Monday, May 1, 2017

Decking Out the Back Yard

I'M SO EXCITED FOR SUMMER!!!! We've been working hard to get the backyard into a super fun, comfy lounge zone for what, I've heard, is predicted to be an extra-dry sunny summer in Seattle. Whoo hoo!

We've got all the furniture outside - mostly from IKEA and Cost Plus World market - the flowers planted, the garden in and the twinkly lights strung around the porch. Next major project is getting a new pool heater installed so we can start SWIMMING. Hooray!


Serious summer hang out zone

Cafe lights adding just the right amount of je ne sais quoi



Must get cushions


Putting in a Garden Over the Weekend

"Why yes! These veggies are from my garden!" She said three months from now.


This weekend while the guys went camping, I was home with the sick baby and used her long napping sessions to get in my first ever vegetable garden in the backyard! I'm pretty dang excited about it and I really hope it doesn't die. It was sunny for once and felt great to be outside getting dirty, making something. 

In mid-April we planted seeds in starter pods and kept them indoors for 2 weeks while they grew like insane gangbusters. 

Planting seeds on April 17

And those seeds just 10 days later

I didn't expect the starts to grow so quickly, so I decided I better get them planted in the garden ASAP. I'd been keeping an eye on the backyard to see where a good sunny spot would be for the raised beds, and decided the flat grassy spot by the pool was perfect - sunny, flat and easily accessible. 



So in between naps, baby and I rushed out to Home Depot and loaded up on supplies. I bought a raised bed kit made out of cedar and 25 cubic feet of dirt to fill it up - which is A LOT of dirt.

9 giant bags to be exact
The raised bed kit went together easily enough, but I can't recommend it. Two of the posts broke as I was sliding in the boards - one I just turned and used a different slot, but the other break happened after the whole thing was assembled so I had to "patch" it together with deck screws and wood scraps.

Getting dirty!

The bed kit assembled, easy to put together but not very sturdy

I lined the boxes with weed blocker fabric and then dumped in the dirt after schlepping them from the minivan - so exhausting oh my god! The kit made one deeper bed and one shallower, which worked out perfect for what I was planting - veggies that grew down (beets, carrots) I put in the deep side, while shallower veggies I put in the other side (peas, herbs). I dumped and raked in 8 of the 9 bags and that was enough for Friday - shower and cocktail time.

Ready to plant!

On Saturday, the next thing I did before planting was to weave a pea trellis for the snow pea vines to grow up. I'd never done this before (because I'm neither a weaver or a farmer), but it wasn't hard at all. I just googled some pics and then made up my own version using 4 plastic-coated garden stakes, 3 zip ties, 6 eye screws and a roll of garden twine. I felt very homestead-ish after I finished this, like maybe I should be weaving pea trellises for a living? Nah.


I used a rubber mallet to hammer in three stakes, and then zip tied the fourth stake across the top. I screwed 6 metal eye screws into the wood and used them to tie off the string. Easy PEAsy. Har.

Close up of eye screws

Please upgrade us!!!

It was time to plant! I put 3 of the 6 starters in the soil and decided to "harden off" the other 3 starter pods. But I forgot about them outside overnight following cocktail hour but they were just fine, so I went ahead and planted them, too, on Sunday. I also added a trellis to one side for the cucumbers to grow on.

Sunday baby and I visited 2 local nurseries and picked up some tomato plants, lettuces, and the cucumber trellis. We planted those along with zucchini, squash and herbs. Then I labeled everything and just as I was finishing Sunday it started to pour rain - perfect!

We should have our $250 salad in July or August

PROJECT REFLECTIONS
Total cost: ~$250
     $100 for raised bed kit, $90 for 9 bags of organic soil, the rest toward plants, seeds, trellises, starter pod kit, weed blocker fabric
Easiest part: Putting the bed kit together, even though it broke a couple times
Hardest part: Carrying all that heavy dirt and dumping it in
What I'd do differently next time: Build my own beds from lumber
What I learned: That I'm super awesome at weaving pea trellises!

