Backyard reclamation project: cozy courtyard

Deep summer is when laziness finds respectability.
– Sam Keen, American author, professor, and philosopher

It’s all done now – the project that claimed every waking moment of my life the last month. What started as a dianthus garden in a corner of the backyard (it was the only place in the backyard where plants would not be smashed by basketballs and teenaged boys) bloomed into a backyard reclamation project and finally evolved into a cozy courtyard. My only regret is that I didn’t take “before” photos so that everyone outside of my family can appreciate the transformation as much as we can.

My new dianthus garden in a corner of the backyard, with poppies and an unknown plant.

I don’t really have a “before” shot before I moved the containers from other areas of the yard to this spot for the dianthus garden, but this is as close as I can get to what the corner of the yard looked like before the transformation. The composter is gone, as are the discarded building materials.

So just imagine a concrete square outside of our garage and utility room. As recently as two months ago, a neglected but thriving rosemary bush near the side yard gate planted by Joe, the first owner of the property, took up about one-eighth of the concrete square. I engaged in two separate hacking sessions to get the very hardy bush to its current small tree-like shape. When the weather got warmer, I looked longingly at our rusted patio furniture in the dust bowl of our center backyard – a table with four chairs and a chaise lounge, which Rex, in his younger, energetic days, used more than any of us, as his lookout for squirrels and neighborhood cat intruders. Discarded building materials comprising pipes and boards and a broken-up plastic bin full of sprinkler parts littered the concrete square. I threw them over the north side gate on the strip of concrete that harbors stacks of leftover slate from our south side garden, and dragged the patio furniture to the space.

A view of the courtyard from the back side.

A view of the courtyard from the back side – with Isabella enjoying it as well. Shielded on three sides, even when the Bay Area fog and wind roll in, the courtyard is protected and the peach and cherry trees isolate us from our neighbors.

A bistro table and set of chairs find a home on the opposite side of the fence, along with potted flowers, metal sculptures and a string of solar lights.

A bistro table and set of chairs find a home on the opposite side of the fence, along with potted flowers, metal sculptures and a string of solar lights.

That worked for a bit. When it was my turn to pick up Isabella and her friends from drama camp in the afternoons, the girls retreated to the chaise lounge and chairs, eating cups of ice cream in the warm weather, which was unusual for our June. That’s when I started imagining a cozy courtyard, filled with blooming flowers in containers, not just in the dianthus garden, but on the other side, up against the side of the house. I looked around the rest of the yard to see what I could spirit away or rescue to build into the courtyard. I wanted to use what we already had in our yard first in order to be green. A beloved rusted “garden” sign, which was hidden behind a small tree in our side garden found a new home on our red fence, and an angel, an acorn, and a bird feeder all migrated to the new space.

Transplanted garden sign and its new companions on the fence - a string of solar lights and a metal winged insect.

Transplanted garden sign and its new companions on the fence – a string of solar lights and a metal winged insect.

An angel watching over the dianthus containers.

Our angel, sheathed in gossamer cobwebs, watches over the Italianate containers of dianthus.

Smooth small river rocks that once graced the base of our trees, which Rex moved around as some form of dog amusement, covered up the dirt in between the containers with the dianthus. I then filled up the remaining dirt spaces with orange decomposed granite, leftover from the slate walkway in our side-yard garden. I grabbed some wedges of slate and patterned them around the rosary bush. We reclaimed the slab of leftover granite from our bathroom remodel that stood for years in a corner of the backyard and moved it over – with help from our wheelbarrow – and leaned it against the fence. Now things were starting to take shape.

Our "found" art - leftover slab of granite - against the fence.

Our “found” art – leftover slab of granite – against the fence and stone acorn next to the tamed rosemary bush.

Muted blue-green containers of colorful flowers and a row of dahlias behind them.

Muted blue-green containers of colorful flowers and a row of dahlias behind them.

We brought a few more containers from other parts of the backyard to the courtyard, and we turned out the very impacted alstroemeria plants and gave them new life – hopefully! – in the front yard. To the dianthus garden, I added scabiosa caucasica “Fama Blue,” scabiosa caucasica “Perfecta Alba” (snowy white!), catananche caerulea “Cupid’s Dart” (a sky blue) dinner-plate dahlias (purple, red, and white) and miniature dahlias (purple and yellowish orange), and more dianthus. My friend Shawn gave me a cup full of sweet pea seeds, and I’m hoping they pop up and climb the trellis that I found in our utility room and propped up next to one of the containers. Jacob helped me break up the hard clay soil with a pick ax so I could plant the dahlias in the ground.

