2010/09/05
Blame It All On My Roots
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The long labor day weekend is my first vacation this summer. Did I go to Michigan and sit on the beach and go shopping as invited? Nope. I stayed home and played in the dirt. That's what garden geeks do. Yesterday was a gorgeous 70 degrees so I toiled gardened from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m.
Blame it all on my roots because I am returning to the garden of my youth, one that combines flowers, fruit, herbs and veggies. I get very sentimental when I think of how our family was sustained by the good earth's bounty and the fruits of our labor .
Here's my new raised herb bed which I made with stones left from a previous owner.
The rosemary topiary in the center is the first I've kept alive with a grow light over the winter . The hen contains golden oregano and the other pot, thyme. I plan to use seeds in the Spring to fill the bed with basil, cilantro, chives, garlic and sage.
I couldn't resist these two cone-shaped boxwoods and will add long-blooming roses and other flowering plants to the border below.
Why is it that a garden seems small until you start digging? Clearing the area, removing and transplanting , hauling the stone from storage and filling the bed took me 7 hours. I thought I'd be sore the next day because I haven't been able to work outside much this extremely hot summer but the ole' bod rose to the task.
Although there's a lot of work yet to be done I think I've made a very good start.
Written by Carolyngail at Sweet Home and Garden Chicago All rights reserved
Blame it all on my roots because I am returning to the garden of my youth, one that combines flowers, fruit, herbs and veggies. I get very sentimental when I think of how our family was sustained by the good earth's bounty and the fruits of our labor .
Here's my new raised herb bed which I made with stones left from a previous owner.
The rosemary topiary in the center is the first I've kept alive with a grow light over the winter . The hen contains golden oregano and the other pot, thyme. I plan to use seeds in the Spring to fill the bed with basil, cilantro, chives, garlic and sage.
I couldn't resist these two cone-shaped boxwoods and will add long-blooming roses and other flowering plants to the border below.
Why is it that a garden seems small until you start digging? Clearing the area, removing and transplanting , hauling the stone from storage and filling the bed took me 7 hours. I thought I'd be sore the next day because I haven't been able to work outside much this extremely hot summer but the ole' bod rose to the task.
Although there's a lot of work yet to be done I think I've made a very good start.
Written by Carolyngail at Sweet Home and Garden Chicago All rights reserved
This post was written by: beemagnet77
BeeMagnet is a professional graphic designer, web designer and business man with really strong passion that specializes in marketing strategy. Usually hangs out in Twitter has recently launched a blog dedicated to home design inspiration for designers, bride, photographers and artists called HomeBase
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