Sunday, March 22, 2009

Saguaro Lake

A couple weeks ago, Joe, Jake and I went to Saguaro Lake for a short day-trip. Jake brought his lab mix, Lilly, and we brought our Dobermans, Max and Sadie. We took an offroad trail and saw great scenery. Joe and Jake also enjoyed the four wheeling. Myself and the pups were a little less enthused :)

Joe, Syd and the Dobes

Our vehicle: The Four Runner!

Me (Sydney) overlooking Saguaro Lake in the background.


One of the Four Wheeling "obstacles"


Max using Sadie as a pillow

Joe Drove.. and Jake took most of the pictures



After the four wheeling we took a short hike around Saguaro Lake and let the puppies swim. Max loves the water, but this picture shows that he didn't quite having swimming down, at least not in his new, giant body. He swam with his paws out of the water like he was trying to walk on it.
Eventually, he got it. Here he is with Lilly, who won the catch the ball game every time.
Because of this, Max decided to focus his attention on getting Lilly, and not the ball.

Jake and Lilly

Jake

Four Wheeling

Lastly, here is a video of all of the dogs swimming. Lilly is obviously the most experienced and graceful of the three. This is a great example of Max trying to walk on water instead of swimming in it. And poor Sadie, who we now realize has probably never swum before in her life. She attempted to swim, but was more successful at semi-drowning. Better luck next time :

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Tree Trimming

We have a massive, no....enormous.... no gargantuan Pine Tree in our front yard. It's one of the trees you would more likely see in Prescott, Payson, or Flagstaff instead of smack tab in the middle of Tempe. As much as I love having something that reminds me of cooler weather as part of my landscaping, it has already become a big pain. We have to deal with a lot of pine cones and pine needles and the tree roots have already broken our irrigation system. So, as a temporary fix we decided to just trim a majority of the bottom branches off so we would get more sunlight and less pine needles on the roof. Here is a reminder of the house before:

See how some of the tree branches are actually sweeping against our roof? Here is how they did-
the tree trimmer actually climbed up into the tree with a chainsaw and hacked everything down!


And this man caught the falling branches.

And finally, the finished project. Big tree = Big difference!!!





Sunday, March 8, 2009

Landscaping, Oh My!

We began the process of landscaping our front yard immediately upon moving in. A previous blog showed Joe and Co. working on repairing damage to our irrigation system. We have also planted winter grass in the front lawn and removed all of the pre-existing shrubbery. I don't have photos to directly illustrate but there are four planting areas available in our front yard and all four had to be gutted entirely. They are the the front left, the front right, the left entry way and the right entry way. The left entry way will ultimately be filled with pavers and used as a sitting area.

Step 1: Remove all of the existing landscaping. Most of the shrubs were 3 feet high and filled in every available space. Weeds were overgrown. We removed all of the shrubs first, and came back later to remove all of the weeds until we were left with a smooth layer of dirt.



The front left landscaping area. In the small photo you can see the Oleanders that had overtaken the area. The only thing we kept were the Pygmy Palm Trees.




The front right landscaping area. Again, everything here has been removed. This area was a weed-disaster zone.




Joe had to remove the Oleander bushes and he did so with the assistance of our Toyota Fourunner. He hooked heavy duty chain around the base of all four Oleanders and yanked the root balls straight out of the ground. We are happy with our Oleander-free existence!




Step 2: Organizing the plants. Not including annuals, there are nineteen plants in the front landscaping areas. I'll discuss them more below.



Step 3: We had to fix and extend our drip line system so it would irrigate all of our new plants. As the plants grow, the drip lines will have to grow with them. It is a tedious process but essential to keep everything thriving.

Step 4: ROCK! We decided to place a rock layer over the ground. We chose a light colored stone that blends nicely with the exterior color of our house. We love the look and thinks it brings a nice finishing touch to the landscaping.




Here is a more detailed view of the front left landscaping area. We have Euryops Daisy (the yellow plant), two small rose bushes, two Agave varieties, an Aloe variety, Fairy Duster and a green Hopseed bush. The fairy duster is a red variety and difficult to see. It will be a medium-sized shrub once established.


The right front landscaping area. We planted Euryops Daisy, an Aloe variety, Green Hopseed Bush, Fairy Duster and two purple daisy annuals.



The front entry way. The vine is a Bower vine, it will produce beautiful white flowers with magenta centers. We hope to carry the vine across the arbor across our entry way. The vine is surrounded by a variety of annuals and a layer of rock has been addded here as well.

Everything is planted and the irrigation system is working. Now we have to determine how long and how often to whater, when and what to fertilize with, to make sure that we give all our plants the best chance at survival. We purchased "Moon Juice" from the nursery and this is administered to the plants weekly and is supposed to help them become established. Arizona summers are HOT and we need to give them the best shot at survival. Luckily, most plants here are well-suited for desert weather. Because we have a mild-winter many of these shrubs will flower year round and we will have color landscaping non-stop. The roses espicially will bloom through the winter once established.
Next project with the front yard: Pavers in the entry way!