Showing posts with label plants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label plants. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

6 AM

Since I never really see the outside (or inside) of my house at 6am, I've never really seen it in this light.
From this angle, it almost looks like things are coming together! ;) 
Blooms on my new hydrangea on the front corner. 'Limelight'
Moonflower getting ready to close back up for the day.
My succulents hanging out, looking pretty. :)
At the bottom of the picture, you can just see the little sprigs that were grown from cuttings and recently transplanted into this large metal bowl. So far, so good!

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Bummin' around the house

From the starter I made a couple weeks ago: ciabatta bread!
With the big, beautiful holes I was looking for last time and a nice crusty crust :)
I've also been re-potting some of my new plants. My orchid bloomed again, which I was told would NOT happen.
I chalk it up to good light in the 'greenhouse'
They're everywhere..

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Solarium: Start to Finish!

This is what the house looked like in the listing when I bought it - cute right?
Nice little sitting room right inside the front door and adjacent to the living room.
Then I saw this. Everything might have been easier...if I hadn't seen this. ;)

So, naturally, we ripped everything apart..
..and fixed the things that needed fixed..
Here's mom/former roommate finishing up the last of the insulation. As with the rest of the house, the wiring was completely redone in the solarium, as was all the insulation, wallboard, wood floors, and trim..though, a lot of the woodwork throughout the house was salvaged.
Hooray for drywall!
..well..sort of. See, I got a deal on some really nice windows; so, rather than replace the two that were there, I decided to take it back to the way it looked it that damned old picture.

Finishing up the new windows and front door.
All in!
Testing out my new grilles :)
Trim is up and ready for sanding (which left dust ALL over the house), priming, and painting!
As of last night: all painted and ready to go! (As you can also see, the greenhouse is in full swing..)
Looks pretty good, if I do say!

Monday, August 20, 2012

Manscaping

This weekend was a lot of fun! Friday night was Knoxville Movie Night – a free outdoor showing of a film in the public park..open to all..big screen, big sound, big fun!
Any guesses as to which movie we watched this time?
http://www.facebook.com/#!/Knoxvillemovienights
Saturday I slept in a little, woke up and started pulling weeds in the garden, clearing the yard of dead and dried flowers (the drought really took a toll on..everything) and did some laundry.
Then my parents came over, and – within about 15 minutes – we went from this..
..to this..
It's always amazing what a truck and a log chain can do..
The house looks so much bigger without the bushes, don't you think?
This should make it quite a bit easier to hang the new siding and replace the windows in this part of the house. It’s also just easier for me (mentally) to get rid of everything and start fresh. Hopefully next year the weather will cooperate a little better and I’ll be able to landscape the yard, completely. With the changes I’ve made to the house and the paint colors I’d like to use on the outside, I’m excited to have a cohesive plan in place for the plantings in the yard..I just hope it’s not 115F all summer next year so I can actually work on it!
Saturday afternoon, I drove to Cedar Rapids and hung out with a group of old friends, and made some new friends while I was at it. The cool part was, we hung out in a $2,000,000 house on an acreage, complete with horses, dogs, four wheelers, and a whole lot of crown molding.
I didn’t take any pictures this time because my phone was dying all weekend..but I have these pictures from a previous visit. Pretty sweet digs J
The front door, complete with gas lamps on either side of the entry.
Foyer, complete with James Bond style secret closet for coats and shoes.
Immediately inside the front door.
Massive crown molding throughout the house. All the ceilings were at least 10-12 feet tall.
Kitchen, living room, breakfast area with a wet bar to the right. Yes, that's a freaking harp.
Bar area..with two mini fridges. You know..just in case.
From the living room: kitchen with bar to the left.
Sunday afternoon was the drive home with a brief stop at the Iowa State Fair to meet a friend. Within 10 minutes, I was being thrown through the air and spun upside down on a giant death-trap ride. Good fun! J
These were our seats. There were two other riders on at the top, and we spun like a GD windmill possessed by the devil for a couple minutes. They were even kind enough to take video of your screaming and yelling. "You shouldn't have..really"
http://www.iowastatefair.org/
There we are...flying! :)

Monday, February 6, 2012

IIIIIIII'm Movin' Out!

I'm almost ready for company!
The vanity - the container on the right is full of extra towels. The container on the left is for all of my bathroom junk. 
I went a little crazy on the tiny plants last night.. I've been looking forward to turning the entryway into my mini greenhouse, though. No time like the present!
Looking through the kitchen into the dining room and living room at the piles of moving.
A nice sturdy metal shelving unit for extra storage in the laundry room.
The bookshelves and my borrowed recliner :) Dad/Roommate and I built the shelves a few years ago...it's strange how well they fit here! Also, no laughing at the recliner..it's the best nap chair ever.
The finished hardwood. Initially, I wanted to stain it dark..then I saw how awesome the wood was all by itself.
Pretty big day. We moved enough stuff that I could actually use my garage! :)

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

This just in: ONIONS

Earlier this spring, I stopped by a little greenhouse not far from home and picked up a few bunches of onion sets. I’m pretty sure you could grow them from seed if you had A) any time, B) any space, or C) the equipment..benches, grow lights, etc. Since I don’t have any of those things, I buy sets.
These sets are tiny little onions waiting to be unleashed. By the time you buy them at the nursery, they can be anywhere up to the diameter of a pencil. Once the soil is warm enough, plant your mini-pencil-onions about 6 inches apart from one another and cover with dirt. We’ve learned that the spacing really is important, and for a very simple reason: if your onions are planted too close together they won’t grow to be very large. Which is fine – that way you can use an entire onion all at once rather than have half of a giganto onion floating around in the fridge.
Anyway, our old neighbor (the one I wrote about a while back) always said that your onions should never see the August sun – otherwise they start to get hot. Which means – in light of all the work we’ve been doing on the house – July 31st was harvest day!
We had white, red, yellow, Texas sweets, and a variety called candy. Because I am a master gardener, I completely neglected to label the different varieties. Red and white I’ve got; otherwise, as far as I’m concerned, there are three different sizes of yellow onions. J
Because we planted so many, we had so many to give away. My grandparents got a batch; my bosses took several; the couple helping with my house got a bag full.. And we’ve still got onions. Lots, actually. Which is awesome because they’ll keep in the basement through the winter. Leave them dirty in a cool, dark place and they’ll keep as long as we need them to – usually they’re gone before any have the chance to spoil.
Happy Tuesday!