Tag: backyard

Backyard Creek Ideas

Dry creek on green lawnOne of the loveliest things about our yard is the creek and waterfall.  The beauty and tranquility it creates is fabulous.  Now don’t get the wrong impression!  We do NOT have a large yard or one of those magnificent yards you see on BHG or HGTV!  What we do have, is a son with a talent for landscaping and some big equipment to do the job, AND a natural slope to our lot. However….you don’t need to have all that.  The natural slope is very helpful and it doesn’t have to slope a lot.  And even if you don’t have that there are some landscaping and grading tricks you can use to acquire the slope you need for a wonderful and natural looking creek.  (That is, if you think having a creek in the back yard of someone who lives in an urban subdivision natural).  But you know what I mean.

The trick is to use the natural slope of the ground, NOT to build a mountain or even a mole hill in the flat of your yard.  That is anything but natural looking.

Design the creek bed beginning at the top, level (or almost level) with your existing grade; digging deeper as you go toward the end.  You may have to dig deeper than you might think at first, but remember, you are going to add the pond liner and then fill it with river rocks so it won’t look as deep when the project is done.  You will use the dirt you are digging to form your ditch banks.

Basic materials you need are:

  • Shovels/picks depending on the soil you have.
  • Rocks – varying sizes from pebbles to 6-7 inch to boulder size, and river rock, depending on the look and the affordability you are after.
  • Pump kit (can be purchased from an aquatic & pond store)
  • Heavy pond liner (some experts suggest using carpet scraps to lay down before the pond liner)
  • Black foam (to be used to glue rocks in place and to divert water and seal leaks)
  • Receptacle (to hold retaining water)

When designing your creek, it’s a great idea to take some pictures of your favorite natural creek in the wild or a picture from a great website J.  Take notice of the banks, the way rocks are placed by nature, the plants that grow nearby; the fact that streams do not run in a straight line.  That is the most fun of all.  Creating!

When you think you have all in place and turn on the water for the first time, be prepared to be very disappointed!  The water will go everywhere but where you want it to.  That’s when some patience and work come into play.  The black foam (sold in nurseries, aquatic, stores, and even Lowes garden center) is your best friend.  You will begin to seal rocks together, seal underneath those you have stacked on one another, add some more over here to divert the water over there, and so on.  It will take you some time.  It took us about a week AFTER we thought the project was done, just to get the rocks in the right place.  Remember water runs downhill!  Your “downhill” needs to lead to the end of the creek, where, by the way your receptacle and pump will be with a pipe that runs back up under the ditch bank to the beginning of the creek.

As with any DIY project do some homework.  There are tons of resources out there. Have fun!

Backyard Creek Ideas creek in backyard 2

Amazing Rock Garden Plant Ideas

Beautiful Rock Garden Plant Ideas

Rock Gardens….and my dad’s aching back!

When I was a little girl my parents loved to go for drives and road trips.  One experience that was always included was time spent looking for rocks for my mom’s rock garden.  I don’t mean just little ole’ every day run of the mill rocks; I mean large and very beautiful rocks.  My dad would stop at mom’s “request” and the two rock hounds would march out into some field or wooded area in search of the rock that would inevitably end up under my feet in the back seat of the car.  Fun memories!  WOW!  Would I love to have some of those rocks now.  Included in many were fossils and petrified wood.

Well, we would get home from the trip and next up was (and this still brings a very big smile to my face) mom orchestrating dad around the yard to place the new find in EXACTLY the right spot.  It always took no less than 6-7 moves.  Keep in mind these were very HEAVY souvenirs!   Well anyway, they ended up with a beautiful collection of mini-boulders for a fabulous rock garden.

Unfortunately, however, they planted tams between the rocks rather than beautiful, flowering, creeping ground cover and some well-chosen perennials.  Now, don’t get me wrong, tams have their place, but eventually all these beautiful rocks were completely covered with these evergreen shrubs.  What a waste!  And these bushes claimed many of my tennis balls and badminton birdies as well!

We, too, have some beautiful rocks (which we paid dearly for, by the way, and one reason I would NEVER want to cover them up), and a favorite hobby of mine is to try different flowers/ground covers, etc. to plant in and around these natural sculptures.

Some of my favorites:

  • Basket of Gold Alyssum
  • Creeping Phlox
  • Purple Salvia
  • Ice Plant
  • Soapwort
  • Snow in Summer
  • Lavender
  • Sweet Potato Vine
  • Geraniums
  • Creeping Jenny
  • Mother Hen & Chicks

Although it is still early spring and many of our plants are not in bloom, you can get the idea of what we have done in our yard.  The Basket of Gold is truly one of the showstoppers this time of year.  These are just a few pictures of the rock gardens at my house 🙂

Rock Garden back yard Rock Garden front yard

 

6 Tips to a Fabulous Dry Creek Bed

DIY Creek Bed ~

6 Tips to a Fabulous DIY Dry Creek Bed (1)

6….okay…..maybe 8 pointers to a magnificent landscape design

If you love the outdoors and want to enjoy the look and “feel” of a beautiful stream, how about a dry creek bed?  The very nature of the term “dry creek bed” can bring to mind a desolate and water-starved scene in the Sahara…NO, NO!   You don’t need the water to suggest its presence in the garden.  If planned correctly and creatively a dry creek bed can look as though there was once rushing water where pebbles and stones were deposited and the lush of foliage remain.