Backyard landscaping project |
random trip report |
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When I bought my house in 1989 there was a large avocado tree, and a lawn, in the back yard. The tree shed leaves year-round at a prodigious rate. I raked only occasionally, and eventually the grass died out. The tree grew larger every year, spreading beyond both sides of my property. The back yard became a dark, gloomy place; I avoided it. This past winter I made the decision: the tree must die. I had an arborist cut it down, saving the wood for firewood (there were several tons). I located David Turner, a landscape architect who specializes in rocks and bizarre desert plants. He drew up a plan with the following elements:
It also became clear that
1) the back deck had to be replaced (bad design and rot)
and 2) both the back and left fences were rotting and falling over:
Here's a picture of David Turner working in the early stages.
The new back fence is in place.
Concrete rubble visible in back.
The pit at right (with rake) is where the avocado stump was
(Dave ground it out a bit).
With the help of Jon Seltzer, I planted the vegetable bed with pumpkins, sunflowers, cabbage, and green onions.
Now (mid-June 2000) the plants are filling in nicely.
In the background is the yard of my neighbor on the right;
there's no fence, which makes both yards seem bigger.
Next step: replace the back doors,
and maybe paint a mural on the back of the house.
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