The Garden Along Our Place

Iris

There is a small garden area off the side of our place. Three of our windows look out to it. It was so covered with weeds that after pulling all the weeds, tilling, and planting, our landlord’s wife asked if we had put up the winding stone barrier to contain the garden. She’s really quite thrilled that we planting there as well as in all the pots she gave us. The dirt along the house isn’t very good. Even after after 1 bag of top soil, 1 bag of compost, some organic clay buster, and adding some manure, it’s just not that great. In hindsight more topsoil and compost should have been added. I guess there is always next year. But before we give up, check out what we did…

Jim Tilling the Dirt

My buff handsome hubby tilling.

Irises and Hens and Chicks

Here is part of the tilled garden, hens and chicks succulents, and irises.

Hens and Chicks

Aren’t they so lovely?!

Ready to Plant

Dirt ready for planing seeds (with leftover plastic spoons from our BBQ as labels), seeds and raspberry bushes from Marissa, more seeds from Kate and Sita, and my trowel (Jim is adamant that it’s not a shovel).

Seeds

What a perfect way to give away seeds!

Arugula Seeds

Aren’t they so lovely? Each type looked so different from the others.

Jim Reading in the Hammock Made by Rick

After both the community garden and our home garden planted Jim and I enjoyed the lovely weather. Check out some of the pots:

Flowers

Flowers

Flowers

Mint and Rosemary

Organic Edible Flowers

Organic Herbs

More Herbs

Basil and Hydrangea from Alisha

Everything is looking much more vibrant than when I last took the photos, but I wanted to document the early stages. About a week after planting the seeds some of the radishes started to poke up (see below). The arugula, kale, squash, and peas are looking good too, but the beets, romaine and spinach haven’t appeared. Maybe they won’t. I’m not too worried as I’ve got all of those things growing in the community garden. Sadly, the raspberry bushes didn’t make it. The weather has been too chilly and they just couldn’t take it. I am sad about this as they were transplants from Marissa’s garden and I also love raspberries. Along with the veggies, we bought some and then were also gifted some flower seeds. They have been dispersed throughout our home garden and many are starting to appear! More photos later!

Radishes

Triple Whammy Party

by sam on June 20, 2010
in Abundance, Boulder, Food, Friends, Silliness

Jim with my Birthday Vegan Chocolate Parfait

Within a few days of each other Jim celebrated an anniversary, I turned 27, and we moved into our new place. It was the perfect occasion for a party. Luckily the weather was beautiful so we grilled and ate lots of other great food (lots of vegan options)! It was so fun to catch up with friends and just enjoy spring. (As a side note: for the first time I feel weird about getting older.)

South of the Border Inspired Salad (Chopping and Presentation a la Jim)

Delicious salad made by SimJam.

The scene before people arrived

Of course our friends didn’t start showing up until 30 minutes after we said we’d start grilling.

Marc the Grill Master (of all thing meat)

I love Marc, and I appreciate his interest in being the grill master, because after the veggies were done I didn’t want anything to do with the grill. Some people have to have their meat.

Rick Making Burgers

Rick making burgers. Poor guy, I threatened him not to get his meat hands on any of my stuff.

Jim and Tom

Jim with sickly yet cheerful Baby O

Love these chairs

Chandler, Stevie, Sarah, Annabel, and Tom

Annabel gave us the coolest glass platter that is perfect for our coffee table as a housewarming gift. It’s so colorful! She also gave me the sweetest silver friendship necklace for my birthday. (I’m wearing it in the photos). Funny thing was that the weekend before we were at her housewarming party, though she actually bought a house. I had the most incredible experience with her while helping her shop for her party. With out all the details, I found out that her mother (who passed away last year from brain cancer) was the most influential woman in my life (other than my own mother) in terms of instilling a passion for food within me. This revelation lead me to drop all my self-doubt about pursuing a career in food (and both of us crying in the middle of Super Target). It was beyond incredible. Here’s a photo of us at her party:

Jim and I with Annabel at her housewarming party

Tom, Josh, and Riley being thugs

Here are some of my friends forgetting that they are white and live in Boulder, therefore negating any toughness they may have.

Oh Gabe

My friend Gabe became a vegan while we were in Costa Rica! Love this rascal.

Natalie on her towel

Natalie looking oh so summery. She brought us a flowering violet orchid that reminds me of Costa Rica.

Adam and I

So great that Adam came up from Denver. Wish he’d move back to the bubble!

