The cleared area isn't just covered in straw anymore! It's turning green!
As a reminder, here's how it looked a few weeks ago:
We are thrilled. There are some bare patches still, but it's definitely better than we could have ever expected.
On the landscaper's suggestion, we trimmed a few low branches on our oak and magnolia trees too, to let a little more light in (in the case of the magnolia) and just to make things look nice.
It's not much, but do you see a little hint of fall:
Our baby tulip tree is starting to turn into autumn foliage. It's much bigger brothers are starting as well, but that's a bit high for our camera.
Busily doing some work in the house - or actually, breaking things, buying things, and hiring someone else to do them. He comes tomorrow and then I should have some new updates for you. Because, you know, who doesn't love a broken garbage disposal....
To be continued!
Please share your opinions and expertise since we need all the help we can get!
Monday, September 29, 2014
Saturday, September 13, 2014
Big Project, Big Improvement
We've been quietly getting quote for a big project around here that I haven't told you about. And now that the work is finished, I can show the big reveal. Can you guess what's going on from this picture?
Here's some white space, so I don't spoil any attempts to guess
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We took the plunge and had the back of our lot completely cleared out!
I'll cut right to the before and after pictures and then go into the details:
After 5 years almost exactly (September 15), we finally decided to hire help to clear out our back yard. We were making progress on the smaller sections of overgrowth, like here and here and here (small is relative - they made up a huge portion of the yard). We always wanted to clear away the triangular section in the back. We hired someone in the fall of 2012 to clear it out, but they mostly just hacked it down to the ground, without removing much at the roots. That might have been ok if we had been willing to maintain it, but it grew back so quickly we couldn't keep up. Plus there was a lot of poison ivy and poison sumac in there.
We realized late last month that if we wanted to clear it away and put grass down this year, now was the time to do it (late summer/early fall is the time to put down grass seed). So we scrambled to get some quotes and, despite the high cost, committed to getting this done. After 5 years of saying we would "get to it eventually" we realized that if we hadn't done it before we had a baby, now post-baby we would never get around to it.
They brought in some topsoil to level everything out, and then laid down mulch (under trees), grass, and hay. The weather have been very helpful and light sprinkles everyday has meant we haven't had to water yet.
Here are some more before, during, and after pictures taken from our second story.
You can't even see the little wood stove in this picture:
Here we are after day one, before we decided to pulled the additional ivy from the right-side. We're keeping it along the back as a privacy screen from the neighboring parking lot. It ends at a cement pad (which we realized one it was uncovered was a lot bigger than we thought - plenty of room for some lawn furniture), so hopefully that will help control the spreading. Maybe eventually we can plant something back there.
And here's the final picture. Hopefully the grass grows well. We have been seeing a lot of birds back there trying to eat the seeds.
Honestly I don't think we realized how much yard we had. It's been so overgrown since we bought the place that it was hard to visualize. It turns out this is about a third of our yard. It will be nice one the baby is walking to not have to keep her away from that section. And now there's plenty of room for a future swing set!
We also had the landscapers aerate the lawn (the real way, by removing giant plugs, and not by making spikes in the ground like the last people we hired - we were very clear about that), but I wasn't home to get a picture of that, unfortunately. They did the front and the back and then over seeded the front.
Here's some white space, so I don't spoil any attempts to guess
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.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
We took the plunge and had the back of our lot completely cleared out!
After 5 years almost exactly (September 15), we finally decided to hire help to clear out our back yard. We were making progress on the smaller sections of overgrowth, like here and here and here (small is relative - they made up a huge portion of the yard). We always wanted to clear away the triangular section in the back. We hired someone in the fall of 2012 to clear it out, but they mostly just hacked it down to the ground, without removing much at the roots. That might have been ok if we had been willing to maintain it, but it grew back so quickly we couldn't keep up. Plus there was a lot of poison ivy and poison sumac in there.
We realized late last month that if we wanted to clear it away and put grass down this year, now was the time to do it (late summer/early fall is the time to put down grass seed). So we scrambled to get some quotes and, despite the high cost, committed to getting this done. After 5 years of saying we would "get to it eventually" we realized that if we hadn't done it before we had a baby, now post-baby we would never get around to it.
I think we made a good decision. It took 4 qualified people almost 2 days to clear everything out. Imagine 2 inexperienced people trying to do it while watching a baby....not gonna happen. First they pulled up everything manually (because they were going to plant grass seed immediately, they couldn't rely on chemicals - which worked out well because I didn't really want them to use chemicals anyway).
Originally we planned to leave some ivy under the trees, since it's too shady there for grass. But we decided to have them remove that too, because - as we learned previously - it's hard to maintain ivy and not have it take over. So they got rid of it and put down mulch.
They also got rid of the small tree stump leftover from this project. They didn't take the stumps out from the larger trees - it wasn't worth it since they are in the back corner and would cost a lot to remove.They brought in some topsoil to level everything out, and then laid down mulch (under trees), grass, and hay. The weather have been very helpful and light sprinkles everyday has meant we haven't had to water yet.
Here are some more before, during, and after pictures taken from our second story.
You can't even see the little wood stove in this picture:
Here we are after day one, before we decided to pulled the additional ivy from the right-side. We're keeping it along the back as a privacy screen from the neighboring parking lot. It ends at a cement pad (which we realized one it was uncovered was a lot bigger than we thought - plenty of room for some lawn furniture), so hopefully that will help control the spreading. Maybe eventually we can plant something back there.
And here's the final picture. Hopefully the grass grows well. We have been seeing a lot of birds back there trying to eat the seeds.
Honestly I don't think we realized how much yard we had. It's been so overgrown since we bought the place that it was hard to visualize. It turns out this is about a third of our yard. It will be nice one the baby is walking to not have to keep her away from that section. And now there's plenty of room for a future swing set!
