reclaimed from concrete

Two posts ago I men­tioned the Crack Gar­den, a win­ner in this year’s ASLA awards pro­gram that made me think in a new way about deal­ing with too much con­crete. Ryan over at Dry Stone Gar­den has some dif­fer­ent thoughts on the project that are worth a read.

porch-1

And as long as we’re talk­ing about reclaim­ing space from what used to be paved over, let me show you a few shots of my front porch. (Notice how fanat­i­cally I staged the space for these pho­tos, includ­ing coil­ing the leaky old hose off in the cor­ner. That’s a level of cre­ativ­ity you never see in the gar­den design mags.)

The area was all con­crete until two, three years ago. This was from the years when a lot of con­crete was poured with strips of wood to break the expanse of con­crete into neat rec­tan­gles. Nice idea, but over the years the wood rots. The con­crete shifts.

porch-from-above

So I dug out all the decay­ing wood with a chisel. Next John and I spent a cou­ple hours with a sledge­ham­mer remov­ing some of the big squares of con­crete, and then I poured black-pigmented cement to grout between some of the slabs.

I prob­a­bly didn’t do enough to pre­pare the ground. Why spend time doing that when there’s bare dirt where you can put plants? So in went some blue fes­cue in a grid pat­tern. (For­tu­nately a few of the plants died, break­ing up what would be a cliche of lit­tle blue fes­cues all lined up neatly in their rows.) And then a plant of red shisu for con­trast, two stand­ing stones, three step­ping stones, a pot­ted euphor­bia, gravel mulch and the coiled gar­den hose to com­plete the pic­ture. (The shisu is an herb that dies back every year, but it reseeds like crazy, let­ting you decide where you want some dark red foliage this year.)

porch-with-hose

Okay, ASLA. I’m ready for my Honor Award.

June 09 2009 | Categories: gardeninglandscape designmy garden | Tags: | 7 Comments »