Tag: Gardening

A Garden fit for a Shed

Can you tell I had trouble naming this post? Like many creatives, I can see a garden space and my mind immediately starts going to adding dimension, color, texture, and hardscapes. I can see it: the end product, in my mind.

I’m truly the most untalented sketcher to ever exist. I’ve sketched out so many garden landscapes for our home, and tried to show Nathan to get his thoughts, but I’m not sure it really makes much sense. There’s a lot of circles and if there’s feathery texture some lines poking out to give it a fountain look. But truly, my blobs usually don’t translate to people understanding the vision.

Starting this landscaping business, I’ve started to teach myself a landscape tool that can better help people visualize their landscape. And that started with me designing our new garden by the shed.

Here’s what the space looks like now…

And here’s a mock up of my design absent all hand-drawn blobs.

I’m going to focus more heavily in this area on perrenials. Some plants I’m considering include: hardy hibiscus, cone flowers, coreopsis, and yarrow. May throw some annual zinnias in there for some color, and incorporated a planter in front of the shed as well as a window box under the shed window for some annuals color.

We’re planning on installing two raised beds for some actual food growing! Tomatoes for sure. Peppers and maybe some lettuce? Hoping I can find a good spot for some strawberries as well. In the future, I’m hoping to add an arbor that connects the two raised beds – but that’s a future dream.

So tell me, what type of fruits and veggies are you most successful in growing??

Landscape by Lauren: A Little Dream.

I’ve had a little dream for a long time. If you’ve been here any amount of time, you don’t have to spend much time on my blog to realize that I love gardening. Flowers and creating beautiful landscapes has been my happy place for a long time.

Nathan and I have transformed our little backyard from this…

to this…

And I can’t tell you the joy that walking outside each morning to this outside home has brought me over the years. I’ve decided to take my love and all the things I’ve learned over the past ten years to help other families with their landscaping.

And Landscape by Lauren was born. I am so excited to help friends all over the US plan their gardens and landscape and create their outside home. Right now, garden and landscape planning and consultation can all be done virtually. We’ll work to pick the right plants for your home, location, and amount of maintenance required to create a garden of your dreams.

If you’re local to Kansas City, there will also be an optional add-on service to your landscape planning of in-person plant selection with you at a local garden nursery! And if you’re not ready to do a full-blown garden, I’m also going to offer custom container plantings at your home or business for those in Kansas City.

Now is the perfect time to start dreaming and planning for the spring. It’s just around the corner. I can’t wait to hear what you have in mind for your next garden project!

August 2023 Garden Tour

The August garden. It always looks a little wonky around here. A few things are passed their prime, but the zinnias and ornamental onions are just entering as the star of the show. Only another month before most of these annuals will come out and I’ll be trading the summer colors for fall reds and golds. Here’s a look at where we started and where we’re at now! We had a big storm come through in late July, and some plants have just never recovered. Such is life as a gardener!

May:

August:

This one turned out to be more purple than I had intended. The purple flowers seemed to enjoy their spot more than the other flowers I had in there that provided some depth of color.

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July 2023 Garden Update

Last Friday, a massive storm blew through Kansas City. I looked outside and thought we were in the middle of a hurricane. Everything looked like it was literally being tipped sideways and flying down the street. What resulted was massive tree damage and no power for several days. Thankfully, we had very little damage, aside from some large branches falling down. But the winds did not help my poor plants. They still are standing sideways today.

But plants are resilient, and they’ll bounce back. Before the storm blew through, I took my July garden update pictures.

May:

July:

May:

July:

May:

July:

May:

July:

May:

July:

June:

July:

May west side garden:

July:

June:

July:

Everybody has fared pretty well so far! Now I’m off to do some staking of my flowers that tipped over during the storm. 🙂

Garden Drip Irrigation: How To & Favorite Products UPDATED

A couple of years ago, I wrote a post about running drip irrigation in my flower beds. I started off small with a very manageable one garden bed having drip irrigation, but over the past few years, I’ve expanded to run drip to nearly all of my beds AND my containers.

Not to be dramatic, but in the life of gardening, drip irrigation has been a GAME CHANGER.

I wake up every morning, and there’s a little pool of water coming out of each of my containers before I’ve even poured my morning coffee. I spend all of my time gardening outside cutting back, de-heading, and enjoying rather than watering every. single. day. It makes going on vacations a breeze, because I don’t wonder if my plants will die while I’m gone. It’s been AMAZING.

Given that it’s been a few years, I’ve honed my favorite products and technique, and it’s time for an updated post.

For flower beds, I ran 1/2″ drip irrigation to them.  I originally started out with the DIG brand, which is sold at Home Depot, but I think it’s kind of tough to work with and manipulate into the connectors.  If I could start all over again, I’d use the Rain Bird brand sold at Home Depot or Ace.  The issue is that you kind of need to stick with one brand for the lines and connectors, because even though there are many brands that are 1/2″ lines/connectors, they don’t necessarily fit snuggly together, and thus, leak at the connection spot.

