Waking on the Brighter Side

While things are finally getting a little easier, they haven’t been great. New guy is getting there but needy and pointing out that all of our training materials are basically crap. We haven’t had a new hire in 5 years and a lot has changed in that time. And we are launching a website redesign and no one really remembered that staff needs to be trained, so “Merridee is good at training, she’ll do it.” Thanks guys! After months and weeks of stress and drama, I am desperate for a break. Thankfully I do the scheduling now. So I put myself down for a week off — and just in time for my birthday and the first anniversary of me in the house.

lily wakes me up

Her favorite trick is to rest her chin on the side of my bed and whine when she thinks I should get up. She HATES it when I read in bed before getting up in the morning.

So the first three days of my vacation it rained — a lot! Which was the perfect excuse to lay in bed, sleep and be lazy. Lily HATED it!  She was so confused when after she whined for hours, I would get up, take her out, feed her, wander around for 10 minutes and decide go back to bed. She would come and check on me every hour or so and I would try to explain to her that she gets to sleep all day all of the time and now it was mummy’s turn. I would manage, driven by guilt, to get up long enough to take her for walks when there was window when the rain paused. But for the most part, pile of lazy! Loved it.

But after 3 days, the weather and I had seemingly done our thing and was ready for reality again. It was still pretty soggy outside, so I decided I couldn’t tolerate another winter waking up in such a poopy brown depressing room. I had been hemming and hawing about what color to paint my room for months now and couldn’t really decide, which is why I hadn’t tackled it yet.  I needed something bright to battle the dark winter months. AND CEILINGS SHOULD BE WHITE. So I went with a color that had worked well in the other house — bright yet soothing — Chapel Wall, which is basically cream. Boring I know, but also bright yet soothing.

I strung out the painting process over 4 days. 2 days for ceilings and 2 days for walls. For a 9×13 foot room, that is really milking it. I took lots of breaks, made some lovely food and pondered future arrangements for after. Also contemplated decorations, since I basically didn’t do any decorating in that room when I moved in. By Friday of my vacation I had finished up, and managed to do all of the styling that was going to happen at this point. Not a decadent sanctuary, but a huge improvement on what it was.

Mirror and Bed

Once again, my furniture doesn’t really fit the space but I love it all too much to get rid of it. The mirror was Grandma Hanson’s, the dresser I got in middle school, headboard I refinished, lamp and books were Grandparents Doman.

Closet

I took the closet doors off when I first moved in. I have hated closet doors for years. But I knew at times the mess inside does need to hide, so I hung the curtain rod I insisted on bringing from the Rex and then lost one of the finials for in front of it.

East wall

I don’t really like my standing mirror anymore but I don’t have room in my bathroom to do my make-up in there, so it had to stay and be inconvenient. The Renoir poster was a present from Kevin when he was an intern in D.C., so is 20+ years old and looks like it. The hanging lamp I inherited when someone left in the basement at the Rex (I have suspicions but that makes me want to keep it more — bitch owes me.) Blanket my mom made me, little table and then purple shelf.

Window

Got the lace curtains hung at the correct height and then put the old bathroom shelf in the corner to hold all of the books and bed stuff. I don’t love this bit but am to cheap to shop for anything new at this point.

I am keeping my eyes pealed for something awesome to hang over the bed. Also contemplating the pros and cons of another hanging light, maybe something from Ikea — keeping my options open.

Another Side Project

I actually finished this project a few weeks ago, but I have been so crazy busy and distracted I didn’t take pictures so I could blog about it. My very good friend and Editorial Page Editor John Laird is retiring so The Columbian needed to fill his position. The Sports Editor Greg Jayne ended up getting promoted to the job and then my boss Micah Rice was promoted to Sports Editor. That left the copy desk without a fearless leader. So as assistant news editor, it made sense for me to try for it. And I got it. I am now, or will be at the end of this month when everyone shifts around, the News Editor at The Columbian. So far it is being really stressful and one of the first things on my to-do list is to fill our vacant position. I am excited for the challenge but also nervous. So we’ll see. The next few months are going to be insane!