Details, details - smaller vases to house short-stemmed flowers. I added a flat, rectangular vase on the shelf that braces an umbrella stand for a floral tiered effect.

Details, details – smaller vases to house short-stemmed flowers. I added a flat, rectangular vase on the shelf that braces an umbrella stand for a floral tiered effect.

Flowers and candles brighten up any table setting. I liked the bubbled texture of the hurricane glass, which makes the candlelight dance. I found this wonderful iron stand holding a circle of fused glass bottles, which make it easy to create a bouquet that spilleth over, from Flowerland.

Flowers and candles brighten up any table setting. I like the bubbled texture of the hurricane glass, which makes the candlelight dance. I found this wonderful iron stand holding a circle of fused glass bottles, which make it easy to create a bouquet that spilleth over, from Flowerland.

He also helped me repaint the patio furniture. We washed, scrubbed, sanded down, and washed the seven pieces, and I spray-painted them to a smooth matte black. They looked brand new, and I broke out the navy-and-white-striped chair and chaise lounge pads that had been stored in the garage for years. Jacob had to scrub the concrete where I had gotten some black spray paint on the concrete, but the problem was that now there were clean spots amid the layers and years of grime in the concrete. So, being anal retentive, I took a steel scrub brush and scrubbed the dirt away – the manual version of power washing, but without the water. It looks so much better now, and with the large cracks patched, the courtyard floor is done.

Details, details - I spied this rusted cut-out metal butterfly from Westbrae Nursery.

Details, details – I spied this rusted cut-out metal butterfly at Westbrae Nursery. We reclaimed the smooth stones from the base of our trees and filled in decomposed granite around the dianthus containers.

Next, I imagined an additional smaller table and two chairs against one of the walls, which would accommodate having friends over. Happily, I found what I was looking for at a reasonable cost at Costco – along with the dinner-plate dahlias. I spied solid navy chair pads to complement the existing ones and little garden décor all on clearance at Target. Birdhouses on clearance at Jo-Ann Fabric & Craft Store hang stately from our peach tree. Candles and small vases for smaller blooms grace the tables, providing that extra decorating detail.

As Isabella sees it, until we put bird seed in the feeder, we have three birdhouses and a zero bird population under the peach tree.

As Isabella sees it, until we put bird seed in the feeder, we have three birdhouses and zero bird population under the peach tree.

I wanted to showcase metal sculptures made of recycled metal barrels made by artisans in the Haitian village of Croix-des-Bouquets on the two walls and fence. These Haitian metal sculptures are very popular in our area. I found mine at Jenny K (6921 Stockton Avenue, El Cerrito, CA 94530, 510.528.5350), Annie’s Annuals (740 Market Avenue, Richmond, CA 94801, 510.215.3301), and Westbrae Nursery (1272 Gilman Street, Berkeley, CA 94706, 510.526.5517). My chosen motifs were the tree of life, birds, dragonflies, and plants and flowers, And, of course, no garden should go without a string of solar lights along the fence to provide night-time wonder.

Of the five metal sculptures, this 3D flower and bird is my favorite.

Of the five metal sculptures, this 3D flower and bird is my favorite.

During this transformation, when it was close to being done, Isabella took to reading her books in the morning. The chaise lounge became Jacob’s destination when he took breaks from hacking at the hard clay soil. While scrubbing the concrete, I took my rare break and sat back and stared at the garden and the courtyard. We were finally getting our little backyard area to hang out. We eat our breakfasts and read the Sunday paper under the umbrella at the patio table. We take our lunches at the courtyard. Sometimes I feel like I’m at the Wildflower Café in Exeter (121 S. E. Street, Exeter, CA 93221, 559.592.2656), enjoying the sun and breakfast and, believe it or not, relaxing.

Another view of the courtyard from the back side - showing three of the metal sculptures, including the tree of life.

Another view of the courtyard from the back side – showing three of the metal sculptures, including the tree of life from Jenny K, and the row of dahlias.

