Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Sweet Sheds

Showy sheds: These garden hideaways are packed with creativity

by Lori Mendoza, special to The Oregonian
Wednesday June 18, 2008, 2:12 PM

Garden sheds used to be dank, dusty outbuildings designed solely to store lawn mowers, hoses, tools and pots. No longer. Today's garden shed is still big on storage, but it also has lots of style.

We've seen many great sheds as we've toured area gardens -- and we've shown many of them on the pages of HGNW. In fact, there were so many, we decided that creating unique sheds had become something of a Northwest pastime.

Clearly it was time to do some serious reporting and find out what other gems were out there. Turns out that wasn't necessary; with a small notice in a single HGNW issue -- headlined, "Show us your sheds" -- we got more material than we could use.

With 87 examples to choose from, we had a hard time culling our selections to the 10 that represented the various styles. In fact, we couldn't, so we decided to feature 12.

But at the end of the story, keep on scrolling and you'll find photos of more sheds we love.

All-weather delight
Pat Eckerdt, Salem

This cobblestone and cedar-shake shed, built by Dene Byers, then a 75-year-old retired mason, is the work center for Eckerdt's two-acre garden. But it's the interior touches -- pots transformed into light fixtures and a mosaic design on the floor -- that make it stand out.

With heat from a wood stove and daylight from six skylights, Eckerdt can make the most of cool and warm days. Door handles made from a garden fork and a cement trowel keep the focus where Eckerdt wants it: on the garden.

Simple but elegant
Bob and Peggy Hanson,
Dundee

The Hansons started with a simple plan: a place to store tools and pot some plants. Then a stained-glass window picked up at a garage sale years earlier caused the plan to take an elegant turn.

Bob drew inspiration from the classic state-park structures and started with a stone-covered foundation. The 'Cecile Brunner' climbing rose reminds Peggy of her grandmother's rose garden.

"It is a wonderful place to have an early-morning cup of coffee or to putter on a rainy day," Peggy says. Oh, and it does store tools.

Portable, too
Barry and Joni Steel,
Manzanita

The Steels learned a lesson when they sold their Portland home and the buyers insisted on keeping the greenhouse. This time, Barry built the shed/greenhouse in 4-foot modules so that it can be dismantled and moved.

Joni's cactus collection "thrives in its new home -- in our very non-desertlike climate," says Barry. He used windows they already had, glass panels from a local recycling center, and a discarded Dutch door and oak arched windows from friends.

It's not a yurt; it's not a spa
Patricia Kilgore,
Hillsboro

Beams salvaged from a burned-out factory became the bones of this octagonal garden shed that is often mistaken for a yurt or a spa enclosure.

Kilgore's son-in-law, Joe Hanks of Beaverton, helped design and build the structure, using the front door from her old farmhouse and constructing the porch rail from old fence posts and copper plumbing pipe. Copper gutters and a hog-wire trellis complete the design.

"It added structure, charm, function, and, most importantly, an expression for salvage and a playhouse for me," says Kilgore.

Form meets function
Suzanne Willette,
Portland

The garden shed, made from found architectural objects, mimics the architectural details of Willette's century-old home.

"I built it myself, using found architectural details that are whimsical yet functional," she says.

Behind mismatched doors, shelves are home to garden tools and provide shelter for a lawn mower and a power washer. On the other side of the shed, wood stored behind a vertical green shutter stays dry for the fireplace.

Already a winner
Becky and Glenn Hogg,
West Linn

After a tree fell on their garden shed last year, the Hoggs decided to use some old things to make a new greenhouse/shed. And even though it's not complete, it has already won a $500 prize from the editors of Better Homes and Gardens magazine.

The prizewinner is made from recycled materials, including 11 matching double-hung windows, three doors from friends and a concrete laundry tub for potting.

"We still have some work to complete, but it has served its purpose this past winter to keep numerous potted plants from freezing," says Glenn.

