Showing posts with label walkway arch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label walkway arch. Show all posts

Monday, April 1, 2013

Walkway Garden - Go!

Ever since installing our walkway arch last fall, I've been waiting for the ground to thaw (and the feet of snow we got in Kansas City to melt) so I could begin the front walkway garden I'd been dreaming of. I just so happened to be off work on Friday, and it just so happened to be sunny and beautiful, so I got to work.

Like many projects, the first step was the least fun, involving digging out all the sod that C has worked so hard on (don't worry, I had his blessing) and filling in the trench with mulch. It was total grunt work, so I was grateful to have a beautiful spring day (and a serious case of spring fever) to motivate me to get it over with.
  

We planned the shape of the beds to duplicate the shape of our walkway - which we have named "The Wine Bottle." The beds also maintain the strong symmetry of our home. The new lines add some nice drama to our sloping front yard, with the dark mulch accentuating the nice green grass.


C even said it looked like a baseball field. Whether he was just being sweet because I was so tired, or really meant it, it's pretty much the ultimate compliment from a former baseball pitcher.

I managed to wait two whole days, admiring my mulch, before I couldn't stand it anymore and picked up a few plants to get the garden started. It was Easter Sunday and my favorite local nursery was closed, so we did a quick Home Depot run and got a few staples to start adding shape to the walkway.


Enter four small sedge varieties, two blue fescue balls and two ranunculus, and things were starting to take shape. I laid them out carefully, alternating the sedge so that they won't crowd the walkway from both sides.


Everything is perennial except for the ranunculus, which is an annual in our area. I don't often put annuals in the ground, but these tiny plants with huge round blooms were just too cute to resist, and it's a bit too early for some of the other perennials I'm planning on adding.

I think as I add more plants I'll keep adding more sedge and fescue - I love the texture they provide, and they are nice tough plants to stand up to the intense sun of our west-facing front yard. 


So, here's the yard before the arch and flowerbeds:


And here it is now.


It's just a start, but a very satisfying one to me. As the weather continues to warm, I'll keep filling in the walkway at the top of the steps, get some climbers planted by the arch, and - most dramatically - plant the wide triangle portions of the beds that go down the hill.

Over the next few weeks, as the weather continues to warm, I'll add some topiary shrubs near the bottom of the hill:



Surrounded by more grasses, as well as some low-growing, tough flowers and ornamental cabbage.


 

And perhaps most importantly, some climbing english roses and clematis to grow up over the arch - adding beautiful blooms and fragrance to welcome visitors into the yard.  



I can't wait to get the rest of the space filled in and growing, but for now my few little grasses and flowers will have to hold me over. As well as some viola I packed into the window boxes on our front porch - I just couldn't resist!



Friday, September 21, 2012

Coming Soon

Happy Friday!

I just pulled the trigger on something I've been wanting to purchase for our house, literally for years. This beauty should be arriving on our porch sometime next week!


This simple metal arch will go over the front walkway into our house, with some simple landscaping clinbing it and reaching down the hill. Here's a very bad photoshop rendering of my plans:



The arch will go at the top of the steps, and the browned out lawn is where I will pull out the grass (sorry CJ) and landscape. The area goes over a slight hill (maybe about 3' from top to bottom) so it will make all the new plants very visible from the sidewalk and street. Here are some of the plants I have in mind.

Morning glory vine growing up the sides of the arch through the summer. It's an annual so it will die out in the winter, leaving only the pretty arch for you to see. The large blue flowers will look great with our house that will (hopefully) be all blue soon.


At the bottom of the hill, at the widest spot in the new landscaping area, I want to do a large prairie grass on each side of the walkway,


surrounded by white salvia and orange lantana (butterfly bush). I love the textures of these three together, and they'll make a good dramatic entry into our yard from the street. 



And finally, I'll plant a variety of low-growing perennials (about one foot tall) along the rest of the steps and walkway to fill the sides in.



 
This will add a lot of new color and interest to the yard, and I can't wait to get started. Come on UPS guy!!!

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