I worked passionately on this project, getting every element in place, every position in the courtyard to have a pleasing view. I also wanted to get our cozy little courtyard completed by the time my cousin Janet and her husband Tim arrived for their annual Fourth of July visit. With flowers abloom on the patio table and in the colorful containers, David served a summer pasta of tomatoes, kalamata olives, anchovies, and herbs (mint, parsley, marjoram, and basil) and Isabella offered her home-baked chocolate chip cookies for a post-Oakland A’s game and fireworks meal for Janet and Tim. With dancing light from the votive candle and another candle under a hurricane glass, we stayed up late, listening to 70s music and catching up on the cool Bay Area night. Priceless.

I pulled the vintage tea cup from our side-yard garden to our courtyard. It was made by Janet and given to us years ago!

I pulled the vintage tea cup from our side-yard garden to our courtyard. It was made by Janet and given to us years ago!

We look forward to our little outdoor entertaining and then later for reading books and magazines, eating popsicles when the hot weather returns, serving gourmet meals, and being lazy outdoors, as these activities are what summers are made for.

Leisurely family meals and entertaining family and friends - that's why summers and courtyards exist.

Leisurely family meals and entertaining family and friends – that’s why summers and courtyards exist.

Summer obsession: flowers and more flowers

I must have flowers, always, and always.
– Claude Monet, founder of French impressionist painting

I’ve been away from blogging for two weeks – the longest stretch that I’ve not been blogging. In that time, I have become uber-obsessed with nurturing the garden. Although I’ve been tending to my flower garden for years – 17 to be exact, the last few years have seen minimal effort from me because of a lack of time.

Wide-ranging Portola bouquet.

Wide-ranging Portola bouquet.

June 20th Portola bouquet front side.

June 20th Portola bouquet front side.

June 20th Portola bouquet back side.

June 20th Portola bouquet back side.

A bountiful second weekly Portola bouquet.

A bountiful second weekly Portola bouquet.

This summer, I succumbed to the allure of the local nurseries – discovering or rediscovering nurseries closer to me than my usual haunt of Annie’s Annuals (740 Market Avenue, Richmond, CA 94801, 510.215.3301). I’ll come back in another blog post to my visits to a couple of rediscovered nurseries, but for now, I’m just going to share the fruits of my labor. I’ll also post on Friday my latest garden project, which is at the heart of my absence of blogging and the mother of all obsessions of the garden kind.

July 1st anniversary bouquet for my friends Kelly and Scott side 1. See the dianthus chomley farran's bicolor purple and red stripes at the top of the bouquet!

July 1st anniversary bouquet for my friends Kelly and Scott side 1. See the dianthus chomley farran’s bicolor purple and red stripes at the top of the bouquet and the explosion of dinner-plate white dahlias! It’s also the last of the peachy gladiolas.

July 1st anniversary bouquet for my friends Kelly and Scott side 2, with new deep purple dahlias.

July 1st anniversary bouquet for my friends Kelly and Scott side 2, with new deep purple dahlias.

July 1st anniversary bouquet for my friends Kelly and Scott side 3, featuring scabiosa caucasica 'Fama Blue.'

July 1st anniversary bouquet for my friends Kelly and Scott side 3, featuring scabiosa caucasica ‘Fama Blue’ to the left, the first time it’s really bloomed for me this summer. And the yellow dahlias are starting to bloom.

Here, I present the latest couple of weeks’ worth of flowers. I have a bounty, but I confess to having planted quite a number of new dahlias, while many of last year’s dahlias are still forming buds, and trying new perennials and annuals that self-sow to bring variety to the garden and future bouquets. Enjoy!

Bouquet close-up....

Bouquet close-up….

Almost-black burgundy dahlia, another dinner-plate variety.

Almost-black burgundy dahlia, another dinner-plate variety.

Red-and-white striped dahlia.

Red-and-white striped dahlia.

Spiked burgundy dahlia.

Spiked burgundy dahlia.

The new deep purple dahlia with its multiple fluted petals.

The new deep purple dahlia with its multiple fluted petals.

Lipstick-red dahlia.

Lipstick-red dahlia.

Close-up of the dinner-plate white dahlias - worth the wait.

Close-up of the dinner-plate white dahlias – worth the wait.

