Showing posts with label aralia elata. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aralia elata. Show all posts

Monday, 3 November 2014

Plans being realised :)

Long time no see... I've not felt like blogging for a while, even though lots have happened that have felt worth writing about. But here I go again and am making a new attempt of doing this at a more regulary basis :)

So, this is how it looked at the back of our house just a few months ago, lots of  Japanese angelica trees (Aralia elata) and just a sea of ferns that everyone said looked so cosy and inviting, and I just hated it. The ferns were just too many and the trees were growing out of control with lots of runners everywhere and the trees had horrible thorns. It's not a surprise that they are called the "devil's walking stick" when you see this image:
http://calphotos.berkeley.edu/imgs/512x768/0000_0000/1108/0959.jpeg
Not the friendliest tree there is and thay just looked like dead sticks in winter and I wanted nothing else than to get rid of them and do a peaceful garden there instead, still with japanese trees but with more peaceful maples. I had already gotten a atropurpureum earlier this year and I also got  a osakazuki, a beni schichihenge, a little princess and a emerald lace and I hope they will all make it and be very happy living in my garden :)
Everything is planted, the maples, the hostas, the grasses, the siberian bugloss, the lungwort and the oregano! The boyfriend and I moved the clematis I got from mum and put it next to the path to Buddha, and I made some stepstones and a japanese lantern from concrete. To top it all I got some big rocks from my aunt and uncle who has a farm and has a big pile of rocks that comes from the fields and have all been thrown there over the years and I could just pick any sizes and shapes that I wanted and the japanese garden has taken some form now. I also kept some of the ferns and planted some new ones in different colours and I can hardly wait to see how it will look next year when it all starts to grow again!

I got hold of an old mirror at a flea market with high edges and I used it to make this concrete tabletop wirh rhubarb leaves. Got the idea from a concrete group I'm in on facebook and all it needs is legs and then I need to decide weather to put some colours on the leaves or just leave them as they are. Should probably practice on something smaller before I go ahead with this one since I don't wanna ruin it. It turned out much better than I had hoped.

When we moved into our house we started parking our cars by this side of the house since it's close to the front door and it seemed like the most natural place to park, but since it's not that nice to park on grass when it's raining and lot's of work to cut the grass we decided to make it into a proper parking place! And we started with cutting down that big tree by the window and then we got some help from a friend with the digging and work with the dirt and rocks.
lots of big and intertwined roots! Probably from an old beech tree that once stood there.
the ground work is done...
and I made some work for myself by starting to get the grass off the tiles and getting the idea to raise them a few cm to be level witht he lawn instead of under it. So I took them all up and put out some stone dust that T had gotten for the parking place and also put some extra tiles to make a path to the cars so we won't have to walk across the lawn.
a days work
and here we are all done!!

When we bought the house the kitchen tiles were white with little pastell blue and pink dots and it was never an option to keep it like that, so i got some tile paint and painted it all black. It looked really nice but always too dark. It wasn't a very positive kitchen to be in :/ Then I saw a photo of a kitchen with turquoise tiles and I fell in love! Asked the boyfriend if he was ok with that colour and thankfully he said yes, so I got the paint and then operation kitchen makeover began!
Before...
the colour I wanted
during the makeover...
and the result!
Am so happy with it and it eally looks like a brand new kitchen :)

Thursday, 26 September 2013

Wake me up when September ends...

September went by so fast...
Two big spirea bushes had been growing like mad outside the garage and I wanted that space for flowers instead so I cut off all the branshes and dug up/cut the roots and got the suckers out of the ground. Many swearwords were spoken during this process ;)
All flowers I had by my flat were dug up by me and my sister and moved to the house + some are the seedlings I planted earlier this year :)
A "bärfis" (directly translated: a "berryfart" :) hihi!) climbing on the foxtails/amaranthus
Daisies blooming in September, I wonder if they will bloom again in the spring?
Vincent is doing his best with helping out around the house :)
I saw this fire screen at a flea market in Båstad earlier this spring but didn't buy it then coz we thought the previous owner of the house would leave the one she had, but of coz she didn't. And since it's getting colder each day and we might be in the mood of a fire soonish we went back to the flea market in the hope that it would still be there and yes, there it was waiting for us!  
Vincent in his basket in front of the fireplace
Embla relaxing under the sofa table
This tree is growing by the back of our house, by the front door (yeah I know, it's all upside down when it comes to what's logic about our house :P) and I've been scratching my head about what kind of tree it is since it got thorns and is keen on shooting roots like nothing I've ever seen, but I think I've figured out that it's a Aralia erata which in Sweden is known as a "parkaralia" (must be common in parks or something I guess). An asian bush that is apparently quite common and can get huge if you don't keep it neat. Let's see if I can make it look good once all dead branches and roots are gone.
I also cut down these huge rosebusches that were by the garage (and dug up one other rosebush just leaving this one) and didn't think it would make it but it's decided to live and started to grow again. Let's see what happens with it next year!
The chocolateflower (Cosmos atrosanguineus) I bought can't stop blooming! Why is it called chocolateflower? Coz they smell like chocolate :)
New bushes have been planted around the house and I'm keeping all fingers crossed that they'll love their new home and grow big and strong.
Top left: Winged Spindle
Bottom left: Black elderberry
Bottom right: Lilac

The family and some of mum and dads friends got together in this boathouse in Ingelstorp for a very informal funeral for my dad. He didn't want the whole church thing so we just gathered, had some food, talked and we all lit a candle for dad and enjoyed the views of where he used to go to hunt and talk to his fisherman's friends. It was a good way to say goodbye to dad before he's buried in the cemetary in Hov.
I was in charge of the flowers...
boathouses in Ingelstorp