East meets West
Donna and John McCoy,
Beaverton

After adding a pond and waterfall to their backyard, the McCoys decided their metal garden shed just wouldn't do. "We love the ambience of Japanese gardens," says Donna, so they researched designs on the Internet.

It was a bit of a challenge to find a waterproof material to use on the exterior walls that would have a rice-paper look. Eventually they found opaque fiberglass panels at a local store, and John made wood grids, painted them black and tacked them to the frames. The door is on a closet-door track attached to the top frame.

"It's almost a shame to store the lawn mower and potting soil in there," says Donna. "I'm always tempted to go out there in my kimono and serve tea sitting on the floor."

Up on the roof
Tina and Nathan Jeffers,
Portland

Tina wanted a garden shed to store her tools, provide shelter for her seedlings and look like an extension of her house. Nathan had little interest in any of it.

"But when I dragged him to the home and garden show last year, he was very struck by a green roof display," she says.

That got things going. After the shed was finished, Tina surprised Nathan with an ecoroof planted with succulents for his birthday. "I had to keep everything very hush-hush and spent a whole day on my hands and knees on top of the roof in order to finish it in time for his birthday," she says.

English countryside
Roger and JoAnn Rollins,
Lake Oswego

The Rollinses needed a place to store gardening tools and supplies -- and they needed a garage for a garden railroad that's under construction.

They started the project (there's no way we can call this a shed) four years ago. Finally, after Roger retired, he finished the miniature version of their English Country-style home.

Roger designed it all, from the basic dimensions to the leaded-glass windows, traditional-style hardware and staggered-shake roof that mimics the roof of their home. When the garden railroad is complete, it will exit the shed through a cat door.

Wild, wild shed
Tom and Judy Webb,
Tigard

Tom saw an opportunity in an old barn from Judy's family farm near Roy. It had been severely damaged by the 1962 Columbus Day storm and it was time to get rid of it.

He used the loft beams of old-growth fir as the base of the simple structure. The beautifully weathered 12-inch rough-cut loft planks from the old barn became the flooring and siding.

"It was great to bring a piece of history to our lower backyard," Tom says -- not to mention rekindling his wife's childhood memories of swinging from the rafters and falling into piles of loose hay.

Wine bar
Sue Carter,
Portland

Carter knew the Tudor-style home she bought eight years ago needed a unique garden shed that would do justice to its manicured English gardens.

"Then two years ago, when a friend and I were browsing shops in the Pearl, we walked into Cargo and saw some interesting old Indonesian panels used as a backdrop for their garden area."

She persuaded Cargo to sell the panels, and garden designer Dave Jensen, of Acorn Solutions, helped her come up with a design. With the help of family and friends, Carter built the shed in a weekend. In the summer, the shed -- with its stained-glass window and candle chandelier -- doubles as a wine bar for garden parties.

Mud pies and flowers
David and Linda Campbell,
Hood River

When Linda sets out to work in her garden shed, her many windows allow her to feel as if she's still outdoors but protected from Hood River winds. David built the shed from bits and pieces of scrap collected over the years, including seasoned wood from an old barn.

The shed also helps unleash the imagination of the couple's 6-year-old granddaughter, Madison. "It is so warm and peaceful, no wonder that our granddaughter thinks it was built just for her mud-pie-making restaurant," Linda says.

"Every little girl's dream? Mine, anyway."

MORE INSPIRATION
"Stylish Sheds and Elegant Hideaways: Big Ideas for Small Backyard Destinations," by Debra Prinzing (224 pages, Clarkson Potter)

-- Lori Mendoza; mendozalori@hotmail.com


MORE SHOWPLACE SHEDS

Karen Sigworth
Brad Meyer and Rachel Yarger / Portland
Louise and Tom Silverthorn / Colton
Ron and Diane Kleve
Jim Michaelson / Portland
Terry Pizzuto / Portland
Deb Stoner and Fred Soelzer / Oak Grove
Linda and Charles Pickett
Diana and George McQueen / Portland
Larry Scott
Terry Shaffer, Colton, and Barbara Byers, Oregon City
Scott and JoDee Zinck
Lori McDade
Arty Trost / Sandy
Suzanne Alexander / Oregon City
Jean Riley / Corvallis
Jim Bofman / Fossil
Mike and Margie Layman / Albany

The Boulevarden Win's David Suzuki Award!

