Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Productive garden + new apartment

It's been six weeks (and change) since we moved. We're happily settled into our closet (as I somewhat affectionately refer to our apartment) and brought the last carload when we came back on Monday. It contained, among other things... and also these...


which are the chairs and table that I decided to strip and stain shortly before we moved. Did I neglect to mention this project? Oops.

Though I'm fairly used to things going wrong at this point, pretty much everything possible went wrong with this project. In addition to my stripper chemical not working very well and it (of course) taking longer than I expected, the stain didn't take very nicely to the wood (probably due to the remaining bit of finish I couldn't remove -- refer to picture of chairs above) AND we got stuck in Texas for three extra days, which deleted my margin to finish the project.

So when we went back a month ago, I finished staining and put a first coat of polyurethane on things. (With the dry time, that was all I had time for.) This time, two more coats, then we brought it back. It's sitting on our deck to let things dry thoroughly, and so it doesn't gas us while we're sleeping.

It doesn't look as good as I'd hoped, but I don't think the average person would think it looks horrible. Except for that one chair. I'll put that in the corner where you can't see it. Also...I only did three chairs. I got so fed up that I decided to just skip the fourth. It's in the attic, halfway unfinished...whatever. Stupid project.

We finished a few other things around the house...painting the window that's been primed pink for a year, caulking some seams, painting around the front door...just little stuff. I have a few pictures (mainly flowers) to post...
Dwarf dahlias (above) and morning glories (below)
Giant sunflower + seeds
And here's Todd, holding the first apple from our tiny tree. This is his Red Delicious. I planted a Macintosh.
I also wanted to show you our new apartment. People have been asking, and this is definitely easier than emailing pictures.

So...you come up these stairs
and then turn left. In front of you is the bathroom and on the left of the little hallway is the laundry "room."
If you don't go that way, you make a u-turn and this is what it looks like...From the kitchen looking back the other way...
(That's our little bar counter in the left corner.)

Sorry that's so dark...
This is from the top of the stairs again. We have a nice little deck with a sliding glass door.
Lastly... my "office" which is a definite downgrade from my previous setup, but not that bad...
The pantry, which I LOVE...I've never had a pantry before. It's great to have a place to put stuff. (And stockpile.)
And the kitchen. Nice high windows face northeast and let in light all day. We also have nice views out the slider and to the southeast (respectively):

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Updates and other news

While I'm fully aware that a sound shaming is in order for not posting for two months and a week, I do have a good reason (more on that later...no, not pregnant). First, a few garden pictures!

Below is our and our neighbors' enormous cherry tomato plants. Theirs sprawls about five solid feet, and is the thing lying on the ground in the bottom left corner of this picture. Ours is tied up to a bean teepee, and I estimate it's about eight feet tall, and still adding height every day. Needless to say, there are more cherry tomatoes than anyone can eat.

So far, from our basil, I've made and frozen three massive batches of pesto, plus made and eaten lots more than that. Fresh basil is spectacular.
Below is a picture of my still-ripening white pumpkin. Of the six seeds, four sprouted. Of those four sprouts, I kept three. Of the three plants, only one plant produced one pumpkin. Guess I will be saving the seeds and trying again...
We have collected what might be termed an obscene amount of squash. This isn't even one week's worth. I have foisted it on neighbors, visitors, everyone. I also chopped a bunch up and froze it with plans of making red sauce, lasagna and zucchini bread in January.
I also let my artichokes bloom. This picture doesn't even come close to the color of the flower. It's like a neon purple, like no flower I've ever seen before. Absolutely stunning. And the bees are obsessed with it. At any given time, there are usually at least four honeybees jammed all the way in the middle of the bloom, bee-ing around.
Sunflowers along the pool fence are just starting to bloom, and they're awesome. The honeysuckles that got more water and sun also took off, and almost all my second-round transplanted black-eyed susans made it. In the next few years, they'll fill in more and be really big and beautiful. Also planted some random climbing seeds I had lying around, and a few weeks later, morning glories!
This is an Autumn Beauty sunflower. At about eight inches in diameter, they are just lovely as cut flowers.
This is also a variety of Autumn Beauty. I like the yellow in this a little better than the brown above, but I think the first one is more striking.
Anyway, on to this news I alluded to earlier. We are moving to Bend, OR for a few years. Todd got a pretty amazing job, and so we're relocating and renting our house to some friends from church. Ironically, they're moving out of a studio apartment, and we are moving into one. After reviewing pictures, I am still not really sure how we'll be able to fit a bed, couch and media console. It's only 650 square feet (but really nice, especially the kitchen).

I took videos of how things look inside and outside (which are now a few weeks outdated)...they're kind of long.



And outside...

