WiseAcre Gardens

north of the adirondacks – wildflowers & perennials that survive winters colder than my wife's feet

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Posted by WiseAcre on May 2nd, 2008

Small Patio Kit

2008
May 2

The perfect patio for those accustomed to sitting alone.

 This kit comes complete with all the tools necessary to easily move it into place. Adjusting the size to fit tight spaces is a simple matter with our Stone Persuasion Accessories.

Single piece patio kit

Natural Beauty and Toughness all in one package

 This all natural sandstone patio is simple in design. There is nothing to assemble and no small parts to lose. Just put it where you want it. This single piece patio is more than ample to meet your needs and it’s tough weather resistant construction will give you a place to put a single chair for a lifetime of quiet meditation.

Installation Made Simple and Easy

Moving a one piece patio The proven installation technology takes advantage of some simple Law’s of Nature handed down through the centuries and still upheld by the scientific community of today. The custom cut wooden rollers reduce friction by an amazing amount. Just set the patio on the rollers and use the included bar in a lever action to move it.

You don’t need friends to have one of these. 

Comment now and get this amazing kit for only $189.95

…..price does not include: $2.00 per mile shipping fee and a $50.00 handling charge.  Any comment made will imply a contract to purchase.  All parties are subject to the whims of folly. 

Stone Pursuasion Accessories

Order today and we’ll add the Stone Persuasion Accessories to your order for only $100 more*

Pick ups are welcome.

*an $80 value!

Posted by WiseAcre on Apr 20th, 2008

Chapel Street Garden – Hardscape Construction

2008
Apr 20

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Dripline bed 

 Chapel Street – Canton, NY

 I started this project last year and returned this spring to finish up the hardscape before planting time. One last thing that needed to be done was to create a dripline bed of crushed stone. With no gutters the water falling from the second story roof dug quite a line in the sod.

 I cut a new edge just beyond the dripline deep enough to run a line of blocks level with the concrete pad that extended from the house foundation.  The dripline bed will be filled with 1A crushed stone and average 3 inches deep.

Daylilies sprouting through crushed stone

 The Hosta, Lily of the Valley and violets already established along the concrete slab will have no problem coming up through the small stone.  In fact the old common orange day lilies planted in the dripline bed on the other side of the house are already well started. The beds were done in stone since mulch or soil would splatter against the house every time it rained.

 The edging created to deal with the rain running off the roof was the easy part. It was pretty clear what the area ‘needed’ and installing the edging and filling with crushed stone is a job anyone can do. The real challenge was the front of the house. I declined the opportunity of ripping out the old concrete steps and building new. That job went to a contractor who used manufactured block.

Chapel Street hardscape

 As you can see the new steps were fairly massive yet didn’t quit fit in. Looking straight ahead the steps and planters seemed too narrow. The house front needed some balance and that’s where I started.  I put on a good show last summer hauling in some very large boulders on my little pick up truck. A good guess puts the largest just over one ton.

Boulders

 With the boulders in place I’m now ready to plant. I don’t have a real plan although I do have ideas. We’ll see what I’ll end up with soon. Right now I can see Sedums, Coreopsis ‘Zagreb’, small hybrid Lilies, Black eyed Susans, Mini Garden Phlox, Coneflowers and Iris as the primary plants. But that can all change in a split second. Who knows what surprise awaits me at the nursery. (I always expect to be surprised – my memory is getting bad enough that I now have pleasant surprises every day) 

Block steps and planters

 An assortment of low growing Junipers will round out the planting in and around the block planters. I’ll be as surprised as everyone one else when finished. I never know exactly what I’m going to do until I’ve finished.  I wouldn’t be surprised if I plant a few more boulders. Afterall they need less care and seem less expensive than perennials these days.

Chapel Street hardscape

 I like to say this is the type of job only an Idiot would do. Who else besides an idiot would attempt to move boulders weighing nearly a ton by hand. In the near future I will be posting ‘Boulder Moving for Dummies’ once I get some step by step photos for the instructions.

The next installment from Chapel Street will cover the planting. I’m going to try restraining myself a bit but  I’m pretty sure the homeowner is going to suffer a bit of sticker shock when all the plant materials are added up. It’s not that I don’t warn people. I do. But I guess it’s a fine line between Expensive and Dear Lord! We’ll see what you think when I finish.

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