Garden abloom in June

An act of giving something to others is an art of flowering your heart.
– anonymous.

The calla lilies somehow volunteered on the other end of our side yard garden in spring and surprise me still with a bloom every now and then. Some of the dahlias came up early, and there are still many dahlias in early stages of development in terms of height and heads. The lilies in the front yard bloomed something fierce, though mine are starting to slow down and the shoots that are coming up are not as tall a they were in the spring. Even the hydrangea are taller and crowded with blooms.

As a result of all this early dancing in the garden, I was able to begin my delivery of bouquets a month earlier – to the winner of my donation to Portola Middle School’s auction this past February. The garden has been prolific, even as the dahlia blooms mysteriously become spent within a few days and are not as long-lasting as they have in previous years.

A late May bouquet, the front side.

A late May bouquet, the front side.

A late May bouquet, the back side.

A late May bouquet, the back side.

I have been an attentive gardener this early summer, something I haven’t been for years. I stopped the cucumber beetles and snails from feasting on the leaves and heads. The tattered leaves are giving way to full-bodied ones. I dutifully fertilize and continue to pinch back multiple dahlia heads on a stem. I clip away spent leaves and blooms. I water wilted flowers and feel great satisfaction when I check even an hour later and find their leaves refreshed and robust-looking once again. And I’m being handsomely rewarded with bouquet after bouquet.

Hello summer!

An early June bouquet, the front side.

An early June bouquet, the front side.

An early June bouquet, the back side.

An early June bouquet, the back side.

A mid-June bouquet.

A mid-June bouquet.

Small steps: exploring urban homesteading

A sacred way of life connects us to the people and places around us. That means that a sacred economy must be in large part a local economy, in which we have multidimensional, personal relationships with the land and people who meet our needs, and whose needs are met in turn.
– Juliana Birnbaum Fox, American environmental and social justice writer, educator and founder of the nonprofit Voices in Solidarity, from Sustainable Revolution: Permaculture in Ecovillages, Urban Farms, and Communities Worldwide

Isabella at Annie's Annuals in Richmond, CA.

Isabella at Annie’s Annuals in Richmond, CA.

Last year, my daughter, Isabella, wanted to hatch and raise chicks, so she watched YouTube videos and read blogs and articles on the Internet. She presented her case for investing in chicks, ticking off the benefits of raising chickens. When we said no, undeterred, she built a chicken coop out of a cardboard box and populated it with cotton-ball chickens and shredded-paper “hay.” After a few months of begging and being stonewalled, she gave up and shut down the coop, which had sat in the middle of her bedroom for weeks.

Her obsession with chickens was rekindled in May when we resumed our trips to East Bay Nursery (2332 San Pablo Avenue, Berkeley, CA 94702, 510.845.6490) and Annie’s Annuals (740 Market Avenue, Richmond, CA 94801, 510.215.3301), which has a chicken coop. The love of plants and gardening sprang forth for the both of us as it always does in spring, as reliably as my dahlias and other perennials. In addition to her desire to plant a vegetable garden in the backyard, the argument for raising chickens also returned, but this time around, I admit that I was intrigued with the benefits. Home-raised chicken eggs are superior in taste than industrially raised eggs. Chickens eat snails and other pests. They till the soil with their pecking. Their manure is excellent fertilizer. But at what cost in terms of infrastructure and management, especially when Isabella has been known to be fickle with pet obsessions and neglectful of her pet gecko?

While David gave a flat-out no, I thought the situation begged for a teachable moment. I gave her a long-term assignment, which begins now that school is out. She is to research the cost of setting up, resources, and time, and what the daily management entailed – beyond watching videos of Becky the homesteader on YouTube. She is also to show us better pet ownership by taking better care of her gecko (read: remove piles of poop from Puntos’ tank). By late winter, she will present her findings and we will determine next steps based on the findings, her commitment to the project, and, most importantly, our inevitable responsibilities. The goal is not to ultimately thwart her desire but to gather facts. I understand the benefits, but I don’t have the time to end up doing the work. I can be convinced IF she will take control, the benefits truly outweigh the drawbacks, the costs zero out, and I don’t have to do much at all.

Rachel Kaplan gave an inspiring presentation under the tent at Annie's Annuals.