I am really glad that we have friends who can take care of our house while we're gone, so the shrubbies don't die and the pool doesn't turn green. While I will really miss living here, there is a lot to look forward to at our new place, so I've been focusing on that.

Probably more to come before we leave (we move into our new place on September 11), and I suppose the blog will be on hiatus for a while until we come back.

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Summertime!

Sooo....lots to discuss in the garden, mainly. Yesterday, I took the afternoon to work on the raised bed I built last year next to the pool. Turned all the dirt, added some rotted manure Betsy brought from the ranch and some grass clippings and even things out. Six hours later, voila!After getting things in order, I planted some dwarf dahlias (below, LOVE the pink-orange bloom)
and some white petunias. I still need to put the drip lines back in place.

The other bed, which is in the background of the picture, is filled with hateful bermudagrass, and I am in the process of poisoning it. Once it's all good and dead, I'm hoping to transplant some of my black-eyed susan seedlings, so I can see them from my office window all summer.
I moved some of the sunflower seedlings yesterday, too. The "tiny" ones, expected to come in at 4.5 feet, are planted along the pool fences. It's a bit touch and go at the moment: two got decimated by earwigs overnight, and several others are looking pretty wilty, despite my heavy watering. It may have been too early to move them.

Also along the pool fence (above) are balloon flower seeds. Nothing's sprouted yet. I planted them a little late in the season. The purple and yellow should be a fun combo, though.

Speaking of a fun combo, how about some pool and sunshine? Thanks to the wind the past few days, there's leaves at the bottom of the pool, but it was looking pretty darn good on Sunday when I floated around for the afternoon. Come a long way since last year. Mom and Dad: please note use of hooks in the background!
Pool shack, also looking super cute with hanging baskets of red petunias (that hopefully won't get eaten by budworms this year).
The baskets hung on the fence (toward the street) are bigger, so there's petunias and blue salvia in those. I'm curious to see how the combination turns out.
I was running back across the street from the neighbors' a few days ago, and I thought to myself for the first time since I've lived here, "Hey, this place doesn't look so bad."
Perhaps you agree? In any case, it doesn't look NEAR as bad as it did a year and a half ago.
I've mastered the Photomerge Panorama option of Photoshop elements to bring you this gem. A nice picture of the back yard, which, again, doesn't look that bad. At this point, I'll take it.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Please, step into my office

Well, it's almost finished! Here's what I did this weekend...

Turns out two coats of blue was mostly enough. There are a few spots that could stand to have a third coat, but since so much of the paint is covered by furniture anyway, I decided it would be ok. I'm also going to be doing a little shuffling when the chair rail goes up, so if I decide that it really needs another coat of Midnight Dream (the paint color), I can do it then.
After painting and reattaching the baseboard (in above and below pics -- quarter round will be installed at some point)...
I swept and scrubbed the floors to clean up any stray wallpaper bits and glue. Fun fact: a little WD-40 will remove dried Kilz2 primer from a wood floor. Painted the door wall white -- it too could probably do with another coat, which I might do this afternoon.
I think the blue looks really sharp. It's very crisp and dark and gives the room a nice weight.
Weight is good, since it gets so much light. Having the walls be almost completely white (if I'd done white wainscot instead of painting) would have been too much, for me anyway. I particularly love the contrast of the blue with the stripes of the curtains and patterning of the wallpaper.
And the three shadowboxes that I made a few years ago for our previous home in Pasadena finally got to come out of storage. They're on the left, and are a PERFECT fit in this room. The top has four shells, the middle is a piece of coral, and the bottom is a sand dollar.
One more...ahhh..love it!!
Ok, enough inside. This morning, I was delighted to discover one of my white pumpkins has sprouted! (Crappy pic...)
This is one of the pots next to our front porch. This flower is called mimulus (aka monkey flower) and I saw it in Boothbay Harbor a few years ago. I took a picture, but thought I'd never be able to identify it and buy some. The Grange had them a few weeks ago, and I was SO excited. The color is unbelievable, and they're just right for the part-sun location in front.
Around back again, two of my dahlia tubers have sprouted. One's picture below...
And my sunflower seeds have also sprouted. I'll give them another week or two in the bed, then transplant to the fence behind the pool and other places they can reach their full FOURTEEN FOOT height.
This is the honeysuckle I brought with from California. I transplanted it last year next to a dead tree so that it'll grow up it and look like a honeysuckle tree eventually (and attract hoards of hummingbirds right outside my office door!). It's doing quite well.
Lastly, I got a great deal on these hanging baskets, which have little red petunia starts and blue salvia starts in them. More to come on those, eventually.

