Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Grass Villian

I posted our plans for having a beautiful green lawn. My husband and I are officially over the whole grass thing for this year! Ahem, before I rant, let me focus on the attributes of lawn filled with grass.
(Here's where I leave a blank post.) No, in all seriousness:

  • grass is nutritious for cattle (I honestly would feel better if we were growing grass for horses and cows)
  • grass prevents erosion of topsoil
  • grass provides the nitrogen soil needs 
  • grass contains chlorophyll 

Ok, I am really scrambling for any other reason it is beneficial in suburbia, but moving on to our mistakes so that you can avoid repeating them.

Before
Before

After









 As you see above, the month of April started out great. We were able to redo the landscape. We even planted our trees, shrubs, and grass seed hours before a week of gentle rain. We were elated.

Downpour
 After the week of rain, we watered with the sprinkler for at least 30 minutes a night. The temperatures went from up 70s down to the 50s and our dying rye grass sprang to life. That's actually what you see in the after picture posted above. Twenty-one days passed and not a single blade of grass came up.

So we were back to the store grabbing a bag of rye. We figured the rye comes up in 7 days and it would stop the rest of the summer grass seed from washing away. The last week of April, first week of May turned into torrential rains. 10 - 20 minutes bucket and gully washers. All our grass seed washed away because it was too cold to germinate. The rye looks beautiful. For now we will enjoy the last of the rye before summer burns it up.

Rain washing down the side of the hill
washed away dirt
what washed out




used to spread the grass seed
 Moral of our garden mishaps?

Rye is great from Fall to Spring. Wait to plant summer seeds until the temperatures no longer dip and the spring rains aren't around to wash it out! Establishing grass seed requires patience, a lot of water, fertilizer, great soil, and ideal temperatures!

My advice is don't give up, take your time, and "if you don't succeed, try, try again." For us we will attempt it again next year.

rye grass


Wednesday, April 20, 2016

Name that bush

Healthy bush
I need help naming this bush. I have searched google to no avail on this one. Here is a picture of the healthy bush next to it. I would be forever grateful if someone could identify what it is. I am afraid the unhealthy bush is getting pretty close to being past saving which makes me sad.


Unhealthy bush
 The unhealthy bush pictured left, has already lost half of its size because the limbs were completely dead. The limbs broke off in one snap. I'm hoping to discover the name so I can look up how to treat its problems. The leaves are not falling off, but it is not producing any spring leaves and the old leaves have burnt spots and some type of mold on them as well.


Exactly on the other side of the house, the landscapers planted this bush. I think it may be a Dwarf Burford Holly? It's leaves are turning yellow. I read this is an iron deficiency. Due to the wet winter we have experienced, it seems the heavy rains washed the iron from this shrub. They don't like to be watered a lot. I amended the soil with iron and it seems to be perking up a bit, but we still have been having quite a bit of rain and am not sure if I need to keep adding more iron or what.
Dwarf Burford Holly? Sickly
Current


Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Evergreens!

The post I've been promising! It's finally here! Upon moving in last year, we faced many challenges with our landscape. I am not a landscaper. I am just a lover of gardening, plants, and all it encompasses. Faced with this new landscape of challenges, we sat stumped for an entire year. This Spring we took the plunge.

When we bought our house, it was the latest house built. The "yard" beyond ours did not have a house yet. We had our hearts set on Leyland Cypress. As the year progressed, we saw our neighboring lot develop, the house be built next to our property line, and our privacy tree idea needing to be revamped.

Privacy Trees
This year we researched Cypress trees all of February and in great earnest all of March. Each weekend in March we drove around to local nurseries pricing screened topsoil, mulch, and trees. In the end we chose Italian Cypress for their small circumference and Green Giant Cypress for their medium circumference.

We fell in love with the idea of Cypress Trees because:
  • They have soft bristles: who wants to mow along scratchy leaves?
  •  They grow 10-30+ feet tall
  • They create a great screening
  • They block the suns rays from heating the house
  • They are low maintenance (no need for trimming!)
  • They grow 2-3' a year 
  • Drought resistant

Green Giant

 One problem we ran into was that no one    carried Italian Cypress. We found Trees2go and liked the fact they delivered. Let me tell you, what great service! They worked with our schedule. The trees came in 3 gallon pots. They were delivered right to us. 20 trees in 3 gallon pots at around 2 feet tall came out to $300. They carried Italian Cypress! When they delivered the trees, they not only gave us an instruction pamphlet along with the trees but also gave us tips on planting them, gladly let us know if where we planned to plant the trees would be good place or not, and gave us advice on what to consider. The greatest part is Trees2go tracks your purchase and you earn cumulative discounts! Happy customers here :)

We followed their advice and spaced the Green Giant and Italian Cypress 6' apart. This allows for the trees to interlace. We shall see in a few years!

Never bury the Cypress tree in clay soil! The roots do not like to sit in water. So well drained soil is key. This is why you see these trees planted in  mounds of topsoil and mulch to allow the water to seep below into the clay soil beneath the roots.

To keep the trees in a straight line, put up a  string and dig along it. When a slope comes into play, make sure you level it from the top! We wanted a curve to our hedge near the back.