Anyway, this project was pretty easy to throw together — just laid down some more of that leftover mulch that I removed when redoing the front patio and artfully arrange some of my pots. Planted a few extra things in said pots and done. But I love how it looks. And it is a good place to have some of my more heat-sensitive herbs — parsley, cilantro, sorrel — so they don’t bolt as fast.

herb garden bed

Looks super cute. On the other side of the walk, the blueberries are doing great. And the chamomile and callengula are filling out. I also threw some sunflower seeds that Eric Murray got in a wedding invitation last year in the ground and was surprised, not only that they came up, but that they are doing great.

And now that things are looking so cute back here, I have been trying to take time to enjoy it. So after a long weekend of weeding, I fired up the grill and cooked dinner.

grilling

A rib-eye steak and zucchini from the garden

Dinner

Steak, grilled zucchini and a arugula, blueberry and corn salad. (arugula and some of the blueberries are from my garden.) Holy crap it was delicious!

And as an added bonus, here is one of my more-awesome day lilies, that I snap a pic of today.

orange lily

Super cute orange day lily. Have I mentioned that I love orange?

Steps in the Right Direction

Part of my love of English gardens includes quant paths for strolling through all of the flowers. And in my mind, paths should be flagstone. I did several little flagstone paths at the other house — some turned out great, others not some much, and one I redid like 4 times and still wasn’t crazy about it. So I know all of the hard work and drama involved in flagstone paths. One major thing that had changed since the last time I made one, however, was the price of the stones. At the old house, stone were, on average, $3-$5. So some of those projects got kind of spendy. But a trip to Home Depot and Lowes showed that for whatever reason, flagstone had gotten crazy expensive! $9 a stone. So considering I had to cover 29 feet in a straightish line, flagstones was now way out of my price-range.

Digging around on Pinterest, I found what looked like a good solution — Flagstone shaped concrete. Basically you buy a mold that is the shaped like flagstone pieces and dump mixed concrete into it. My first adventure with concrete was a nightmare but after using it to patch a wall in the basement, I have gotten pretty good at dealing with it. (Sometimes it makes me sad that I have developed certain skills.) Anyway, the mold was $25 and bags of dry cement are $2.50, so this route was definitely within my budget. What could possibly go wrong?

Turns out, nothing! The hardest part of this project was hauling the bags of concrete out of the truck (hardware store guys put them in there for me — thanks again guys!) Then just dump the cement in the wheelbarrow, use the hose for the water, mix mix mix, scope out the wet cement into the mold, smooth, move to next mold. I had 2 molds so by the time second one was filled, the first mold was ready to be moved down the line. Whole process was crazy quick!

short path

This project was crazy easy — mix concrete, pour into mold (seen leaning against house) smooth out and move to the next one.

long path

This is about 20 feet long and only took me about 2 1/2 hours to make. I love how it looks!

long path not done

Once again bad at math — I under calculated the number of concrete bags I would need to do the last few feet. No worries, easy to mop up after work one evening.

I am so excited about how good it looks — can totally imagine lovely green things growing in the cracks.

A Dirty, Dirty Job

I have already proven that math confounds me (see my retaining wall post). And measurements are just as bad. As a page designer for the last 17 years, I have picas and points, even on a scalable screen, mastered. Inches can be iffy but in print I am close. In the real world it gets ugly. Anything bigger than an inch — feet, yards, meters, miles, kilometers — I am useless. That said, I NEED dirt. And a lot of it. After attempting to top off behind the retaining wall with a few bags of soil from the hardware store proved I have no idea what a yard looks like, I knew that it was more than I wanted to buy in individual plastic bags. So to the Internet I went. First to a yard calculator and then to a dirt company who would deliver. They came Friday morning.

Pile of dirt

6 yards! The picture does not do it justice — it was literally above my waist and took up most of the driveway. Holy hell, that is A LOT of dirt.