Audrey, Eric, Rick, and Natalie

This became the “smoking section.”

Marissa and Lita

Lita and Sasha both went crazy when they saw Marissa. She and her husband Jeff used to watch the girls for us when we’d go away. Even though they hadn’t seen each other in 8 months the girls remembered and greeted her with exuberance.

Lisa, Ashley, and I

Lisa (on the left) has been my biggest mentor and hero since we met almost nine years ago. She and Ashley are gems.

Marissa kindly giving me seeds

Marissa kindly asked me what seeds I’d like to have as a housewarming gift to plant in our gardens. Isn’t she the cutest?!

Judy, Joanne, Eliza, and Alisha

Baby Eliza is the cutest chunk of a baby you’ll ever see. She’s so social and smiley. Alisha gave us a gorgeous blue hydrangea plant that reminds me of Costa Rica.

Sasha and Cecilia getting acquainted with Kates supervision

Kate, used to work with Jim at HP and also used to live in our place. (She and Sita just bought a place in Lafayette.) We were thrilled to get in touch with the landlord before they had started advertising.

Me, Natalie, Jim, Kate, Sita, Cecilia, and Kurt

Natalie, Kurt, and Cecilia are our next door neighbors (and rock). Cecilia loves Sasha and Lita. It was great that Kate and Sita came from Lafayette as we didn’t get to chat with them much at their housewarming party the week before. Fun for them to be able to see the work that was done on the place and Kate’s old neighbors and friends.

Cards and Cigars

This didn’t last long as most people were more interested in going to play frisbee golf.

It was such a fun party, with lots of great friends, food, and lovely weather. It’s times like these when it’s nice to be back in Boulder and I don’t miss the beach in Costa Rica so much.

The Community Garden

Me in my Mom's Garden as a Kid

Our friends Heidi and Noah petitioned to their HOA to build a community garden. It passed and they/we built one. Not many people were interested in it so we were granted a generous amount of space. The sides of the raised beds and the door are made of old fencing that their HOA replaced, the soil and rebar came from Heidi and her connections with the Broadway construction project (she had a buddy dump the dirt over the fence, and some of the fencing was donated too. Noah and another guy along with Jim’s help did most of the work. Then, between Noah and Heidi and Jim and I, we got a bunch of bags of top soil and compost and Noah got some llama manure. Before adding all those goodies to the dirt, we sifted all the large rock out of the dirt with a giant sift Noah made. The soil is awesome!

The Boulder Community Gardens had a plant sale a few weekends in a row and Noah, Heidi, Jim and I went wild and purchased a ton of plants and seeds. It was way too cold for a couple weeks after getting the plants so they had to stay inside. (It has snowed 6 times since we got back at the end of April!) When it got warm enough we planted. Most of our plants and seeds went to the community garden, but the herbs and edible flowers were planted in pots at our place. We’ve also planted some more seeds at out place. I see the whole thing as being a massive science experiment on growing and sustainability. I planted a tea garden at the preschool I used to work at, have had potted flowers, tended to the preschool’s garden, and planted lilies last year at our old house (which have grown back this year!) but other than that I haven’t had a proper garden since I was a kid (and that was really my mom’s garden). I’ve been so impressed by the generosity and hard work of our friends. It’s fun to be apart of something you do as a group, each of us checking on the garden to see if things need to be watered, pruning, weeding, and replanting when critters have dug things up. It really turned out to be an awesome garden.

These first photos were taken a few days after planting. Jim and I love riding our bikes there when it’s warm.

The Community Garden (early stage)

Garden Tools

Wheelbarrow, Dirt Sifter and Jim Working on My Bike

Our Plants A Couple Days After Planting

Lettuces

Blackberry Bush, Rhubarb and Seeds

Peppers and Such

Tomato Plants

Tomato Plant Close Up

Pruning

Being Silly

Jim's Action Shot of Me

Two weeks after planting we stopped by the same time our friends Noah and Heidi did. They had planted a week earlier but our seeds had started to sprout too!

Heidi and Noah

Lettuces after 1 week

Seeds Sprouting after 1 Week

Noah Pruning and Weeding 2 Weeks After We Planted

Three and a half weeks after planting we were delighted to find that our tomato plants were bearing fruit and our cucumber and yellow squash seeds were sprouting (which we had only planted a week before)! The rest of the plants really burst with life.

