It’s been a while…

After nearly a year without an update (the reason for which we will come on to), I thought now would be a good time. It’s approaching summer and we have been working in the garden, and although not much has changed in the house, our application for planning permission has been submitted to the council.

We have gone with our original idea of having a ‘one and two story’ extension, this expands the upstairs bathroom, the kitchen and the dining room.  We now just have our fingers crossed that permission is granted.

So with that in mind, we are trying to save as much money as possible, and we have mainly been making a few improvements to our front garden.

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Pictured above: Our established ‘Loddon Blue’ Lavender and ‘Totally Tangerine’ Geums

On the last May bank holiday weekend, Paul and I went and bought nine different types of lavender to plant in the front garden. These now line the wall that runs parallel to our house. We’ve left space for them to grow so they do look a bit meek at the moment, but we’re looking forward to having a long row of fragrant shrubbery in years to come.

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We have quite solid clay soil which makes digging more than a couple of inches very difficult. Coupled with the buried bricks, making space for the lavender was not as easy as we’d hoped.

Above: The variety of lavender now planted in the garden. 

The two french lavenders ‘Tiara’ and ‘Regal Splendour’ didn’t come with tags, as we had to go to an entirely different garden centre to find these. I intend to document the order in which they have been planted in a garden book so we don’t forget.

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Earlier on in the year, in March we re-planted our hanging basket with a variety of succulents and an alpine lavender plant. The reason we went for those is because last year the plants tended to dry out very quickly and didn’t do well. It’s all doing much better and needs a lot less watering than last year’s arrangement.

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We also replaced a the couple of plants that didn’t make it through the winter in our strawberry planter, it’s now bursting at the seams. Again, alpines and succulents seem to be the way forward for some easy gardening.

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Above: The bees have been loving the abundance of chive flowers this year.

Our kitchen garden is doing well. We’ve removed most of the mint and had to re-plant it in spots where we don’t mind it taking over (on the ground below the raised bed). It’s now happily mingled with escaped strawberries, sweet woodruff and chamomile (and a few determined weeds). And we replaced a few of the things we lost over the years like sage and lemon verbena (which didn’t survive the Beast from the East last year).

We have also pulled out and replaced some of the plants near the top of the front garden.  I have tried to introduce some more colour as it was previously just a bland blanket of green.

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From left: Hart’s Tongue Fern, Carex ‘Bronze Form’, Berberis ‘Thunbergii Orange Rocket’, a hosta (whose tag we lost), Heuchera ‘Marmalade’ & Tiarella ‘Spring Symphony’

We’re hoping it will all fill out a little bit and look even better next year, providing the slugs don’t eat them.

The plan is to begin work on our extension in 2020. The application was submitted to the local council by our architect in April and the decision was meant to be made on 6 June. We have yet to hear anything, but are hoping for some good news soon so we can start making some more concrete plans!

The Great Outdoors

We’ve had a highly-concentrated flurry of work being done on the house. In the last couple of months, we’ve had more done than possibly the last year. Although this has been good for getting work done it means I haven’t had much of a chance to post an update in a while, but hopefully this will be the first of a few as I catch up.

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Firstly, we’ve had a lot of work going on in the gardens. We’ve finally had the fence in the back garden put up, so next door can’t just wander in (which their dog and children tended to do). And the wall at the back has been re-rendered on the bad parts, and since the weather has been so good recently, I even got round to pressure washing it and slapping on a few coats of paint.

Please excuse my sexy DIY clothes

Please excuse my sexy DIY clothes

We continue to prevail in our ongoing battle with the unrelenting tentacles of ivy which seem to be trying to drown every solid fixture in the garden – but the war continues.

I’ve painted the wall with Sandtex’s ‘Chalk Hill’ it’s a grey so light that’s almost white, but it’s a little less bland. It was a lighter colour than I thought it would be but I’m happy with it, and it’s certainly better than the semi-attempt at graffiti that was there.

We’re having more trouble on trying to decide what colour to paint the fence, however. I like the natural colour but am happy to paint the fence either a cream or grey or green (to match our new front door!) but Paul disagrees.

It’s not just the back garden that’s been getting all of the attention.

I’ve planted some delphiniums in place of where last year’s foxgloves were. One was completely chomped down by slugs overnight and has now been replaced by a new one I bought today (and now surrounded by slug pellets). I replaced one of the lupins that didn’t come back from last year. I’ve also put in a couple of anemones to fill two gaps beside the lupins. But the lavenders are still going strong for now.

A few months after we first moved in, Paul cut down all of the useless bushes along the long patch of soil running down the side of the house. Although it opened the area up, we didn’t do much more with it, until now. We pulled up all of the horrible stones that covered it and discovered that the previous occupants hadn’t bothered using proper ground sheets to stop weeds from coming up, but just used the bags that the stones had come in, and then filled in the gaps with reems of Sainsbury’s plastic bags (classy!).

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Once we’d removed all of that, we dug out the rotting roots, and have started to plan and even plant some new things. The whole raised area is reserved for edible plants. At the moment it’s mainly made up of a lot of herbs but we also planted  a couple of rhubarb plants in February at the shaded end, having successfully grown rhubarb at our old flat.

All of this garden work means we have learnt a few things, and one thing is that the soil is a bit rubbishy. We have a heavy clay soil which makes it really hard to dig down deep but is also very stoney – although we try to pick out all of the stones we encounter it’s made even more difficult by the fact the clay soil solidifies when it’s exposed to the air for too long. We also found that the the area between the old fence we tore down last year and the wall that we can now see, was used as a dumping ground by previous occupants, meaning we found some lovely items, including motorcycle parts, lighters, bottles and bags of retro food packaging. It’s a bit like Time Team, but it over covers a couple of decades, although Paul was quite good at identifying old sweet wrappers and bottles from the 90’s.

Downloads

We’ve taken many bags full of stones, bricks, and other crap to the local recycling centre, which they charge for, so it’s been an expensive clean up. But it’s considerably clearer now and today we bought six large bags of soil conditioner and have tried to cover and mix it with our front garden soil in the hopes it will improve the quality and make planting/growing things a lot easier. Fingers crossed. We’ve also ripped out even more of the plants and bushes that were just growing around the place. Thankfully the recycling centre don’t charge for this, because we have taken car-loads of the stuff recently, and although we have started using our beehive shaped composter, it’s already full just with grass cutting.

Despite all of these changes, our garden has been a bit bird crazy recently. We always try and have bird food out anyway, but in previous years the bits we’ve put out have been ignored by the local wildlife. But when we noticed a couple of birds that kept visiting us, we bought some more and then suddenly it’s escalated to flocks of sparrows, at least a couple of blue tits and a great tit, two black birds, a fat wood pigeon, and two magpies. we’ve been having to fill the feeder up every day with suet pellets and seeds (although looking at the floors around the feeder, they don’t seem to like black sunflower seeds, so they are probably getting through it so quickly just so they can get to the bits they actually like). We’ve since purchased a water feeder as well as several other little feeding areas for them all.

Today we’ve bought a sparrow bird house and Paul’s climbed on top of the utility roof to put it in a warm but protected area. We probably won’t see anything this year, but fingers cross for the coming years.