The Green Giant has a circumference of 10-12'. To create a hedge you can plant them up to 8' feet apart. We wanted to mix them with the Italian Cypress that has 6' circumference. This means Italian Cypress need to be spaced 3' apart to create a hedge. We ended up mixing the two trees so that we could plant them 6' apart and cover more ground that way.

A good rule of thumb to follow is always buy a couple more plants than you think you will need. We bought Emerald Arborvitae for the driveway side of the house. Hopefully it will create a nice hedge in place of a fence.

After all we have researched about Cypress the past year, we are pretty excited to observe the results over the years.

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Garden Plans

7+ ton additional pile
Spring break weekend was busy! The funny part of this week was we did not plant trees. The whole point of this spring's prep ended up incomplete.

So what happened? From my last post until now a lot of shoveling was involved! All Tuesday and Wednesday I shoveled dirt and pushed the wheelbarrow because I was too impatient to wait for us to purchase a cart for behind the lawn mower. The 7 ton dirt pile managed to fill in the holes and extend "the beast" partially. We simply ordered another load of dirt. Communication somehow became muddled and we received twice as much as before. I wanted to cry.


halfway finished
Here sat a pile twice as big. We now only had four days to complete our list. The clincher was the muscles sore from the previous two days. Another pile of mulch was added to the list of piles needed shoveling, but at least we had our cart to tote it all in!

The good part of all of it is, although we still have not planted our evergreen trees, our yard is mulched for another season and we got the grass seeded right before the rains came. Now we wait. The grass is supposed to come up in 10-21 days and then we can seed whatever washed away.
halfway sloped
completely sloped and seeded









We did decide on a local place to order our evergreens from and are waiting to see how it will turn out. They are supposed to deliver and set the trees in the ground for you. That would be amazing.

Tuesday, March 22, 2016

Spring Prep Update

7 tons topsoil




I honestly did not know what to title this back-breaking experience. Saturday we were scrambling around trying to see what local nurseries offered in trees, soil, and mulch. In the process, we added to our outdoor plans. (more on that later)

Saturday we visited three nurseries and our local Lowes in search of the perfect evergreens for the "the beast" side of the house. What a nightmare! Due to how narrow that side of the house is, our options continue to narrow. 

While searching for trees, we began to really think through the process. Local nurseries were advising us to kill all surrounding weeds, amend the soil, add fertilizer, and mulch on top to maximize the amount of growth the trees could grow yearly.

We went to Lowes to look at all the plant labels. We were looking at the evergreen labels, tree labels, and shrub labels reading how much sun they would need, how big they would become at maturity, and viewing the overall picture of them at maturity level. A waft of sweet smell caught our senses. There on display sat gardenias. We had gardenias at our old house. My husband appreciated their delightful smell at our old house, so we bought them. The nursery worker warned us to wait until the last frost before planting them........yes, we have more plants to plant now, ha!

Since our house was built last year, the ground has been stripped of its topsoil. The rains have created rivets in our soil. We decided we would start with purchasing topsoil. The topsoil was only $135 for a 7 ton load, including delivery.  So there was that huge pile on Monday staring at us.

Here we are four days later sore from hauling dirt in our wheelbarrow all day yesterday. Our sweet neighbor suggested another local nursery to check out. Needless to say, I am excited! The more nurseries the more options, I say!

Our total list for this year is starting to look like this:
  • Fill in rivets with topsoil
  • Level out the yard
  • Seed the yard with zoysia grass seed (should come today)
  • Plant Gardenia bushes
  • Dig holes for trees
  • Decide on trees!
  • Purchase trees this weekend
  • Purchase and bring in mulch this weekend
  • Plant trees
 And all because it's Spring Break this week....we're a gluttony for sore muscles.

Friday, March 18, 2016

New Adventure Update

It's almost been a year to date! Yes, we are still working on last years plan.....sad to say, we have not begun implementing any part of our plan. I will say we have successfully decided on a landscape plan!

For our current yard, we are branching into the low maintenance theme. We took forever deciding on a grass last fall. It was late fall when we planted the perennial rye 50 lb bag for $30 we found at our local Hudson store. Because we planted so late and the winter weather turned hot so fast, here in NC this year, the grass has turned brown this month. Typically rye grass will last from fall until late Spring. Perennial Rye enjoys cooler weather below 70s. We were spoiled with a wet winter so we did not have to water the grass seed.

This spring we will be planting with two different grass varieties zoysia and Kentucky bluegrass and will update on how well they do. This time we simply ordered from Amazon. The key to grass is a great fertilizer and keeping the seed moist until it sprouts.

On a side note, I hate grass!!!! It's not economical, it robs plants of their water, it requires a lot of mowing which translates into gas, etc. Needless to say this yard does not make me feel relaxed, at the moment. Ok, off my rant. :)

We have gone from 2.5 acres down to .8 of an acre. Our plan is to create a low maintenance property boundary and privacy hedge around the sides. Once that is established we want to create the back yard more like I prefer a yard to look like. Stay tuned. This upcoming month will be a lot of posts on planting our privacy trees!

back yard with steep slope
Needs retaining wall


Back yard sees into all the neighboring yards

side yard

side yard
side yard

Side yard