What else is new?
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@brenda said in What else is new?:
@Mik
Oregon. The Pinots are so awesome there!Closest thing to fine Burgundy, very consistent quality and a whole lot less expensive. Fantastic stuff.
@Mik
We get some every time we drive home from Oregon. Last time, we had five cases of various wines, and our return trip was over Thanksgiving weekend. It got cold, really cold, especially overnight as we went back through Nort' Dakota, don'cha know.Told hubby we could NOT leave the wine in the vehicle (a Suburban). He said it would not hurt the wine. I said, "Yeah, but the bottles won't be happy! They're going to break."
He hauled five cases of wine into our hotel room every night, and out every morning, the entire trip from Oregon to Minnesnowta.
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Let us know more about the canvas we have to work with @brenda!
@jon-nyc beautiful. I love my wife, but appreciate having someone in your life who has the vision and style for that sort of thing. I am mediocre best at, but certainly lead the design (indoor and outdoor) and furnishing efforts here. My wife fully would admit she doesn’t have the creative or vision talent so is usually there to help make a decision between 3 options I’ll give, but how nice it is to have Mayla’s talent around!
I'll need to post my drawing that shows some of the design. It includes the retaining wall that will give some perspective on the grade change and such.
It will be interesting to get others' ideas. Our landscape designer thinks it's great, and wants to hire me. LOLOL
I think it's easier when you know the site and the style of the house. Also, we have been thinking about this for several years, visiting various public parks and such. We have been working on the plan in our heads for long enough to have many ideas, but more are welcome!
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@Mik
We get some every time we drive home from Oregon. Last time, we had five cases of various wines, and our return trip was over Thanksgiving weekend. It got cold, really cold, especially overnight as we went back through Nort' Dakota, don'cha know.Told hubby we could NOT leave the wine in the vehicle (a Suburban). He said it would not hurt the wine. I said, "Yeah, but the bottles won't be happy! They're going to break."
He hauled five cases of wine into our hotel room every night, and out every morning, the entire trip from Oregon to Minnesnowta.
@brenda yeah, sadly I would too. Too much invested to chance it.
We took a trip to Champaign IL a while back to go to Binny’s, my fave wine place for that last 20 years. They had MFR’s fave chard for about half price so we bought six cases and another three of miscellaneous Bordeaux and Rhône’s for me.
If in Portland, check out Great Wine Buys. They have an outstanding selection of all sorts of Oregon Pinots and they ship. I still buy a case or so a year from them.
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@brenda yeah, sadly I would too. Too much invested to chance it.
We took a trip to Champaign IL a while back to go to Binny’s, my fave wine place for that last 20 years. They had MFR’s fave chard for about half price so we bought six cases and another three of miscellaneous Bordeaux and Rhône’s for me.
If in Portland, check out Great Wine Buys. They have an outstanding selection of all sorts of Oregon Pinots and they ship. I still buy a case or so a year from them.
@Mik Thanks for the tip about where to look for some good stuff.
While it was no fun hauling the wine every night and morning, we are sure glad we did. Those are really lovely wines, and we (now) enjoy the story of hauling them home. Between the wines, our luggage, and our froggo, we had a lot to bring into the hotel every evening.
When it gets closer to November, remind me to tell how we celebrated Thanksgiving last year on our way back to Minnesota. We still laugh about it, and it's all just fun, no carrying of heavy wine boxes.
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I'll need to post my drawing that shows some of the design. It includes the retaining wall that will give some perspective on the grade change and such.
It will be interesting to get others' ideas. Our landscape designer thinks it's great, and wants to hire me. LOLOL
I think it's easier when you know the site and the style of the house. Also, we have been thinking about this for several years, visiting various public parks and such. We have been working on the plan in our heads for long enough to have many ideas, but more are welcome!
@brenda said in What else is new?:
I'll need to post my drawing that shows some of the design. It includes the retaining wall that will give some perspective on the grade change and such.
It will be interesting to get others' ideas. Our landscape designer thinks it's great, and wants to hire me. LOLOL
I think it's easier when you know the site and the style of the house. Also, we have been thinking about this for several years, visiting various public parks and such. We have been working on the plan in our heads for long enough to have many ideas, but more are welcome!