Garden 3 1/2 Weeks After Planting

Peacevine Tomatoes

Yellow Pear Tomato

Legend Tomato

Cucumber Seeds Sprouting

Squash, Zucchini and Peppers

Yellow Squash Seeds Sprouting

Broccoli and Eggplant

Some of the Lettuces

Red Leaf Lettuce

Onion, Carrot and Beet Seeds Sprouting

Jim and I went again today to check on them and even with cold temperatures and 3 days of rain everything looks great. I’ve been educating myself on how to care for plants, esp. pruning and harvesting. It’s quite fun. One of our spinach plants is ready for it’s first harvest!

Setting Up Our New Place

Our new place is a walk-out basement of a 100 year old house. Our address includes “1/2″ which I find to be charming as if it belongs in Alice in Wonderland. Luckily all our windows look straight out above ground. That makes the space so light and cheerful.

We lucked out with this place by knowing the previous tenant (who just bought a house). The landlord was born in this house and then moved to the house next door when he was young. He inherited both houses when his mother passed away. Another thing about our landlord is that he’s hard of hearing and very adamant about us being non-smokers (which we both are, thankfully) as both his parents died of lung cancer. He and his wife (with the help of some others) did a ton of work on the place before we moved in, including new carpet and linoleum, paint on the walls, adobe-like plaster on a few walls, and a new stove and hood. His wife also gave us a bunch of huge pots to plant in which I was ecstatic about. The funny thing about our landlord is that he really likes all the old details (check out the cupboards) that keep the place looking like it did when he was a boy. Our landlord’s main handy-person is this man who rents a room in a trailer, wears a crystal around his neck, talks like Jimmy Stewart, and communicates with cats via his higher self. He’s pretty much awesome and loves Sasha and Lita.

So our place is pretty great. It’s 3 blocks from my favorite Sip House, Ideal Market (AKA mini Whole Foods), and a bunch of other neat things. We’re also 5 blocks from Pearl Street, which is rad. It’s been great to walk down to Pearl for dinner or to meet up with friends. As for the house itself, we’ve got a great big open yard that we share with the house next door. It’s got a lovely apple tree (which is great to hang a hammock from), a picnic table, and along one side of the house there is garden space. Inside it’s about 600 square feet, 1/4 the size of the townhouse we owned before leaving for Costa Rica, but we’ve found we don’t need much space. We still haven’t really used the space off the kitchen. Jim pointed out that no matter where we live, we always don’t use one space. My favorite part of our place is our red claw-foot tub.

The first night at our place (which was the day the stove was put in) I cooked up a curry meal for us and we watched a movie, before sleeping on our blow-up mattress (which we did for almost 2 weeks before getting out bed). We hadn’t moved everything into the place yet, so check out the plants on chairs, and our nifty laptop console.

Curry Makings

Our Tiny 20 Inch Stove/Oven

Yellow Curry, Brown Rice, and Rice Pudding

Jim Eating Curry When We're Half Moved In

The following day Jim built a fence for the girls. Actually, it’s really for us, so that we don’t always have to put on a lease when they just need to go potty or want to lay in the dirt in the sun.

Building The Girls' Temporary Fence

Check out that cute butt!

Moving Rocks

Some of the Girls Space

The girls were very interested in sniffing everything out in their new hang out place. They approved!

Sweet Girls Checking Out Their New Space

The Nifty Gate Jim Rigged

While Jim put the last touches on the fence I planted in the massive pots we were given. Lots of flowers, including organic edible ones, and a bunch of fresh herbs, which took 2 weeks to become fully vibrant and cheerful.

Our Lovely Potted Plants

My next post will be on the garden space along the side of our house, but here’s some lovely Irises that were there already.

Our Irises

Chandler’s Birds

babyomen

Our dear friends BCO (Brad, Chandler, and Baby O) have had some exciting new life in their back yard, more specifically in a nest on top of a vent that juts out from the back of their house.

mamabird

Chandler had noticed the nest and then saw the eggs in it while I was helping her watch O while she planted her garden.

Larry, early, big and baby 1

Not to long after she very carefully checked on the birds again, getting pelted in the head by the father. She later wen out again to get the last photo, protecting her head with a sweatshirt. Both Momma and Daddy Bird are very protective and have even spent afternoon keeping an eye on Chandler through their sliding door. If this isn’t spring I don’t know what is.

Larry, early, big and baby 2

***All photos taken by Chandler of BoCoBaby***

« Previous PageNext Page »