We are happy to report that the Boulevarden won the 'David Suzuki Digs My Garden' contest. The contest called for gardens that do not use pesticides...you can view a personal congratulations from David Suzuki here http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/bcpid1869637951





From Suzuki website http://www.davidsuzuki.org/NatureChallenge/GardenContest/didyouknow.asp

"Getting your lawn off drugs is kinda smart, too.

In the race to
have the best lawn on the block, we spread 67 million pounds of toxic pesticides onto our lawns every year. It’s foolish, and dangerous - especially to small children and pets.

Over 1,000 toxic pesticide products for sale in Canada have been banned in other countries. Exposure to pesticides can lead to serious illness such as cancers, neurological diseases and reproductive problems.

Other reasons not to use pesticides?
• They kill off beneficial inse
cts such as ladybugs and honeybees.
• They accumulate in the food chain – damaging birds, fish and other animals.
• They destroy bacteria and nutrients that improve the soil and nourish plants and seeds.

• When it rains (or you water), they end up in our water table.

Tips to get you started:
Think outside of the golf cou
rse this summer. Depending on where you live, you can plant clover, thyme, flowering mosses and a ll kind of grass varieties. It doesn’t have to be just grass. Xeriscaping is a great approach to customize your yard to a local climate. It also happens to require less water and maintenance."

So next summer as a community let's quit using pesticides, take up more and more lawn and add more drought tolerant
plants.

We need to be open to different 'lawns'...we are living a type of desert...we need to plant accordingly. Xeriscaping is not about just removing your lawn and replacing it with gravel...look at the pictures below...xeriscaping is beautiful - more beautiful than a lawn if you ask me - and truly when you have perennials life is easier than a lawn...if ya wanna talk about it stop by any time - 1309 7 Ave South. Also I recommend the book "Getting Your Lawn off Grass" I have used it for a few years and it is a great resource http://www.harbourpublishing.com/book.php?id=411

The gorgeous picture below is a very easy maintenance lawn
- native grasses and sedums...this is really a no maintenance lawn - maybe have to weed once every three weeks at the most!
Try a clover lawn -
no mowing and it fills like a thick carpet so virtually no weeding.











Use Yukkas, which do really well in southern Alberta and have beautiful white flowers!
Is your 'lawn' up a step or two? Use a Thyme as a walk way - it is not only beautiful, it also smells wonderful - and - walking on it makes it reproduce as the seeds get crushed under foot. (below is not Thyme - but looks very similar)

Friday, September 19, 2008

Dominic and Ethan's visit


This afternoon I met Dominic and Ethan, two cool cyclers who stopped by the garden...unfortunately they were not able to cull much from the garden...Ethan found a couple of 'green' strawberries...sad - there have been quite a few people by for strawberries and so there are not many left...Ethan and I are pretty sure that Cameron and Spencer have been by and they are big strawberry pickers : D

Ethan did get a bit of mint and gave it to Dominic to 'smell'...cycle aroma therapy I say. So...Ethan lives in Lethbridge - Cameron told him about the Boulevarden and he brought Dominic...Dominic now lives in Red Deer - a city about the same size as Lethbridge. I asked if they had recommendations for planting next spring - any plants that they would like on the go.