Fun stuff. Like you said, you know the property and you've been thinking about it long enough. Trust your gut. That being said, today I saw in the hardware store a real-wood (but connected) garden edging that I thought might be a cool idea in the future to really frame a nice garden area. (See below) We also are putting in some emerald arborvitae to replace some old shrubs we removed near the fence line. I was going to put in Hicks Yews (or Japanese Yews) because they are so shade tolerant, but the online warnings about how poisonous they can be to little kids and idiot dogs that eat them made me go back to the arborvitae.
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This is the edging I use with brick to create a mowing edge. I dig a base for polymeric sand to place bricks vertically on their side with additional bricks laid flat as the mowing edge. I sweep additional polymeric sand between the bricks.
Hubby loves this type of mowing edge, especially because I install it.
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This is the edging I use with brick to create a mowing edge. I dig a base for polymeric sand to place bricks vertically on their side with additional bricks laid flat as the mowing edge. I sweep additional polymeric sand between the bricks.
Hubby loves this type of mowing edge, especially because I install it.
@brenda said in What else is new?:
Hubby loves this type of mowing edge, especially because I install it.
I find that weeds and random bits of shrubbery provide a very effective mowing edge at a fraction of the cost.
Arguably mine don't look quite as nice as those.
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@brenda said in What else is new?:
@89th
I LOVE YOUR ARBORVITAE ARBOR!! That is too cool.Here is a pic from yesterday, I haven't pruned it this year but you get the idea of how the arch has grown in quite nicely, lol!
compared to 2021:
@89th said in What else is new?:
@brenda said in What else is new?:
@89th
I LOVE YOUR ARBORVITAE ARBOR!! That is too cool.Here is a pic from yesterday, I haven't pruned it this year but you get the idea of how the arch has grown in quite nicely, lol!
compared to 2021:
Some updated pics for @brenda after finally finishing the arborvitae trimming. I have to stand near the top of an 8-foot ladder then stretch with my 6-foot extension hedger to give these fellas a haircut at the top. I think they'd grow to 20-30 feet if I let them! They are about 15 feet tall as we speak now. My 2 year old is hanging onto the fence... in the afternoon the light comes in from behind and it really glows, which is nice in autumn with the colorful leaves in the background.
Next Spring's project is to re-set the flagstone and river rock pathway, don't think it's been touched in 20 years.
Also found this fella today nearby:
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@89th said in What else is new?:
@brenda said in What else is new?:
@89th
I LOVE YOUR ARBORVITAE ARBOR!! That is too cool.Here is a pic from yesterday, I haven't pruned it this year but you get the idea of how the arch has grown in quite nicely, lol!
compared to 2021:
Some updated pics for @brenda after finally finishing the arborvitae trimming. I have to stand near the top of an 8-foot ladder then stretch with my 6-foot extension hedger to give these fellas a haircut at the top. I think they'd grow to 20-30 feet if I let them! They are about 15 feet tall as we speak now. My 2 year old is hanging onto the fence... in the afternoon the light comes in from behind and it really glows, which is nice in autumn with the colorful leaves in the background.
Next Spring's project is to re-set the flagstone and river rock pathway, don't think it's been touched in 20 years.
Also found this fella today nearby:
Those look like cedars making the arch. Do you know what kind?
With effort we have had good luck with cedars despite the dryness and winter cold. Not sure whether the cedars we grow here would spread enough to make an arch like you have.
Looks great 89.
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That close in picture looks like it could be england somewhere. loL
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That close in picture looks like it could be england somewhere. loL
@taiwan_girl said in What else is new?:
That close in picture looks like it could be england somewhere. loL
Yes, in a garden of a large country house like Chatsworth or Castle Howard. Lovely
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Those look like cedars making the arch. Do you know what kind?
With effort we have had good luck with cedars despite the dryness and winter cold. Not sure whether the cedars we grow here would spread enough to make an arch like you have.
Looks great 89.
@Renauda said in What else is new?:
Those look like cedars making the arch. Do you know what kind?
With effort we have had good luck with cedars despite the dryness and winter cold. Not sure whether the cedars we grow here would spread enough to make an arch like you have.
Looks great 89.
Good eye, I think it is some cedar arborvitae variety, maybe a "junior giant thuja"? Hard to tell since I've had to trim it to control the width and height, but I know it grows like 5-9" per year. I am planting a few emerald green arborvitae in the backyard soon (9 to be exact) to fill in some gaps where we removed some old shrubs near the fence line. I'm looking forward to those, especially if they get some direct sun...arborvitae LOOOOOVE direct sun.