So out came the wheel barrow and for the next 3 days nothing but sholving and dumping — first into the garden boxes and then behind the retaining wall. Because this was happening on a lovely Friday, Saturday and Sunday, I got to meet a lot of my new neighbors out for a walk and enjoying the beautiful day. Lily made a ton of new friends and got a lot of exercise following me back and forth from the front yard to the back and out again. Neighbor Charles (who I really like and who Lily LOVES to bark at) made it a point of coming out and making sassy comments ever few hours — Thanks for that Charles!

But I triumphed!

Dirt gone

3 days later. And some seriously sore muscles, I had moved it all.

And now ready for the fun part … planting.

garden boxes

Full and ready for planting

retaining wall

Another blank canvass ready for some fun!

The Push and Pull

The waiting is over and the black death has been removed to see the swath of brown. I am ready to rototill my new herb garden bed.

dead grass

The plastic did its work and now time to rototill. A little digging confirmed that this was not a job to do by hand.

dead grass 2

I had the utilities come out and mark where the lines were. Nothing scarier than hitting the gas line with a rototiller — fortunately they are much deeper than I am planning on going.

lily on dead grass

Lily really likes sitting on the dead grass — maybe it is extra warm or something.

Lines marked, I headed to Home Depot and rented a rototiller. I have never done this before and it took some time to figure out how to not rip my arms off. But once I got the knack of it, it went pretty fast. Neighbor Charles redeemed himself for all of his snarky comments while I was moving dirt by helping me get the rototiller in and out of the back of the truck.

rototilled

All done. I had to throw down some blocks to get across the muddy pit. Lily was particularly unhappy about tramping through the mud. I liked the stones so much, I decided to set them deeper and keep them.

One Cool Cookie

We have had a lovely spring — keeping in mind that it is Oregon and rain happens — usually a lot. But is has been nice enough that yard is flourishing and the house has gotten rather warm a few times (thanks to new, non-drafty windows!). So my dad owned a heating and air conditioning business for more than 35 years and I am kind of a baby when it comes to temperature control. This house does have air conditioning but it feels too early to turn it on (and I am cheap.) But one of the virtues I learned about in the old house, where there was no A/C, was ceiling fans. Almost every room had one and I even installed one in the dinning room there. So I knew I could do it again. And bonus this time was that the ceilings here aren’t 12-feet high.

So I spent the first day of my vacation on a ladder doing this.

before ceiling fan

The before — I LOATH boob lights! How can anyone think that looks good.

After ceiling fan

Looks pretty snazzy. And it took a fraction of the time that it did at the other house. Experience is a blessed thing! Also note the new art arrangements. So much cleaner. Oh, and the TV is probably new in this photo too. I am sort of fancy sometimes.

A Little Side Project

There is a massive road construction project going on at my work, The Columbian. One Wednesday, we on the desk were going about our business when one of the ladies in Advertising strolled by and mentioned that the landscaping in the west parking lot was being ripped out the following morning and all of the plants were up for grabs. Several of the desk members have thumbs as green as mine and we jumped at the chance. So during our dinner break, Bob, Romana and I went out to loot. Romana had a shovel in her car (that is a true gardener!) and I was thankful I had a pair of gloves in mine. My bounty was pretty awesome — several little variegated shrubs, 6 giant clumps of tall aster things (thought they were shasta daisies), a little tree and a ton of periwinkle. Loaded my share into the back of my truck and went back to work, sweaty but satisfied.

So now that I had all of this free booty, I needed to figure out where to put it. I knew I didn’t want shrubs in the new front yard bed and I didn’t really have a game plan worked out for the back. However, the front side area was screaming for something low maintenance but cute. The two draggly roses needed some friends.

south of drive

2 leggy rose bushes and current home to the mulch removed from the front porch. yuck.

Another blank canvass to play with. So my next day off, a few hours of work transformed it.

driveway side transformed

Dug out a little bed. Plunked in the bushes, some davidii and asters, spread some of the mulch.

Driveway side transformed2

Looks much better. Sorry I about the poor photography and shadows. But you get the gist.

New Wall Stacks Up to Hard Work

The guys who work in the garden center at Lowes officially think I’m crazy. Also I don’t do the maths.

