Showing posts with label Landscaping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Landscaping. Show all posts

Sunday, January 3, 2016

A New View.... Drone Photography

Do you remember the 587 foot stonewall I built back in 2008-2011? I photographed it and blogged about it here and here.  Over the holidays my daughter and husband spent some time flying their drone over our home and taking photographs from new angles. I especially loved this one of my stone wall.



I love this photograph and the texture of the trees. The stonewall starts in the lower left, turns right and continues out of the frame in the upper right. It is a long stonewall! If you look carefully you can see the top of our sculpture creation from Sculpture Week 2015. I never blogged about that but it is on my to-do list.

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©2016 Ashbee Design, Marji Roy

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Raincoats for my Peonies

I love peonies - for a variety of reasons.

  • The blossoms are glorious, huge and so easy to create contemporary flower arrangements with. 
  • After they bloom, the deep green foliage looks great in the garden as a backdrop for the rest of the season.
  • The deer don't eat them - ever!


But it seems that they bloom in full glory the day before a major rain event every year. And their full blooms soak in the water, catching it and holding it in the bowl shaped flowers. And then, one by one, the blossoms become top heavy and snap. After the storm, I am left with tons of flowers with destroyed stems that need to be picked, too many for bouquets.

Out of plain kitchen trash bags, I made raincoats for my peonies. Before Tropical Storm Andrea descended upon us with torrents of rain, I pulled the trash bags down over the flowers. And they survived.


And when the rains returned yesterday, I again covered them. My front yard looks like a ghost convention! But when the sun returns, I'll uncover the peonies and enjoy the flowers a little longer.

A simple solution for sure. And the trash bags are still intact and will be used for their intended purpose.

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©2013 Ashbee Design, Marji Roy

Monday, April 22, 2013

Naturalizing Daffodils

I hate planting daffodil bulbs in October. There is no immediate reward for the work. But oh, when April comes it makes me so happy.

Our hillside is glowing yellow with beautiful flowers. I love naturalized daffodils for a variety of reasons including.....

  • The deer don't eat them.
  • They come back year after year.
  • They grow where I can get nothing else to grow.
  • Even a lady with brown thumb (me) can make them grow.
  • They love a wooded site.


I try to buy a bag of bulbs every fall and add them to the collection.

Today, the hillside below our house is a sea of yellow, with a little white mixed in.

I have planted bulbs in all kinds of nooks and crannies.


They even come up in places I haven't planted them!

Naturalizing daffodils is the process of planting them willy nilly, not in a planned and orderly fashion.

I like mine in the woods but it can also be done in a grass lawn.  Here are some naturalizing steps:


                            
  1. Choose an area to plant Scatter a couple dozen bulbs, allowing them to fall haphazardly to create random look.  Separate those that fall too close together so they have space to multiply.
  2. With a sharp spade at an angle (slice into the earth.
  3. Loosen the soil with your spade, and work a small handful of boneameal or balanced granular fertilizer or bulb-booster into the soil al few inches below where the base of the bulbs will rest when they’re planted.  Bulbs are planted at a depth of two or three times their height – usually 6-8 inches (15-20 cm) for daffodils.
  4. Plant the bulbs, pointed end up.  Replace the earth, tamp it in place and water well.  Repeat the process with the remaining bulbs.
  5. After they bloom in the spring: Remove the flowers as they fade, but allow the leaves to yellow before mowing.  The foliage feeds next year’s bloom.



Happy Spring everyone!

© 2013 Ashbee Design, Marji Roy

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Monday, July 2, 2012

Garden Sculpture Shuffle

It's not uncommon for people to rotate their art collections. We collectors tend to own more than we can ever display but there is also a need to rearrange and experiment with new vignettes. We have been working on relocating some of the garden sculptures recently. I have shared many of them with you in the past including my chrome balls and the grasping fingers. David recently did a little rearranging which include combining the fingers with the Restoration Hardware sphere I acquired last summer. It is a very effective combination.


He moved the chrome balls to another corner and aligned them in a new arrangement.


Both are an improvement over the previous display.

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©2012 Ashbee Desing, Marji Roy


Saturday, May 26, 2012

Garden Maintenance • Chores

Not everyday can be new projects. Some days have to be used to maintain previous ones and today was a day for garden maintenance. I have explained before that, because our front yard is very shady, we have failed multiple times to get much grass to grow. Several years ago we visited Garden in the Woods in Framingham, MA and since that time we have be modifying our front yard to be a woodland garden. It is now established but this winter was hard on it. I am not sure why but that which thrived last year, isn't this year. Here is a photo taken almost one year ago today. Note the beautiful mounds of  green waterfall grass (Carex Appalachia). It has been beautiful since we planted it 2009.