Rachel Kaplan gave an inspiring presentation under the tent at Annie’s Annuals.

Fortuitously for Isabella, Annie’s Annuals presented an Urban Homesteading Design Lab this past Saturday given by Rachel Kaplan, who co-wrote a book with K. Ruby Blume about their and others’ efforts toward urban homesteading. Urban Homesteading: Heirloom Skills for Sustainable Living, is a tutorial for turning our urban environment into a diversified healthy ecosystem and embracing a regenerative culture. Rachel has moved away from using the term sustainability because she feels we ultimately cannot achieve sustainability. Rather, we need to adjust ourselves in the face of significant changes. We need to be resilient.

Rachel is an advocate of permaculture, which is based on three ethical principles: earth care (recognizing that the earth is the source of all life and that we are a part of it and not apart from it); people care (supporting and helping one another change our lifestyles to do no harm to us or the planet, including developing healthy societies that focus on earth care); and fair share (limiting our consumption of earth’s limited resources and using those resources in equitable and wise ways and working toward a just outcome for systems of our culture that have endured oppression and genocide).

Rachel emphasized that it doesn’t do any good if only one of us or a few of us live consciously. But if we are part of a growing movement, then what we do in our urban environment will make a difference. I didn’t have paper or pen on hand, and my memory is faulty, but I came away with a thing or two – including her book, which both Isabella and I look forward to reading and which Rachel happily signed at Isabella’s request. Rachel entreated urban homesteaders to create or grow more than they use. Fair share or sharecropping – if you can’t grow tomatoes but your neighborhood can and your neighbor would love the honey that your bees produce – encourages communication and connection with others and creates the proverbial village.

Following up on that concept of connectivity is achieving integration in all of our relationships – human, animal, and plant. Much to Isabella’s delight, Rachel introduced the concept of “stacking” functions by way of the chicken, which provides eggs, meat, feathers, and rich fertilizer. Chickens are many things at once, which is a good thing in a world of limited resources. That makes chickens valuable in this type of ecosystem. Rachel emphasized that stacking – benefits from just being  – is distinct from multi-tasking, which we all know is not a good thing on the body or brain.

Blueprint for an urban homesteading site.

Blueprint for an urban homesteading site.

Speaking of multi-tasking, Rachel also pointed out that homesteading shouldn’t be a burden. Don’t go big. Take small steps. Only do what you can. Only do what you have the resources and energy to do. Don’t kill yourself. She gave a great example. Rachel collects rain water, but it was a labor intensive and exhausting chore of hauling and distributing the water to her garden until she was able to get a system built to replace the manual steps. We need to be as efficient as we can with the least amount of resources, not unlike the mantra of reduce, reuse, recycle.

I came away interested in learning more about urban homesteading. Although it sounds hip and it’s certainly living a conscientious life, I can’t see myself becoming a beekeeper or installing a compostable toilet. I cringed just a little when she discouraged traveling by plane or long distances by car, which contributes to an expanded carbon footprint. But I do see ourselves setting up a small garden and being better about water conservation and conserving other resources. As for the chickens, I’ll wait for Isabella’s report when late winter is upon us. Stay tuned.

Dianthus love: back in the garden

Sir, the year growing ancient,
Not yet on summer’s death, nor on the birth
Of trembling winter, the fairest
flowers o’ the season
Are our carnations and streak’d gillyvors,
Which some call nature’s bastards: of that kind
Our rustic garden’s barren; and I care not
To get slips of them.
– William Shakespeare, English poet, playwright, and actor, from The Winter’s Tale

This past Memorial Day weekend was filled with research, youth baseball, and gardening – a healthy balance of all three. On Saturday, I took a break from watching my son play and focused on reading my research materials. I then took a break from research and made a bouquet for my friend Raissa.

Different kinds of flowers abound in this bouquet: the first gladiola, Bird of Paradise, hydrangea, alstroemeria, dahlia, scabiosa anthemifolia, and fern.

Different kinds of flowers abound in this bouquet: the first gladiola, dianthus, Bird of Paradise, hydrangea, alstroemeria, dahlia, scabiosa anthemifolia, a succulent, and fern.

I was so enthralled with my dianthus caryophyllus (otherwise known as a carnation) “Chomley Farran,” which has given me such beautiful blooms this spring (in fact, I don’t think it gave me much of anything the last number of years), that I was obsessed with planting more in my garden. I only have two dianthus flowers in the side yard.

