, it was easier for me to pick up the wooden post and hammer away at it, near the nail, then to try and pull the nail out from the other side.

Which actually served to straighten out the nail.

20180521.flower.garden.side.fence.corner.post.nail

About half of the length of that nail was in the wooden post, while the other half or so was bent down on the other side of the metal.

Then I had to use pliers to untwist the wires that held the first section of fencing in place.  The wire was so old and rusting, several pieces broke off.

By this point, I’d found a bucket to take along with me, to put in the assorted nails, screws and bits of metal that I managed to keep out of the grass.

20180521.flower.garden.side.fence.clear

Side fence, gone!

The next section was a different challenge.  After removing the twisted wire that held the fencing to the posts, I then had to cut away the rose bushes that had come up on the outside of the fence, more stems that had woven themselves through the gaps of the fencing, and cut away the vines at the base of the fence.

Then I just left the fence there, and took a break!  There was just the north side section to do, with two more fence posts and more roses to trim out of the fencing.

20180521.flower.garden.last.fence.section.rose.bush

My mother tells me this is a white rose bush.  I cut away just what I absolutely had to, to get the fence loose.  I noticed some dead stems and branches that will need to be cleared away, so it’s another thing to go back to, later.

Much to my surprise, the rest of this fence was held up by what looked like a broken broom handle, shoved into the ground, a length of pipe stuck into the ground, and at the corner of the house, it was tied to the fence post with twine.  The other fence post in the middle?  Nothing.  It wasn’t attached to it at all!

Once that was done, we only needed to roll up the fencing (still full of plant matter in some areas) and haul it away.  We’ve selected a spot to leave all the detritus we find, so when we hire someone to haul the junk away, it’ll mostly be in one place.

20180521.flower.garden.side.area.after

Here is what the south corner looked like, after…

20180521.flower.garden.middle.after

And the centre.

Later today, when it is cooler, I will go back and do some more clean up, and see if I can take out the fence posts.

The next major step is to first lay down a layer of cardboard (after our move, we’ve got lots of that!) and wet it down, then start to layer the leaves the girls have been piling up for me, as well as the straw that was over the septic tank like, and the straw that’s in front of the dog houses the outside cats have been using all winter.

Throughout the summer, we will continue to layer grass clipping and other yard waste, and the kitchen trimmings that would normally go onto the compost pile.  I plan to use what’s currently the compost pile as well.

By the end of fall, I hope to have some pretty solid layers on there, and by next year, it should be well-built-up soil.

At least, that’s the plan!

The Re-Farmer

 

Our Daily Deer

I got very few photos today, but we got good progress on the wood pile in the garden.

2018-04-13.woodpiles

The deer path goes through not far from some of the new piles we’ve made, so I half expected the deer might be a bit stand-offish about coming over, but nope; Hungry Girl and Barbecue came right on over, soon after we left the garden area.

2018-04-13.deer1

2018-04-13.deer2

It is nice to finally be able to get outside and get more stuff done, even if the snow made our footing a big treacherous.  I am really looking forward to more manual labor!

The Re-Farmer

Clean Up Progress, the garden area

So this morning got off to a rough start.  I got a phone call from my mother, which is always touch and go.  After chastising me for not calling her (we’ve been in contact rather often, lately, so that in itself was weird), she informed me that some of my siblings would be coming over to burn the wood pile in the garden area.

No.  They are not.

It went downhill from there.

With the threat of fire hanging over us, my daughters and I went to start on cleaning up the wood pile.  We had intended to wait until more of the snow was gone, but it seems we don’t have much of a choice.

Ah, the joys of living in someone else’s house.  Even if that someone else in my mother.

Check this out, though…

20180413.deer.path

This is the deer path running through the garden and the apple trees, leading to our feeding station.  There is another one running through the garden in the other direction.

We got quite a bit of progress on the wood pile, sorting it into piles of twig, larger pieces that will be cut down after they are moved, and a pile of leafy branches that are still quite green.

After removing about half of the pile, we found…

20180413.wood.pile.insulation

Old fiberglass insulation.

Something else to add to the “why is that there?” list!

Of the piles we’ve been making, this is the one that interests me most.

20180413.wood.pile.leafy

These pieces are very straight, smooth and still quite green.  I am hoping to get a good amount of wood slices out of them for various projects I have in mind.  The rest will be fuel for the fire pit, once we get that cleaned out and set up.  Looking forward to some late night wiener roasts! :-D  I’m also looking to build a cinder block cooker, though that might have to wait a year.  With all the clean up of deadwood, just in the yard, we’ll have plenty of fuel for that.

Much to my surprise, not long after we came in for the day, I saw Hungry Girl and Barbecue outside our window.  With all the activity outside, and the changes in the garden area, I thought they’d stay away for longer.  As I was taking photos (I’ll post some this evening), I was greeted by this, in the corner of the living room window.

20180413.asian.lady.beetle.ew

So much ew.  Can you tell that I’ve cleaned this window ledge recently?  No, I can’t, either.

And that’s just one corner of one window.

Time to break out the vacuum again.

The Re-Farmer