Tuesday, July 22, 2014

My Journey to Restoring a 69 Year Old Overgrown Yard

So I'm officially out of the Army, and we have relocated back to our home state! Washington! (Not D.C. as so many think of when they hear Washington). It's wonderful to be around my pine trees, and the smell of the cold and rain. I've lived here for 20 years before we moved away and began our journey in the Army.

Coming from a Career woman in a veterinary hospital, to a full time homemaker and 2 kids, to a full time soldier with 2 kids and still managed to play the role of the homemaker. Now, as of June 27, 2014, I'm free of all the pressure and responsibilities of other soldiers lives, mission operations, training, and coordinating. I'm back to being mom again. Just mom. Mind you it's only been a month, but the feeling is so enthralling that I'm planting roots for the first time since I left 5 years ago. Literally I'm planting roots.
This is the photo they show you to make you believe how awesome the place is until you get there!

We moved into a 3 bedroom house on 3/4 of an acre. The land was so overgrown that when passerby's walked by our house they would revolt at the sight. Mind you this house was built in 1945, and for being 69 years old, it' wasn't half bad considering the interior remodel. The yard on the other hand was in some dire need of love.

This is where my journey / inspiration began. The bushes in the front yard were so overgrown that when someone walked by the house the bushes would push them off the sidewalk. The grass was so tall and full of weeds that my kids played hide and seek, and could actually hide!

The garden beds were bare and dry, I wasn't even sure if anything would grow, and the tree branches and rocks littered the land. It looked like winter took over and never left. So I began clean it up.

I decided to hedged the bushes first, and as I reached and pulled around the tall bushes, several cars drove by staring. Felt strange having a ton of eyes on you while you're just tending to the yard. I brushed it off at first, and kept trimming away, until I cut through my power cord... .uggg.... replaced it, and not even 10 min later, I cut it again! double ugggg.... (and here I thought I was being careful) I replace it again and look back at my work up to now and wow! I can walk on the sidewalk!

The neighborhood must have noticed because as a lady was driving by me, she yelled out her window, "Hey, it's looking good" while giving me a thumbs up! The chills crept up my spine again, knowing that everyone was watching me. (I'm extremely introverted, if that helps you understand my discomfort). But it did feel nice to know that my "bubble" was going to look great, and apparently I've already got approval from the neighbors.

After 3 hours of hedging maybe 30 feet of bushes, I mowed the lawn. Seems simple enough, just push the mower over the grass right? Nope....

After mowing the "jungle"
I quickly learned that this yard has not been cleared from falling tree debris, or rocks, or anything but grass, ever!!! I determinedly pressed forward and slowly inched my way through all 3/4 acre lot slowly mulching up dry sticks, roots, flinging rocks, 3 feet of grass, and anything else that lay hidden in this disaster. Never in my life had I been afraid to mow before today. I've been to war, I've been to Iraq! I've had Mortars launched and gun fire in my direction on a near daily basis. Felt the explosions of bombs near by. I can brush that off, but pushing a lawn mower through a "jungle of grass" whoa let me tell ya, whoa! I've never wanted to wear eye protection before to mow and I almost even went to extreme measures of even wearing a helmet! (Projectiles of yard shrapnel). But I didn't wear the helmet, or eye protection. I remained risky and determined.
I attempted to keep some patches of wild jungle and surrounded it with broken branches I found in the yard. I found enough branches to create edging around two giant patches of wild brush
5 hours later.......


Ivy Debris after mowing down as much as I could
Canes and Stocks left over after chomping up the berry bushes
Overgrown field next to house, not sure if I can get grass to grow with out tilling up the land
I'm mowing over sticker bushes now.... (aka black berry bushes) Now I realize this is not good for my mowers health, but I was still determined. This was my new home after the Army, and I am the type of person who enjoys having my environment clean, and cared for, it's how my mother, and Army raised me. That your surroundings reflect who you are, so.... I mowed on, and on, and on. until my mower could not chomp up anymore overgrown vegetation. I grabbed the weed whacker and ran into the ivy roots up the trees, and heavy tree branches that had fallen down, and rocks the size of computer chairs (no clue how these got here either, sheesh). By now I was wishing I had a heard of goats and a mighty fence to keep them in that space. When they were done, I would totally borrow some pigs and let them chow down on the roots, but that is not an option for me.