This year, one of the five plants looks like this.....

Two look like this.....

And two like like this.....

Last weekend we visited Garden in the Woods and purchased 3 replacement plants and today, I replanted them. The garden is a much prettier site. And my dancing sticks (DIY here) are happy again!




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©2012 Ashbee Design, Marji Roy



Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Creating Woodland Paths

I am a very lucky lady, lucky for many, many reasons. Just one is this incredible piece of land we call home. David and I live on 26 wooded acres in Connecticut and together, we have been creating a web a trails snaking through our woods. Because of the extremely heavy snowfall two winters ago and the beautiful cross-country skiing and snowshoeing, we have made it a priority to expand the trail system. Little did we know that we would have no snow last winter but how much we would love these trails during the spring instead.


We have learned that the woodland grass grows naturally when we clean up the fallen debris.  It is simply glorious in the springtime. In the above photo you can see the stone wall I finished last year.  That was a four year project!


There is something about a trail in the woods that just beckons you on. We estimate that we have between 3 and 4 miles of trails and during this season we do an afternoon fast walk along them everyday.


There are abundant ferns along some sections. As we walk we pick up sticks and stack them in piles interspersed along the trail. It amazing how clean the woods get if, every time you walk you also pick up the deadfall.


Another section of trail traverses a hillside covered in towering pines. The green here is deeper, less spring-like. Often the floor is covered in pine cones.

Our trail systems started from woods roads that evolved as we harvested firewood. This back woods trail was the toboggan run when the kids were still home.


We got inspired to expand the trail system because our neighbors blazed a walking trail along the edge of the swamp through their adjoining property. It is a gorgeous trail and we connected our system up to it, they in turn added more. It has been a great neighborly project. 


I created a map of the trails using Pages. Here is a link to the blog post showing the map and giving DIY instructions for creating your own map.

The best trails are the ones where we let nature decide the course. Let the trail meander around hill, slip beneath a low limb, or skirt around and interesting rock. We plan a trail using bright orange surveyor's tape tied to trees and then come through with clippers and a chain saw. The goal is to not cut live trees but to clean-up the deadfall along the way. Once a trail is cleared, we walk it daily. After several months it becomes apparent where the trail is because our footsteps have worn a path.  

These paths have become a source of joy for both David and I. Hiking through the emerging spring woods brings smiles to our souls!

Notes about these photographs: All of these photos were taken on my latest iPhone while out hiking.  The camera on that little device is amazing!

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©2012 Ashbee Design, Marji Roy


Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Spring Garden Chores

Not everyday can be a "make something new" kind of day. Some days have to be a "maintain something old" kind of day. This week included two days of garden maintenance chores. I am not an avid gardener but I love having gardens. Do you see the dilemma? Garden chores are not my favorite but I certainly love looking at the results.

So it was mulching week. I made two trips to the mulch center and got the pick-up truck loaded up.  David and I have spread it over most of the required places. My finger nails are all dirty but I did pause to take some photos.

Here is the garden near the main door. My Restoration Hardware Sphere sits proudly atop a stone wall I built a couple of years ago.


When we added the sunroom we decided to replace the front lawn with a series of paths and garden patches. Although we tried for 30 years, we have been totally unsuccessful in growing grass beneath all the trees. Instead we have a path that beckons you on. (See all the beautiful, fresh mulch!)


Our garden is filled with sculptures and industrial chic stuff. I found the big gear in the woods!


Turning the corner of the sunroom the paths continue and there are three of my red dancing sticks to welcome you into our front yard.


Two others frolic along the driveway.


All are happy to be dancing in fresh mulch! Happy Spring everyone.


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©2012 Ashbee Design, Marji Roy

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Winter Garden • Sprinkled with Sugar

Snow has been decidedly scarce this season. Don't take that statement as a complaint, please! But it does make me appreciate the subtle beauty when we do get a little bit. Last night we got a dusting and my world looked as if confectionary sugar had been sprinkled over it. This morning I grabbed my camera first thing to record our winter garden.


So much of what we create in the outdoors is done so with a consideration of how it will look in the snow. Here are my dancing sticks, lightly dusted.




The stone walls I spend years building blend into the forest but coat them with snow and they make a stronger statement.




The hollow tree pyramid pops out in the landscape.

And the edges and lines of all the various objects and sculptures become emphasized.














As is often the case, there was a trio of deer that watchfully observed my every move.


The beauty of New England is the changing seasons. It is important to note how the variations change the view.

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©2012 Ashbee Design, Marji Roy