Garden and Backyard Space

by Freakyfoam in Living > Gardening

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Garden and Backyard Space

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So, I bought my house around a year and a half ago. After moving around a lot and not having my own place while in the Marine Corps, I was glad I finally had a backyard I could do something with. I always wanted to grow my own veggies, fruit, and have lots of beautiful plants to enjoy.

When I purchased the home, the backyard was basically a field of neglected grass, weeds, and some poorly executed decorative projects. There is a lot of stuff I would like to do, but it will of course take time and money.  That being said, I was able to get the yard where it is today by re-purposing things the previous owner had in the backyard and by searching for discounted items.  

Unfortunately, the garden is bare right now because I didn't plant many winter crops because of some back issues, but picture several types of tomato plants in the raised beds along with cucumber, zucchini, yellow squash, pole beans, and a few others and that's what it looked like last spring and summer.  It's been great because I've been able to share what I've harvested with many of my neighbors!

Before

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This is what it looked like when I bought the house. The "grass" seems to look okay in this pic because it had just rained, but believe me, it was 50% weeds and wasn't usually that green.  A $75 rental of a sod cutter took care of that.

It's a little hard to see, but the previous owner put in a planting bed and a little pond toward the back by bordering those areas with retaining wall stone.  The pond looked terrible and wasn't functioning, so everything got taken out. 

After

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After removing all the grass, stones, pond, and other junk, I used weed fabric on the right half of the yard which was then covered with 2 cubic yards of the cheapest gravel I could find (I think it cost me $60 for all of it.  If you haven't moved 2 cubic yards of gravel before, I can tell you that it's A LOT).  

I re-purposed the retaining wall stone and used them to make raised garden beds.  I also used some flagstone that was on the property to create some pathways in the gravel and to border the fire pit that I constructed.

I was able to get the plants extremely  cheap.  I originally thought it would take years to buy the plants I would need/want, but I found deeply discounted plants at some local home improvement stores.  One day, I bought $400 worth of plants that were discounted to $60.

I was also lucky to find paver stones that were 50% off, so I have a pathway going from the steps all the way back to the shed, a pathway from that one that goes toward the shade structure and then the rest of the pavers were used to build a small patio under the structured).

I also put in a drip irrigation system so it would be easy to maintain.  Every plant is on the system, so I don't have to worry about someone else watering them when I go camping, etc.

Anyway, it's a work in progress and I'm looking forward to planting some new crops in the next few months.