At the end of the day. My yard was in full blown shock. Grass bladed down from 3 feet tall to 2 inches, logs relocated, rocks piled up, ivy plant butchered, black berry bushes chomped up, roots and stocks laid everywhere consuming any and all topsoil that may be present. Everything was yellow, rotting, and very much like a forest floor after a clearing. Day 1 check.... now lets plant, lets grow, lets heal the land.

My attempt to grow something
The next day I purchased some grass seed, some weed and feed, some yard bug killer, some garden fertilizer, and some flowers. I set to work right away on the three garden patches in front of the house. These garden patches lined the front of the house, they looked like a grey cement color, and I felt like I was taking a huge gamble planting anything in there. I took my spike hand tool and whacked at the dirt to loosen the soil. I sifted out as many rocks as I could find and found enough to fill a gap by my sidewalk to the house and bushes by the gate. (A lot of freaking rocks to be in any garden bed). I then stirred into the soil several cups of fertilizer to try and re-nutrition the soil. Then I planted wave petunias in hopes of their survival.
Pool spot was a pain to seed and grow, but once it finally grew, wow!
Next I tended to the grass. As you can see in the photo, the previse tenant had a pool or something in the front yard for a really really really long time. Also they had bricks planted into the soil. Strange, but we fixed it.

I walked the yard with spiked shoes, (you can buy those at any hardware garden store) and then I laid grass seed, and mulch over the bare spot. I then spread weed and feed, and then I spread bug killer. I then watered the yard. Three weeks later we had grass!
Notice how bare it is, lets add something to grow
Bricks found randomly buried in the yard


Pile of yard waste collected randomly through out the yard
 We dug out the bricks  and lined them up along the bushes near where I threw all the rocks I found in the yard as they projectile across my face from the mower. The grass slowly started to grow, and the brick liner created this image of grass territory and bush territory, was amazing!




 My pile of debris built up. This was just the back yards pile of broken and dead branches. The front yard took 5 loads of a pick up truck to the transfer station.




We then built a few raised vegetable garden.

As you can see we used 2x4's and built a couple boxes. I then contacted a local compost, topsoil, bark company, and purchased 2 1/2 yards of premium soil. (2 1/2 truck loads). Paid about $45 for it, way cheaper than buying it in a bag cause this would have taken somewhere around 400 bags of dirt and usually the dirt in a bag runs about $12 to $20 a bag.

We filled the beds, and I hammered and nailed 12" intervals all the way around each bed. I then used some cotton string and divided up the dirt by 12"x12" squares so I can garden using the square footage method.

Square Foot Gardening
I did a ton of research and found that this website
http://www.smartgardener.com was the most helpful. It's a free website that helps you plan your garden, how much food you need to grow based on your family size and gives you a weekly to-do list. It even has a planner guide so you know how many plants to put in which square. Super helpful!

So began to grow

I this photo you see pumpkins on the ends, and corn in the middle. All started from seeds.


Here in the front is broccoli transplants, and in the very back are strawberries. In the middle you can't see anything yet, but spinach, peas, green beans, squash, carrots, tomatoes, lettuce, and cucumber are growing seedlings.
Baby Strawberry Plants
 Close up of my baby strawberries. Strawberries are year round plants, that dormant in the winter. So far we only have had a few strawberries, but most plants go into shock after transplanting.
Baby Broccoli Sprouts
 Broccoli, Awe they're so little. These guys were transplanted in the middle of June 2014