The retaining wall in the south west corner of the yard had basically crumbled and while rebuilding it I thought I could make a cool raised bed. I laid it out and did all kinds of crazy math and figured out how many stones I would need. Then I had to take into consideration how many the truck could carry (had a few tense moments buying pavers in the yellow car and didn’t want to bottom out or wreck my shocks).  My plan in hand, I head to Lowes to get what I hoped would be enough for half of the project. They were eager to help and got a load of stones into the truck. I get home, bust out the wheel burrow and haul them around back. The stones don’t even cover a single layer and I know now that I will need at least 4 layers. Fail. 3 trips later, the lowes guys automatically pull on their gloves when they see me coming and ask how many this time.

retaining wall

Beginning of day 2 — Still totally underestimated the number I would need.

finished retaining wall

Completely worth all of the drama and hard work! Looks great. But I’m going to need a lot more dirt.

Planning the Foundations

The major consequence of February’s tree planting adventure was that it gave me a serious hankering to get back into the yard and start planning this year’s projects. So I mopped up my major work undertaking of restructuring the Copy Desk and officially shelved my ambition of teaching myself Java Script and pulled out the graph paper. Out came the gardening books and I started making lists of plants I had brought with me and what I knew I wanted to buy for this yard. Having a fresh canvas was exciting but I knew that could get in over my head in a hurry. So I limited this year’s project to just a few beds, the garden and few foundational plantings (aka more trees). I had a week off in the middle of March and started digging.

First chore: remove mulch and pave front patio so I could have somewhere to sit when it rains:

front porch

Mulch has to go. And repot tropical lily thing.

front porch

Replaced mulch with pavers. Added desk and chair. Potted up lily and added some primroses and snapdragons. Cute, cute, cute. And dry.

Next project was expanding and creating new beds in the front yard.

new front bed

New bed between my property and neighbor Charles. Then planted a plum tree and put in stepping stones for the mailman.

front porch bed

Connected new side bed with the front porch bed, which I expanded out another 2 feet.

And since I was in a tree planting mood — I planted 2 fig trees and a cherry tree along the north edge of the back yard. Going to be so delicious!

Frui trees

Closest to house is a Desert King Fig, Cherry tree (5-kind hybird), and Brown Turkey Fig.

I moved the sod from the front bed around back, for the beginnings of the next project — the retaining wall.

sod pile

By the time I was done with front beds, I had a pretty big pile of sod.

Cramming it all in

I knew that I wanted my new living room to be a robbin’s egg blue ( not sure why I knew that, but once planted in my brain it wouldn’t budge) so that is how it played out. And of course, WHITE CEILINGS! I also did an accent wall along the hall with the same yellow as the kitchen. The whole thing is very cheerful, even in depressing gray winter.

But once the paint was done I needed to arrange the furniture and decorate. Turns out that what I thought would be a room practically designed for my furniture, nothing really fit at all how I hoped. And I was scratching up the floor moving things around all the time, not to mention making my back sad. My biggest problem is that I LOVE my furniture and I wanted anyone who came over to see all of the awesome pieces I have. But not enough space, so what would get booted to the back bedroom? My orange couch, which was my first grown-up furniture purchase? Nope. Where would people sit? The ugly blue chair or ugly green chair that I inherited from my grandparents? They are too prefect with the wall color and age of the house and where would people sit? The old tv or old stereo (also inherited). Super cool and great talking points, so they have to stay. Shelves hold plants and plants are a must, especially in front the big windows. My desk? Also holding plants (and I’ve had it since junior high and am so attached). Ugly Coffee table I inherited from Deacon? Where would people put their beverages? The little white cabinet? It looks perfect under the thermostat with the $700 lamp on it. Sigh.

In the end, the awesome armoire got booted and people will just have to put their coats in the real coat closet and games can go in the back room and pulled out when needed. It still feels a little crowded. Future project is to rethink, but for now I’m OK with it.

The wall hangings also went through several rounds of rearranging, which made me feel super guilty about putting nail holes in my freshly painted walls, but I’m over it.

armoir

It looked good but couldn’t stay

living room

Getting things arranged

mom living room

Mom by the little white cabinet and Rex painting

living room

The armoire is gone but the art still needs work. And a rug to pull things together.