Ground Zero

in Reflections2 months ago

What a diff'rence a day made
Twenty-four little hours

Ground zero.

image.png

The morning started with ripping out the stumps from the two birch trees we felled earlier in the year, and unfortunately destroying the play house, as while many were interested to get it for free, none were willing to organize the transport. And then it was on to all kinds of digging. Quite a lot of earth has been moved so far, cutting away the drop to the garage on the right, starting the trench at the back of the lot to bury the pipe to move water away to the road, and scraping the driveway a little.

You might notice the big puddle on the left of the last picture. That hole was dry when they made it, but it is quickly filling up as the amount of water held in the ground in that area is huge, which is why we have had to get this done in the first place.

Can you see it?

image.png

Almost there.

Smallsteps was dismayed when she came home from school today and saw the state of the yard. She thinks it is going to take many years to get it usable again and well, she isn't completely wrong. Even after the wall is built, we aren't going to be able to plant any grass until at least next spring, since we are now too far into the off-season for it to grow. And of course, the terrace that we are planning isn't going to be done next spring either, because the price to do it is so high.

But, what we will be able to do next spring after the grass is growing, is put down the stones in the normal traffic areas, and bark chips for where we will start our gardens again in planter boxes. Smallsteps is pretty excited about having her own garden to take care of and is considering what she is going to grow. While I don't have many great memories with my mother, there were a few days I remember spending out in the garden with her, and I really enjoyed it.

Perhaps forty years later will be the time I start gardening with enjoyment again.

It really does look like a construction site for the moment though, and it will look pretty bare for the next eight months. From December through to about March or April however, it will likely be covered by a layer of snow anyway.

I think that considering we have a 1960s house, once there is some structure in the garden, it is actually going to look relatively modern, because our house is rendered and has relatively fresh paint on the walls. With some greenery put in, some decking and perhaps a glasshouse in the back yard, it might even be attractive.

Perhaps hard to see through the mud at this stage though.

Tomorrow they will come back and continue on with the long list of tasks and they will likely be here for the next couple weeks. The thing that is going to take the most time (and money) is building of the retaining wall. The work portion is about 60% of the total, which is also why we are going out on a limb and getting it all done now, because the tax return percentage will change from next year. As long as it is all billed in 2024, we will get a tax redaction of 50% for the work performed, whilst next year it will be a 20% reduction. It is a big, big difference in the total cost, but we won't see the reduction benefits until 2026.

By then, the garden might be a healthy green again.

Will my bank account?

Taraz
[ Gen1: Hive ]

Sort:  

I can imagine Smallsteps face seeing no grass and the destroyed playhouse, but it will also take a long while. how do you say, but if it looks like the picture, it will be worth the wait.

The funny thing is, she won't be using the playhouse next year anyway - she will be out in the parks with her friends instead.

Looks like it is going to be pretty sweet when they get it all finished. Wow, that is quite a bit of water. We had some issues like that, but it was because a sump line that runs parallel to the road had cracked. I had to pay a couple thousand dollars to get it fixed twice. I'm hoping if it breaks again it does so on someone else's property next time!

Wow, that is quite a bit of water.

Yep. It started collecting just after they dug it. We can swim in it tomorrow :)

Why do you have to pay for the crack, isn't it council?

Nope, I had them out, fought with them, talked to a bunch of other people. Even the crew that fixed it said it shouldn't be my problem, but it isn't a municipal line and it is on my property, so my problem.

Take time, by the way, if you want to have fun, the smallest ecosystem is beans corn and pumpkins, as the beans used to stalk corn, and the pumpkins cover the ground to prevent weeds. As a South American common knowledge.

I have never heard of anyone growing pumpkins in Finland! :D

Oh, you cannot do it? They have whole fields in England, and it is a bit cold here too.

Ah the playhouse. We have one that is coming down next year. Despite the kids not playing in it ever these days I know they will make a huge fuss!

The biggest fuss is getting rid of the bloody things!

It will be green again before you know it.
Gardening is such great exercise, for body and soul. Wonderful science education, too.
You'll be so happy when it's done. Glorious.
How nice that you have started!

It will be nice. Then I will be able to do some "proper" gardening posts :)

I look forward to those! Not that you have ever been at a loss for subject matter...

Funny how everyone wants it and no one wants it when they have to pay for delivery. We had that with an old shed and eventually a Paw Paw tree fell and solved that problem permanently. Maybe next year the bull cycle can help speed thigs up.

I'm excited for you guys gardenign with smallsteps. Honestly, Ive read a TRILLION posts in the Hive GArden about memories of gardening with parents - they're alll really precious and you can do a lot worse than instilling a love of gardening in a little one, who'll have that for life.

It won't be long before you're sitting back and seeing how beautiful it is, even though it might seem like ages before it looks better.


image.png

We support gardening, homesteading, cannabis growers, permaculture and other garden related content. Delegations to the curation account, @gardenhive, are welcome! Keep an eye out for our weekly writing prompts and our monthly #gardenjournal challenge on the 1st of each month.

Bit of a shame on the playhouse. But at least you will be swamp free sooner. The tax reduction difference is huge, so it's really good that you were able to do it before it got lower. I believe you can buy grass that are already grown so you can reduce the wait time a lot instead of using seeds.

Sad about the playhouse :< But yay for the rest of the plans finally commencing :D

The whole yard belongs to you? I would then put a pergola at any corner, and build a fireplace for barbecue. Also, a swing for smallstep would be great :)

Congratulations @tarazkp! You have completed the following achievement on the Hive blockchain And have been rewarded with New badge(s)

You got more than 105000 replies.
Your next target is to reach 110000 replies.

You can view your badges on your board and compare yourself to others in the Ranking
If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word STOP

Check out our last posts:

LEO Power Up Day - September 15, 2024

You have used your day profitably. They those who waste those twenty-four little hours