To run drip lines to a flower bed, you’ll want, depending on the comapct-ness of your plants, supply tubing, emitter tubing, a bunch of different options of connectors (t-shape, l-shape, straight), and an end plug to clamp off the end of your line. 

You’ll also likely need a hole punch, if you are going to add some targeted emitters to your supply line, as well as emitters that stick in the hole and deliver the water to your plant. 

You’ll also want either 1/2″ irrigation stakes or I opted for the basic metal garden staples to hold down the line into the ground.

I ran 1/2″ supply line tubing (that’s tubing that is just a solid tube with no holes/emitters) to the areas of my beds that had larger established plants.  Where I had my established plants, I added emitters using a hole punch and adding specific 1 GPH emitters to water those specific plants.  Then the parts of the bed that didn’t have established plants and I put in annuals every year, I used an emitter supply line that already has emitter holes punched in it.  I personally chose the one that had emitters every 12 inches – but they come in every 18 inches as well.  That way I wasn’t worrying about getting water to one specific plant per emitter, but it instead just kind of saturates the whole area for me.

I’ve used two types of timers as well at my spigot – the Rainpoint timer and the Orbit timer- both have performed fine, but I think I prefer the Orbit brand.  It has slightly more functionality than Rainpoint.  You kind of have to decide how many zones you want hooked up at the same time to automatically water to determine how many outputs on your timer you need.  For instance, in our backyard, I have two drip zones that water at different intervals, and I wanted to have a regular hose hooked up all of the time that I could use normally, so I opted for a three output timer in our backyard.

Lastly, I did add drip irrigation to all of my container pots last year, and loved it.  I have a ton of containers on our patio in the summer and they require daily watering.  I loved this kit – it had everything I needed to run it, and I just bought extra tubing and emitters when I ran out, but it was a great starter kit for containers.

Drip irrigation can seem overwhelming at the beginning, but it’s fairly intuitive once you get started. If you’re starting for the first time, I’d recommend starting with just one smaller bed, and then increasing the area you cover farther down the road, like the next gardening season. There’s always something to be learned the first (and second, and third) time around you do something that’s unique to your own circumstances, so splitting it up in chunks makes it much more manageable!

My Winter Containers

Hi friends! And happy 2023! We had a really wonderful holiday and winter break. I feel like I say it every year, but Christmas with a four and two year old may be my favorite yet. I’m going to share some favorite pictures from the break tomorrow, but today I’m finally getting around to sharing my winter outside containers this year.

In fairness, I put together my winter containers before the holidays, but I love making them easily non-Christmas-y, so they look beautiful all winter long.

In the front, I anchored the container with a spruce top picked up at my local garden nursery. I bought the white berry, pine cone, and birch wood accents last year, so they cost me zero dollars this year. 🙂

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September Final Garden Update

I’ve so enjoyed sharing how the garden has grown over this past season. September, though, is generally the end of our summer gardening season. Invariably, October brings at least a few cold snaps, so I pull all of my annuals out in September and tidy up the garden for the winter. I’ll keep a few late season annuals until the first freeze, just because they still look so beautiful. And, of course, will add some mums and replace a few container plants to “autum-ize” a few of my containers. But this is the last true garden update for the summer!

I’m going to include pictures of how things looked just planted in June as a reference point of June to September. September is certainly not most plants best months, but it is truly magnificent how much growth happens in just a few months!

June:

September:

The coleus has just grown beyond my wildest imagination in this front container.

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August Garden Tour

Time for a monthly garden tour! Early to mid July is what I call peak garden season here. It’s absolutely stunning during those couple of weeks, and then it really heats up here in KC. The plants that really love the heat go bananas, and I’m out in the garden at least weekly cutting things back so they don’t look leggy or overgrown, and the things that like slightly more mild temperatures just kind of wonder what in the world I’ve done to them.

Last month, I showed a picture of these areas in June and July. I’m going to add on an August photo, so you can see how much everything grew!

June:

July:

August:

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The Dirt Pot

Last year, we formally became the owners of a dirt pot.

“What’s a dirt pot?” you might ask.

Well, it’s a large planter that sits on our patio that is filled with dirt. Compost dirt, to be exact.

We acquired the dirt pot because I noticed something about Harrison when he was very young. He loved to use Mommy’s garden tools and dig in the dirt. He’d spend a long time for a 1 year old digging, dumping, and exploring.

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Winter Outside Containers

I’ve admired for years winter containers put together by some of my very favorite garden accounts. I’ve admired my own MIL and mom’s winter containers, but I finally had the time and energy to put some together myself this year!

Even though this is my first time doing winter containers, I love that it’s a cross between outdoor gardening and flower vase arrangements. You can play with and re-cut, re-arrange as much as you want! Watering doesn’t matter as much if it’s below freezing, and you can make it all look just to your liking!

To put together these winter containers, I had picked out the containers around my home that I wanted to spruce up with evergreens this winter when I pulled out my annual flowers this fall, and I left the potting soil in the pots. The most cost effective way to create a base for your arrangement 😊. I’ll clean out the old potting soil in the spring before I re-pot them with spring flowers!

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