Dominic said raspberries would be awesome - he was telling me about his grandma's which started out as a small plant and have multiplied like crazy - so we discussed the downside of raspberry bushes on the Boulevarden...Dominic also though that maybe carrots and onions (to which Ethan said, "onions?!...no way - you wouldn't eat onions as you were going by!" Dominic replied "yes I would...if there was salt!"). We discussed the idea of a condiment bar in the Boulevarden...this discussion evolved into the idea a full kitchen option in order to be able to cook things - as a cheese burger would also be good).

Ethan thought that peas, cukes, peppermint and honeysuckle would be good - he suggested a fence for the honeysuckle to grow up - he told me that 'you can take the flowers and suck the one end and get 'honey'".

...it was cool to meet them...

It was a nice visit...

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

So Nice to see you...

Last night I sat out on the deck for a wine and visit with my Mom...long over due. As we were talking a Mom and her four kids came by the garden and spent about 1/2 hour looking for strawberries and tomatoes and shaking sunflower 'trees'...they also went over to Richard and Marlene's (the next door neighbours) garden and found some nice tomatoes to eat as they played and discovered the gardens. They were very cute and it was nice to see them in the garden.

Then just as I was walking my Mom to her car a friend of ours Pat was driving by, she stopped and we ended up having another glass of wine with her - and a lovely chat. I have not been out on the deck much lately and last night reminded me how important it was and how much it makes my heart smile.

It was so nice to see you...

Monday, September 8, 2008

Cameron and Spencer bring Samantha

This afternoon when I got home Spencer and Cameron where here and introduced me to their friend Samantha. Cameron said they had told her about the garden and got her to come by. They found some strawberries and some ripe tomatoes from our neighbours Richard and Marlene's Boulevarden. Richard and Marlene have tonnes of tomatoes. The kids were eating the cherry tomatoes right off the vine and pocketing some Romas for dinner.

It is always nice to see them, and it was great to meet Samantha. Samantha said her brother came too, but was not into it so left for home. It is really cool that Cameron and Spencer are so into the garden they are bringing friends - thanks guys...see ya soon.

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Guerilla Sunflowers...


My sister Sara noticed and took me to this guerilla garden (pictured above). It is a garden spot in the park by the tennis courts on North Parkside Drive. The bed is planted with ever greens - someone added sunflower seeds and now there are dozens of sunny flowers growing there.

The above sunflower garden is in a back alley a few blocks from my place...

Cameron and Spencer!


Today was great for several reasons - one b
eing Cameron and Spencer dropped by the Boulevarden (I am sorry Cameron if I have been calling you Campbell - for some reason that was the name I had in my head but I see looking at the note I made when you stopped by before I wrote Cameron...oops). I have talked about Cameron and Spencer before - they are neighbourhood boys you visit the garden all most daily I learned today. They have been watching the tomatoes and waiting for them to be perfect...which would have been today - they came and they were gone. Sad. But we (actually they) found some cherry tomatoes, strawberries and a zucchini to take with them. Spencer found a 'funny tiny one' pictured below


Cameron had dropped off a Shamrock for me...the 'seed' is a corm I think he calls it - he says 'it looks like a pineapple'...which it does - see the picture below of him holding the 'corm'. We decided to dig it up and I would plant it inside.


In another post I will add in the instructions Cameron has for the care and SHARING of a Shamrock plant. Cameron was very precise...while Cameron was giving me instructions and tips, Spencer was crouched down eating the flat leave parsley...seriously cute! I gave Cameron a cutting off my Jade plant.

One of the times they were here in the last bit, Cameron, Spencer and Rhonda their mom were by to take some of the plant volunteers in the garden (some Phlox, Chinese Lanterns, and Black Eyed Susans), but they didn't transplant so well so we are going to have a go again. Fall is better for transplanting those anyway.

Spencer wanted a sunflower - he chose one that was 10' tall...it was a beaut I have to say, but I told him that it would not transplant well at this time of year - he is going to take a smaller one in the upper garden another time.