We also had the landscapers aerate the lawn (the real way, by removing giant plugs, and not by making spikes in the ground like the last people we hired - we were very clear about that), but I wasn't home to get a picture of that, unfortunately. They did the front and the back and then over seeded the front.
Tuesday, September 9, 2014
The Same But Different
I took advantage of the long Labor Day weekend to get to a multi-day project. Our red coffee table clashed with our new red rug and it was hard to find an opportunity to have a few days in a row where we wouldn't miss it in the living room (relatively...).
So out onto the lawn on a tarp, propped up on containers so that I could get to the legs. A quick sand with a medium-fine grit, just to take the shine off.
Then after a quick wipe, it was time for paint! Safety Blue in Rustoleum's High Performance Professional Enamel. I didn't actually buy it for this project - we had some left over from painting the build-in shelves in the nursery.
One coat,
I waited two days and then applied Slate Gray Minwax stain purchased a long time ago for my blue cedar chest. I tried a different technique (also associated with not caring) - I wiped it on and then off the top surface and then dripped it into the crevices of the side edges and legs.
Finally after more waiting, I sprayed the whole things with three thin coats of Minwax Polycrylic spray (one coat, then super-fine sand, then promptly decided that wasn't worth the effort and did coats two and three without sanding). Two more days to cure fully and back it went!
But we weren't idle in the living room while we waited. We took advantage of not having furniture on the rug (or at least not having *much* furniture on the rug) to finally get a rug pad down. First we let it air out in a different room - it stank of chemicals coming out of the packaging. But a day or two later, it was fine and ready to get put under the rug (we had more motivation now that the little one is experimenting with crawling and rolling and banging her head inelegantly against the floor on the way down...)
And so without further ado, here's the new and improved coffee table!
See how the gray is in the details? D actually thought I had painstakingly painted each line, but since stain is so liquidy, I just dripped it in and wiped off the rest.
Honestly I like this even better than the red - better spray paint and better stain technique. Let's hope that's the last time I had to paint this thing, though, because twice is definitely enough.
So out onto the lawn on a tarp, propped up on containers so that I could get to the legs. A quick sand with a medium-fine grit, just to take the shine off.
Then after a quick wipe, it was time for paint! Safety Blue in Rustoleum's High Performance Professional Enamel. I didn't actually buy it for this project - we had some left over from painting the build-in shelves in the nursery.
One coat,
Two coats, three coats:
I followed drying instructions for minimal drying time (you have to spray within an hour or so or wait 48 hours, and no way were we going to make it that long without our table). The top surface was uneven, but no where near as bad as it was when I painted it red. I attribute this to a few things. 1) I was painting over paint and not over whatever was on it the first time. 2) This blue enamel went on much easier, so maybe there is something to this whole "professional" grade stuff. And 3) I cared a whole lot less and didn't dwell on imperfections.I waited two days and then applied Slate Gray Minwax stain purchased a long time ago for my blue cedar chest. I tried a different technique (also associated with not caring) - I wiped it on and then off the top surface and then dripped it into the crevices of the side edges and legs.
Finally after more waiting, I sprayed the whole things with three thin coats of Minwax Polycrylic spray (one coat, then super-fine sand, then promptly decided that wasn't worth the effort and did coats two and three without sanding). Two more days to cure fully and back it went!
But we weren't idle in the living room while we waited. We took advantage of not having furniture on the rug (or at least not having *much* furniture on the rug) to finally get a rug pad down. First we let it air out in a different room - it stank of chemicals coming out of the packaging. But a day or two later, it was fine and ready to get put under the rug (we had more motivation now that the little one is experimenting with crawling and rolling and banging her head inelegantly against the floor on the way down...)
And so without further ado, here's the new and improved coffee table!
See how the gray is in the details? D actually thought I had painstakingly painted each line, but since stain is so liquidy, I just dripped it in and wiped off the rest.
Honestly I like this even better than the red - better spray paint and better stain technique. Let's hope that's the last time I had to paint this thing, though, because twice is definitely enough.
Monday, September 1, 2014
Day of Labor
Even though I'm not usually someone who makes lists, that to-do list we made a couple of weeks ago made me realize how many smallish things needed to get done around here and pushed me to accomplish some of them. We replaced the light in the office last weekend and now this weekend crossed another off our list (and got started on a different one, but that's a post for another time).
This Labor Day (and boy, does labor mean something different to me now that I have a baby...), we cleaned out the dryer! It had been about three and a half years and especially given how much more laundry we've been doing these days with a baby, we figured it was probably become quite the fire hazard. We actually had completely forgotten how to do it but fortunately took very good notes on the blog last time and followed them. Step one, of course, was that we unplugged the dryer. Next we had a little trouble getting the bottom of the dryer off, but eventually got it unhinged.
Then we unscrewed the black covering inside, vacuumed, and then unattached it from the vent hose. D dragged out the shop vac and sucked up the dust while using the drill attachment from both ends to send the brush through the vent.
Then we unscrewed the black covering inside, vacuumed, and then unattached it from the vent hose. D dragged out the shop vac and sucked up the dust while using the drill attachment from both ends to send the brush through the vent.
I'm happy to report that it wasn't really all that bad. So we cleaned it the first time a year and a half after moving in, but it had obviously been a lot longer than that since the previous owners cleaned it out (or they never ever cleaned the lint trap?). I think ever three years should definitely be plenty in the future.
The only other unexpected find from this little project? A very very very dead and desiccated mouse stuck to a sticky trap behind the dryer. Don't worry, there'll be no pictures for this one. The trap wasn't even for mice, it was for spider crickets. Poor little thing. Wrong place, wrong time. Though of course if he'd made it upstairs our cat would have been waiting...
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