I filled up the flower-box with compost, and had a look around in the garden centre for some colourful and fairly hardy flowers to go inside. I chose the following :
Pink 'Daisies' - In the middle
Lobelia - In each corner
'Pinks' - On each side
They have added a nice bit of colour to the garden.
Wednesday, 27 June 2012
Tuesday, 26 June 2012
Path
At the top end of the rockery, there is a gap between some paving slabs under the length of the front windows and the path that leads around to the back of the house, and my mum suggested some paving slabs here to make it easier to go from front to back. This made sense, but I wanted to have something there that was a bit more pleasing to the eye than just paving slabs. There is some natural slate that was discarded around the back of the house, along with a couple of old roof tiles, so I thought that maybe I could make something out of these.
Wet newspaper and compost went down and I rounded off the top of the rockery with bricks before laying down the natural slate tiles in a kind of pattern across the top of the rockery towards the other paving along under the window. In between the tiles, I put some more of the decorative stones to gel in with the rest of the garden and it began to spring to life and look quite attractive! I topped up the stones around the rockery, so not quite so much compost was showing through. All of a sudden, the end of this huge project was in sight!
Wet newspaper and compost went down and I rounded off the top of the rockery with bricks before laying down the natural slate tiles in a kind of pattern across the top of the rockery towards the other paving along under the window. In between the tiles, I put some more of the decorative stones to gel in with the rest of the garden and it began to spring to life and look quite attractive! I topped up the stones around the rockery, so not quite so much compost was showing through. All of a sudden, the end of this huge project was in sight!
Sunday, 24 June 2012
Finishing the rockery!
I had some of the bricks left over, so to match up with the centre piece of the garden, I decided to use these along the edge of the rockery, and then turf up to them. So I began the final push of the 'wet newspaper/compost' combo right the way up to the edge of the rockery which took a good couple of hours and quite a bit of compost! But it meant I could flatten out the ground as I went, as this part of the garden was the most uneven. Once this was done, I layed the bricks out in a wavy line along the length of the rockery, working out roughly how many more turfs I needed as to where the bricks should go. I wanted a decent amount of space in front of the main rocks of the rockery so that in the future I will be able to have some plants there, but also had to balance out the cost of the turfs and that I didn't end up spending a small fortune on them! Once this was all done, I sprinkled some of the decorative stones along the length so it would match up with the centre piece, and VOILA! Rockery (just about) done!
Thursday, 21 June 2012
Getting there gradually...
I have continued layering up the wet newspapers and compost, bit-by-bit-by-bit! I've only really had weekends and odd days that I've had off from work, so in between looking after two crazy boys, a husband and running a house, it's taking me a while! I'm enjoying it though, but this part is somewhat tedious. I want to do it properly, to hopefully stop the weeds coming through, so I'm determined not to cut corners! Been thinking about the rockery and how to finish it off and have had a few ideas.
So I've been out shopping for some pretty, colourful flowers to go in there. A little light relief from all this newspaper!
Monday, 18 June 2012
Starting the rockery
All I had to do was collect them, and as they were local, it was no problem. So after I picked them up, I started to prepare the ground where I wanted them to go in the same way as before, layered wet newspaper and compost, and then began placing the stones on the top, spacing them evenly along the length of the garden. It was built up very quickly and before long the rocks were in place, taking up a good part of the garden, looking great
To finish off, I put some of the
small decorative stones around
the rocks and over the compost.
Tuesday, 12 June 2012
Centre Piece!
So, this is one cost saving project I came up with! To save a bit of money on turfs and compost, I decided to make a centre piece for the garden, with the intention of having some kind of raised bed on this spot. The bricks I had in the back garden going spare, so I made a square out of them, six bricks by six bricks. I used the layered wet newspaper method in the middle of the square, and filled it up with compost. On the compost I put a layer of small decorative stones. This would hopefully become somewhere where I could put a tub of some sort with plants and flowers in. I also got offered a load of unused soil from some friends of my parents! A HUGE cost saving, but an awful lot of lugging about! Still, no pain, no gain!
Monday, 11 June 2012
And it begins....
Saturday, 9 June 2012
Newspaper weeds away...?
I began researching ways to keep the weeds at bay and create a new lawn without the difficult and tiring job of digging over the entire garden. The ground was incredibly hard, so digging would have been near on impossible anyway. I came across a few websites that showed how to lay wet newspaper down around plants and cover with mulch to stop photosynthesis of the weeds below, thus stopping them growing and was completely biodegradable to boot! Since I didn't want any plants in the middle of the lawn, I decided to give it a go, but instead of mulch, I would put the wet newspapers down over the entire lawn, cover it with compost, and then put turf down. Easy peasy....
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