Rhonda came by after a busy day of work and musings of missing their first day of school because she had to work...she was working at a school and she said it was a busy busy zoo. As I scurried off in a hurry to go get Paul, Rhonda asked the kids if they wanted a ride home or wanted to walk - they opted to walk. As I drove off I watched them...as they walked down the street they looked at around, said hi to a woman who walks a one legged dog in our neighbourhood, and generally just seemed to enjoy themselves.
These two precocious boys are lovely...they want to be part of a community - they foster their community - they are community.

Thanks Cameron and Spencer for making my day.

Monday, September 1, 2008

My heart is strawberries...

Perhaps this is all a bit dramatic...

...but

I have been wanting to complain to you
or maybe it is just a desire
to share my thoughts with you
on this summer
so far
...or as it ends.

I found this summer
different
from the last
the first
...and it has left me slightly melancholy.

...and I can't figure out why...this summer has been a great year for Guerilla Gardening in Lethbridge, and I have been a catalyst and part of many of the efforts. We did the Coyote Garden, seed bombs, the Boulevarden, small weeding/actions here and there...I traveled and visited with women around the Lethbridge area who offered and shared with me their stories and plants. Several of the press have been to the garden again this year. When we had a gg table at the Amnesty concert at the beginning of this month person after person come up to me to applaud my efforts, and to tell me that my actions have inspired them to make small/important guerilla efforts of their own (I say this not out of ego...but people have been really positive, encouraging and impassioned about guerilla gardening this summer...word has gotten out and people are excited about it - and I do know I have played a part in that).

which brings me to the dramatic part...

I feel a bit detached

from the garden this year. I think part of it is because I am disappointed that it has not done as well...plant wise. As I have said before the tomatoes were more than disappointing, the Basil died...and Zucchini barely grew! Those three items were what people mostly harvested from the garden.We had no plums this year...last year kids on bikes and would stop, grab a plum and ride off with a wave. We have not had much to share. Which has made me sad...as that was the point, right? or at least one of the points...I loved/thrived on the gift aspect of the Boulevarden as much if not more than the community part of it, well I guess the gift part is community,but...I'm sorry, I am talking in elipses...

Don't get me wrong...the garden looks wonderful...all of the flowers and perennial herbs have grown very well, and people have still been by to see and share the garden (and its tiny bounty...smile)...

But I worry me as my detachment has caused me to not be in the garden...or out front as often, I am not interacting with the community as often. Last summer I did a performance a day in the garden. This year when I go out I feel self conscious and have only done half a dozen or so. Although as I peer through my screened window at people in the Boulevarden (which I sometimes do) I feel I am in performance...I feel like another...I feel sneaky, closed, open..I have begun to wonder if they see me and have started to think of me as the strange woman who spies on them...if they feel self conscious...

So I don't know what
to do with this...
is just indulgent?
moaning and g(r)ow(n)ing?
I don't know...
but my heart is very still

very committed
to guerilla/community/performance gardening
...but it feels a bit like a small strawberry presently.

But then perhaps this is all just a bit dramatic...

Reunions and a Hen

My friend Kelly has returned after a summer of traveling and art residences...lucky very talented girl. It is nice to have her home for a bit. We caught up a bit and then took a walk to another friend to see his hen (I will leave his name off so that no fowl business will occur). As we were walking we passed one of my favourite front yards on 7th Ave...it is done with drought tolerant plants and looks lovely. They have also planted their boulevard. Their neighbour has also done some great landscaping. The boulevard is pictured above the front garden below.

As we were walking we met Hannah another friend who joined us on our journey. I have not seen her since June so it was lovely to visit - even if it was brief - her smile lasts in memory for a long time fortunately.

The hen was lovely and one of the hen's keepers said that her daughter comes out and visits with the hen every day - and when she has a bad day she says, "I am going out to see the hen"..."it calms her" she said. I love the idea of fresh eggs, chickens in my yard...but I will stick to veggies...for now.