Tuesday, 19 April 2011

Further on with the middle border

Ready for turfing and with more grass from the enlarged border.


I have worked out top dressing is about £200 for the whole garden. May have to bite the bullet. 


As usual, loads to do.


Terrace levelling.

This is a massive job, but I hate the step in the middle and the way the garden drops off. I should never have let the builders do this.


Friday, 15 April 2011

Vegetable garden renewal

Before and after. There has always been an annoying slope, and the border remodeling will create a lot of spare soil so it seemed sensible to solve the two problems by levelling the vegetable garden. I had wood left over from making the raised beds and the new shovel made digging holes for the posts much easier.

Another job done. This allows the rejigging of the middle border to proceed.

I also finished staining the monkey bars today. They will be in use tomorrow!
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Wednesday, 13 April 2011

Monkey bars

In NZ the girls lived on climbing frames with Monkey Bars. In a weak moment I promised to add Monkey Bars to the climbing frame in Erica's garden. Here is the result (staining still needed).

I'm pretty happy with it, though doing it by buying a ladder was not cheap in money (about four times the cost of the wood alone), it *was* cheap in time, strength and quality of finish.

Digging a 0.8m hole in the top garden was surprisingly easy with the new longer thinner shovel (grouching shovel, trenching shovel?) I added to my collection of man tools.


30 seconds of scarifying

Aaargh, and loads of broad leaf weeds too.


Saturday, 9 April 2011

Know the enemy

Clear sign of the neglect of the garden. I've never had a daisy his far advanced before!


Sunday, 3 April 2011

Erica's new bed

Slow start to the day, but worked hard once we got going. Decision made about our old rose penelope (dug out but lives on in her offspring and a slit trench cutting), but decision deferred on the mulberry tree.  We need to do some more research there.



Erica watched with interest throughout. We were joined by a very vocal robin at one stage.

We also managed to trim our little hedge and shred everything using the lovely Atco quiet shredder. I still enjoy putting big stuff through it. It must be a man thing.

penelope had to go, but she has a daughter plant that has sprung up from her old root so that went next to the piece in the slit trench.  It will be interesting to see which bit survives the best.  We planted her in the spot where the children run down the garden and leap off the wall.  She may prevent that but may get destroyed.  We'll see.


The first refugees (Sedum telephium) from the slowly disappearing island border.




The pukekos picking over where penelope used to live.