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Snap Judgments

In the last few days, Todd and I decided it was time to finish my office. I think it's really weird that this is how most things get done around here -- one of us just decides to rip down wallpaper, paint, whatever. The bathroom was the same way: "Wanna redo the bathroom?" "OK." Commence demolition.

Anyway. You may notice from the photo below that the last papered wall in my office (sporting a jaunty gold and brown pattern) is now gone. Todd and I each took a side of the door, and since it was only (only!) two layers, it didn't take too long.
My office was back together for all of a day and a half, before we went to Home Depot for a gallon of navy blue paint (last night). I also brought along the gallon of pink primer we had left over from the living room, in hopes that they could tint it purple or something so I could use it (they did). FYI, dark colors require a tinted primer, or it's at least recommended. Because I did a somewhat mediocre job removing all the wallpaper paste, I figure the primer helps the paint adhere a little better.
and angle number two...

I actually kind of liked the purple. It reminded me of a color that I wanted to paint my room as a child (but was not allowed to). I think it's possible that I'm working out these childhood color-deprivation issues all over my house (blue bedroom, red living room, plans for a yellow kitchen...)

Then, first coat of blue paint. This is Behr...navy blue. I actually don't know if I looked at the name of the color (a first) because we marched in to the store, plucked a few blues from the chips, compared for about 30 seconds, and decided on a color. No taping to the wall, no testing at home, and hopefully it'll be ok. So far, looks fine.

I have to say, I'm a lot happier with the coverage from this blue than I was with the blue in our room (which is more in the royal family than navy). Maybe it's the purple primer (rather than the gray we used in the bedroom), but one coat looked good (despite some streakiness, which is to be expected) and the second looks like that might be all it needs. Nighttime and light bulbs are deceptive, though, so I'm not holding my breath. I will say that it's a whole lot less of a pain to paint when you're not taping everything and trying to avoid trim and whatnot. I ripped off the baseboard last fall, so it'll get repainted separate from the wall.

This whole setup with the blue paint is a departure from the original plan. I was going to install hair-rail height tongue-in-groove pine paneling around the room, painted white. Well, sadly, I bought it too far in advance, let it sit in the garage and warp for nine months, and when I finally went to put it up, it was all bendy and weird. Then I thought I'd do white wainscoting, because it's less campy, but it was kind of expensive. So I had unpainted, unwallpapered plaster walls for a year, until I was inspired. Chair rail is cheap (.50/ft) and classic (a drawback with the paneling, which would have been questionable and rather permanent). WIN!

So, navy paint under the chair rail, the wall with the door outside will be painted white and possibly have a sailboat painted on it (in a very simple, monochromatic way, not like a mural), and BAM! Office complete!!

I'll put up some additional pix when it's all done. ALSO. Pictures of the garden are coming. I can't believe it's been three weeks since we got everything planted!

Monday, May 10, 2010

"Yardening"

As usual, this weekend held lots of yard work for us. Saturday, we put our raised beds in place and picked up the dirt to fill them with from Biomass (which is where you take all your wood clippings and other organic waste, and pay to drop it off, and they make dirt and compost and mulch out of it, and then you pay them to get it back). The bed in the foreground is ours, and the one behind it is Steve and Betsy's. We lined the bottoms of both with dry leaves, in hopes of keeping some of the moisture contained (and adding to the quality of the soil, as the leaves break down over time). Yesterday, in between brief torrential downpours, I planted our little basil plants and some onion sets, leftovers from the neighbors (thanks, guys!), in our bed.There's a nice closeup of the basil. It's from Trader Joe's, which I visited with Cat on Friday in Bend. It smells amazing, and I'm really excited to harvest and eat it.

Our neighbors' garden, in case you are interested, looks like this:

Personally, I don't think lettuce and sugar snap peas have any business looking that good (is it trying to get eaten? Because that's what I want to do to it), but maybe I'm just jealous they got started sooner than we did.

In other yard-related news, we were chatting with Tom, who mentioned that he has a friend who can hook us up with some lovely mulch, like this:which is verrry exciting, because it involves one of our favorite words: FREE. Also, because we have a lot of things we are planning on mulching. I sprayed weeds this weekend in the yard and all our flowerbeds out front, in hopes that they will die soon and we can mulch over them.

Let's see, what else...I'm really proud of my ghetto water catchment system. That would be an old garbage can positioned under a gutter that has no downspout.

You can make fun of me if you want, and I'll understand, but bear in mind that I watered all the plants in my yard this weekend without turning on the hose. I would like to put in real catchment barrels (ideally that look nicer than old trash cans) at the downspouts around the house, and in my green dream world, dig a hole and put in a water-storage cistern to stash all that rainwater for irrigating in the summer. I suppose in the interim, my "system" will work fine.