Garrell Tiger Creek Cottage
7 years ago
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Oh phooey....what a mess I have now
Comments (16)Yes, I have trouble with my lawn guys, too. They whacked off the top of my new sasafrass tree, right after I had pointed it out to them and ask them not to whack it down! So, now I'm waiting to see if it will still put out two stems, one of which will have to be air layered, so I can make a new leader out the other. Ah, well. I'm not going to let them mow the back yard at all. I like to keep the weeds agrowin' there, cause the butts love the wildness of it. They have all but crowded out any grass now. I have some really nice patches of white clover, which is the host plant for sulphurs and other butterflies, and I cut a wide swath around them when I am touring the yard so I won't step on any butterflies in the making. I also have lots of coniclinum coelistinum (Gregg's mistflower) growing there, and some other wildflowers I've yet to ID. Tons of dandelions, which are some of the first nectar plants to appear in spring. Tons of Queen Anne's Lace, and something that looks like a plaintain, but doesn't have the ribbed leaves like plaintain, so don't know what it is yet. Sprouts of Virginia Creeper, and a little heart-shaped plant that is growing either like a vine or a tree, but can't tell yet. Then another plant on which the new foliage is kind of a reddish-gold. There are these pretty little wild daisies in late summer that the butterflies LOVE! Something in the asteraceae family anyway. I wish I could get rid of the liriope back there. I just hate that stuff. My little pinellias are up - they are so cute, and I let them seed, so hopefully I'll get a huge patch of them. My Ariseaema triphyllum is up about 6" tall now; I guess the other one didn't make it. My arum italicum is looking so good. I love this plant because it is green all through winter (with the white mottling). I hope the acanthus mollis blooms this year. It sometimes doesn't, but is an architectural plant in and of itself. Blue Angel and Sum & Substance hostas are HUMONGOUS already. I really need to divide them. My 3rd year 'Titanic' is looking really, really beautiful! Has anyone noticed how bad slugs are this year? I have two little hostas that have been eaten to the ground already. My petasites is just looking awful in just the last week! Slugs! I have some DE but I just hate to use it right now because you have to put more down after every time it rains. After 5 years in an apparently "bad" location, I moved my cardiocrinum giganteum to a new spot in much more friable soil. It is up and the foliage looks so much better in the new space. I am hoping it will bloom in the next year or so now. I am getting flowers on my Aristolochia clematitus for the first time. This is their 3rd year in the ground. They are so tiny, and no noticeable odor at all. So cute! This is a great little plant - groundcover! Mediterranean, so it will take our hot summers. A. serpentaria is doing well, too, but I won't be getting more of it. It is said that it takes 25 plants of this to sustain one pipevine swallowtail. Oh, my Hops are up. I have one that is a golden variety, and it is gorgeous. It is growing by leaps and bounds, too. The first day, it was up about 2", the next 4", the next 6". I have to check today to see if it has eaten the shed it is planted next to. I have a clemmie (violaceae) in a 3" pot, and it is 3' tall. Think I should pot it up? LOL! Dawn, thank you for your encouragement in regard to my GD, Kenna. I hope she will have precious memories. I remember my grandmother who loved iris, and my great grandfather who loved 'tunies, or petunias. But, they never let me garden with them. That was back then, you know. Kenna loves to garden and she really loves to help collect the butterfly caterpillars and watch them grow. Susan...See Morenantahala house plan
Comments (188)@boe dillard, I tried to cover everything, again most of the issues were accessibility - added a foot in the single side of the 3-car garage to allow , added a foot in the master bedroom side, etc. We built the Tiger Creek - another spin-off of the Nantahala/Amicola, etc. (there's also a Houzz thread on the Tiger Creek). Pictures of my build are shown on Garrell Associates webpage Tiger Creek Cottage C 18028, in the photos at the top. (click on either side of stock drawing - says 'more pictures'). I certainly wasn't overly smart about this whole darn thing - when you are doing it all alone (my husband is a severely disable vet) you get taken advantage of from EVERY direction. I feel like I have "SUCKER" plastered across my forehead! Best of luck!...See MoreAnyone Name Their House?
Comments (41)Behr, eh? :) Any connection to the paint? The garbage is part of the problem...not everyone is so diligent with their garbage cans & it makes it rough on those who do. We keep ours sealed in a room off the Arctic entry (cold) so there's no way for Mr. Bear to get in. I made the mistake thinking Mr. Bear was in hibernation last Thanksgiving. (Lesson learned, NEVER assume pertaining to bears...you'd be very surprised what they are capable of!) My hubby could tell you stories that would curl your teeth from the bears at the terminal (Alyeska Pipeline terminal here in Valdez - yes...that Valdez, the one with the oil spill). Anyway...I used my Arctic entry as a 2nd fridge during Thanksgiving. I put food in a huge cooler with ice. The door, of course, to the outside was always locked & dead bolted. I remember going to the entry & getting some food from the cooler & I had this sudden feeling of 'bear'. I ignored it. I had family staying & my 7-year old granddaughter said she didn't want to sleep in the Living Room since there was a bear outside. We told her the bears were asleep & not to worry. Well, about a week later, a neighbor told hubby at work that he saw a bear on our porch on Thanksgiving! EEK! Lesson learned. Anyway, bears aren't true hibernators so I now make it a point to not assume. Link below. Here is a link that might be useful: Bears aren't true hibernators...See MoreWild Daylillies and other Flowers Found
Comments (13)peren, I believe your right, that picture might just be a Lilium. The pictures I used in the post were merely for representation purposes, my bad.. I believe the first picture, and the daylilies I kept referring to were Hemerocallis lilioasphodelus. (I know the difference between Lilium and Hemerocallis, just a bad choice of pic :) signet, you have to click the links in green to see the pictures. Ed, I think your right about em being Hemerocallis fulva. Very interesting that their sterile and after reading up on em, it makes sense that the whole community was sharing em at one time, they might of been the only strain around for our climate back then, and possibly the only Hemerocallis being sold for our climate at the time. (zone 3a) I'm gonna have to take a better look at them this year. In any event, they would of been a huge game changer for the world of cottage garden perennials at the time. Very hardy plants, and I can really see why the community took to em....See MoreRelated Professionals
Daly City Architects & Building Designers · Ken Caryl Architects & Building Designers · Riverdale Design-Build Firms · Lansing Home Builders · Riverton Home Builders · Pooler General Contractors · Burlington General Contractors · Bowling Green General Contractors · Exeter General Contractors · Gloucester City General Contractors · Groveton General Contractors · Hanford General Contractors · La Grange Park General Contractors · Lakewood Park General Contractors · Rohnert Park General Contractors- 5 years ago
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