Welcome to Annie's Annuals!

Welcome to Annie’s Annuals!

So off Isabella and I went to Annie’s Annuals (740 Market Avenue, Richmond, CA 94801, 510.215.3301). I made a beeline for the dianthus alley and scooped up six varieties: more “Chomley Farran,” dianthus caryophyllus “Ric Rac”; and dianthus perpetual carnation “John Barrington’s Bliss,” “Mad Hatter,” “White Rabbit,” and “Queen of Hearts.” Of course, we had to linger and check out the chickens, the other flowers, the garden ornaments, and compost.

A concrete structure decorated with found art at Annie's Annuals.

A concrete structure decorated with found art at Annie’s Annuals.

One of the women working at Annie’s Annuals told me I may see a few blooms from my tiny dianthus plants, if I’m lucky. More likely, my flowers will bloom next season. I’m an impatient gardener, but there will be plenty of other flowers to tend to this summer.

You can literally get lost in the rows and plants at Annie's Annuals.

You can literally get lost in the rows and plants at Annie’s Annuals.

My friend Lauren Ari's artwork throughout Annie's Annuals.

My friend Lauren Ari’s artwork throughout Annie’s Annuals.

I spent Sunday afternoon moving concrete pots that had been empty for years from various points in the backyard to a corner of the yard, filling the pots up and amending the soil, and finally putting the new plants in their new homes. I call it my dianthus garden. As I turned the soil over, mixing compost with clay soil, I felt refreshed. It has been a long time since I spent this much time working on the garden, planting plants as opposed to weeding and tidying up the side yard. Garden fever has struck. Dianthus love erupted. I look forward to my new favorite flower. I’ll get a few this season, but anticipate bouquets upon bouquets next summer. Welcome dianthus garden!

My new dianthus garden in a corner of the backyard, with poppies and an unknown plant.

My new dianthus garden in a corner of the backyard, with poppies and an unknown plant.

Bouquet time!

A flower blossoms for its own joy.
– Oscar Wilde, Irish playwright, poet, and author

We may have had a drought this past winter, but the strange weather has resulted in some of my flowers blooming earlier than usual. My alstroemeria, or Peruvian lily, which was a gift from my friend Raissa’s mom – a prolific gardener in her own right – has exploded this year in our front yard. Both hydrangea plants have gotten much larger and are also blooming like crazy, whereas in previous years they have been stingy with their flower production. Some of my dahlias, which don’t bloom until June, are already budding. I usually don’t start my weekly delivery of bouquets – my donation for my son’s middle school auction – until next month, but I figured why not share my bounty with the winning bidder, who happened to be last year’s winning bidder and was looking forward to another summer of an explosion of color in a vase.

This past weekend, in fact, I had enough flowers to create three bouquets – for my Portola Middle School auction winner, my friend Tana’s open studio (which was extremely successful!), and my friend Soizic. Now that is a bountiful week!

Variation on a theme: all three bouquets offered Bird of Paradise, alstroemeria, hydrangea, scabiosa anthemifolia, dianthus plumarius, and ferns.

Variation on a theme: all three bouquets offered Bird of Paradise, pink alstroemeria, pink hydrangea, brilliant blue scabiosa anthemifolia, magenta dahlias, pink and magenta dianthus plumarius, and ferns.

Spring offering: a bias cut mermaid-hem dress sprinkled with tiny flowers.

Spring offering: an old favorite of mine from years ago, a bias-cut mermaid-hem dress sprinkled with tiny flowers.

A spring breeze ruffles my comfy spring dress.

A spring breeze ruffles my comfy spring dress, which is complemented with strappy platform sandals and structured Cole-Haan handbag.

Details: Satya Jewelry earrings (NYC), Sundance cuff and stack of rings, Eskell fan ring (Chicago), and antique document holder-turned-necklace (Kate Peterson Designs, El Cerrito, CA).

Details: Satya Jewelry sterling silver earrings (NYC), Sundance cuff and stack of rings, Eskell fan ring (Chicago), and antique document holder-turned-necklace (Kate Peterson Designs, El Cerrito, CA).

Sandal weather!

Sandal weather!