Like the earth itself, our backyard has evolved over the years.
The Jungle Age predated our arrival in 2003.
Our first kid arrived in 2004, beginning a ten year period known as The Broken Toy Age.
This overlapped with The Weed Age (which continues to this
day).
By 2014, I finally had some time and energy for the yard,
thus beginning The Great Gardening Age.
There were years—maybe a decade!—in which the yard was
largely ignored and had to fend for itself. I had three little kids and 95% of
my energy went toward keeping them alive. Any yard project that required more
than twenty minutes at a time was penciled into the next decade.
But life is a little less hectic now that the kiddos are
older, and gardening has become one of my favorite hobbies. On weekends you’ll
find me covered in dirt, and I love it!
2003: the northeast corner of our yard before any changes. |
A year ago I considered posting about our yard projects but
I was concerned that the timing was wrong. I did not want the post to come off
as insensitive or braggy, right in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic. My
friend M said that it might give people a boost to see something bright and
colorful during a time when our spirits felt bleak. Still, I decided to wait, and
I truly hope this piece comes across as cheerful and encouraging rather than as
a brag fest.
Over the years, we enjoyed various aspects of our yard. We
liked that the previous owners planted trees—they wanted this place to feel
like home, rather than a temporary
stop. The apricot tree was pretty and produced a handful of apricots (one year
it yielded exactly one apricot, but why split hairs?). The overgrown tangle of
trees and weeds provided nooks and crannies for our kids to explore when they
were tiny. There were many hiding places for Easter eggs. It worked for us, so
why change things? Plus, I was super busy with the kids and the yard was not an
urgent matter. But at some point the kids grew and I could do a few “me”
things, like working more in our yard.
We added a few plants over the years, but the biggest change
came in early 2018, when Hubby built a home office in our back yard. Hubby and
I are both DIYers, and although I helped a little, he built it himself and did
an amazing job. The color scheme and design matched our house, and soon I felt
like it had always been there.
Winter 2018: Hubby's office is in the same corner that you see in the photo above. |
I decided to build a garden wall, as the office met the patio in a way that seemed too abrupt. Plants would soften the transition. I discovered that I love building planters, which helped organize the yard. The geometry of the concrete block planters contrasted well against the organic shapes of the flowers and plants.
The garden wall / planter I built below Hubby's office. |
Once the office was in, I started looking at the yard differently. I wanted the yard to reflect us, rather than the previous owners. The apricot tree was dead, and needed to be removed. I took a long look at the yard and realized that I wanted to take out three other trees, too. Yet, I was racked with guilt because taking out four trees (even if one was dead) felt wrong to me. One tree was a dwarf orange, only waist tall, so it wasn’t like I was killing an ancient Sequoia tree. But still, I felt badly. Eventually I decided that it was okay for us to make our yard how we want it. Removing the trees opened up the yard a lot, and my ideas started flowing. (Side note: if you are a very stubborn person, you can cut down trees by yourself, refusing help from anyone else. You need a reciprocating saw, and it’s possible your hands will be unusable for two days afterward, too sore or cramped to do anything. But it can be done!)
The back fence after trees were gone, before I added planters. |
2019: trees are gone. Wall is found. Pool is deflated. Dirt is...dirt. Mama is tired. |
2019--Building a planter against the back fence. |
Planter wall, including some cuttings from friends. |
In 2019 I made a peacock garden mosaic, and built two more concrete block planters. I also bought gray cement pavers to put in front of Hubby’s office, but I got distracted and they sat in a heap in the yard for months.
Some of the pavers I painted. Mixing and matching is marvelous and magnificent. |
More pavers. Keeping it lively. |
March 2020: the pavers are not finished but at least I started. |
During the stressful, isolated months from 2020 through 2021,
gardening was a lifejacket for me. In the early months of COVID-19, I didn’t go
into stores, so I wasn’t buying materials or plants. But container gardening
allowed me to rearrange plants out back, and working in the dirt was soothing
to my soul. Doing something that made our yard look good gave me a boost during
the pandemic, when I felt helpless and anxious.
2020 |
I used river rock from the front yard to fill in spaces. |
Summer 2020. |
Lessons I’ve learned and want to share:
1.
When you are redesigning or refreshing a space,
see if there are existing elements that work for you (like our brick planter).
If so, use some of what is already there. This cuts down on cost, effort and
time. Plus, it makes you think more creatively because you are mixing old with
new, rather than using a blank slate, and you often you get a more interesting
effect.
2.
It’s okay to make your space your own. If you
decide to remove something, be it a wall or tree or whatever it is, you’re not
a criminal! It’s your space and it should reflect you.
3.
Be patient and celebrate each finished stage,
big or small. It’s tempting to want everything to look finished right away. Who
doesn’t like immediate gratification? But when a project happens in stages, I appreciate each
victory, thereby extending my satisfaction.
4.
Try your hand at DIY projects. They are
gratifying because they have your stamp on them. Plus, you save money (sure,
they take more time but think of this time as in investment).
And so, to keep things relatable, here’s a list of what else
was not pictured: weeds, occasional doggy doo, plant leaves with chomp holes
from caterpillars, dog hair on the edge of the patio, more weeds, a gopher
hole, supplies jumbled in the side yards, spider webs, bird poop on the
planters, rotting premature persimmons that fell on the ground…and more weeds.
Years ago someone said something a bit snarky to me. A
mutual friend described all the creative things I do and the other lady said,
“Oh, well, I don’t have time for all that.” Her righteous tone implied that I
spent time on meaningless stuff, whereas she was doing important things. I
shook it off but years later, I almost feel a need to explain my life. Yes, I
am lucky that I can spend time on my yard. Sure, it’s not essential, but it
brings me joy. My family comes first. I love teaching. I do the chores that
need doing. But in my leftover time, I love gardening. It calms me, and it
provides beauty (and sometimes tomatoes). My yard looks different from how it
used to because I put time in daily. These progress photos span years, so this
is not an overnight makeover.
Spring 2021 |
Especially in the early days of parenting, I didn’t
understand that self care is vital. Gradually I learned that it is important to
do something that feeds your soul. If it brings you peace and doesn’t hurt
others, do it! Maybe it’s playing music. Maybe it’s going to ball games. For
me, it’s reading and gardening. Find whatever it is that feeds your spirit.
Summer 2021. |
I hope this backyard refresh brightened your day, and I’ll see
you again soon, here on the blog. School is starting up and before long I will
have loads of student art to share. ‘Til then, I will be moving potted plants
around, cursing at the weeds, occasionally finding a Hot Wheels car or Lego brick under
layers of dirt, and watching Mother Earth work her magic…