A New Home for Us!



We've moved to Washington state and into a beautiful home in Normandy Park, a small town south of Seattle near the ocean. Plenty of new projects to "make" here coming up this year.

Thursday, October 1, 2015

Black & white bathroom remodel

We finally finished the downstairs bathroom! The shower was semi-tiled for months, but our super busy summer didn't really leave us any free weekends for the finishing touches (and by "we" I mean Jim). So we - really both - made the bathroom, but Jim definitely put in the most effort with construction and finishing. I wanted a masculine look since it's his bathroom where he gets ready early in the morning, and I think the duo tone and wood touches, plus the nod to vintage in the subway tiled shower and pullout shaving mirror achieve that. Unfortunately the cool black penny tile floor isn't showing up - but trust me, it's cool!

Sunday, September 27, 2015

Perfect rainy Sunday meal

Thomas Keller's roasted chicken (plus fresh garlic cloves) with thyme mushroom gravy, sautéed Brussels sprouts with bacon and roasted farmers market potatoes. So. Delicious.

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

DIY backyard sandbox

Enjoying his new sandbox with his cousin

Earlier this summer I made a super easy sandbox for my 2-year old to play in with his "diggers" and shovels. My goal was to make the backyard a really fun place where he could play and be entertained so that maybe, just MAYBE, I could read my novel outdoor in the sunshine in relative peace.

At Lowes I found this 4'x4' raised garden kit in a box consisting of 4 plastic boards, hinges for the corners and 4 stakes to secure it into the ground. After some 6th grade math that hurt my brain, I figured I'd need 9 bags of "Play Sand" which, apparently is a commonly stocked thing and it's meant for sandboxes. Who knew!

Just remember when buying bags of play sand - 
width times height times depth equals volume... I think? 

I also bought 4 red, resin-coated pieces of rebar (sold as garden stakes) that were about 5 feet long. I thought it'd be cool to use them to string some fiesta flags around the edges of the finished sandbox.

At home, I assembled the frame according to directions using a drill to attach the corner hinges and a rubber mallet to pound the stakes into the ground. I placed it right on top of the grass. Then I schlepped 2 bags of sand at a time with a wheelbarrow from my car to the backyard, sliced them open and dumped away. A bit of raking evened out the sand and the stakes and flags (attached with zip ties) gave it a festive flair.



When Alexander woke up from his nap I hurried him outside to see and he exclaimed, "A beach!" He loves it and has been playing in it all summer. His favorite thing now is to write numbers and letters in the sand and then "erase" them.


PROJECT REFLECTIONS
Total cost: $135.00
     $90 for raised bed kit, $45 for 9, 50-pound bags of play sand
Easiest part: getting a Lowes employee to help me load up the sand bags into my cart and then again into my car.
Hardest part: I guess schlepping the sand bags and dumping them out. So heavy.
What I'd do differently next time: Figure out a better way to attach the flags.
What I learned: You really DO use that 6th grade math when you grow up!
 

$4 thrift store lamp makeover

 The repainted lamp looking pretty fly on the madeover desk

I found this metal lamp at Value Village for $3.99. It had cool lines and I immediately knew that with a paint job it would be a killer piece for my sister's new office. 


I wrapped the cord and covered the inside edge of the lamp shade with painter tape, then started spraying a copper paint. It took about 3 coats to completely cover it and in maybe 2 hours I had a great-looking lamp that complemented the makeover desk quite nicely




PROJECT REFLECTIONS:
Total cost: $11
     $4 for the lamp. $7 for the paint
Easiest part: The painting was so easy.
Hardest part: tightening the loose fasteners.
What I'd do differently next time: I'd paint a little more carefully because it can definitely start to run on the curved parts.
What I learned: That the thrift store is a great place for finding reusable pieces! (I'm not a huge thrifter to begin with.)