Stock Tanks

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Its spooky how fast time flies.

It does not seem like 4 months since my last blog post…how did that happen?!

Spock analysis?

temporal causality

“I believe it to be combination of work commitments, summer vacationing and the fact that we have been stuck in a temporal causality loop since last April ESP.”

“That would explain the sense of déjà vu I keep having whilst visiting and photographing the gulf coast…great work Spock”

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Another quick camping trip down to the Texas gulf coast, or was it the same one?

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A hobbit lost in the Shire.

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The dunes and grasses made a great backdrop as the sun burnt down behind them.

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My fire was created by a particularly large bag of charcoal… 

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…Texas sized…just light the corners!

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We were treated to some great sunsets and zero sandstorms this trip – thank goodness.

http://www.eastsidepatch.com/2015/07/carry-on-camping/

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Pretty much our usual set up minus the life-threatening tarp and aluminum spears.

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Further down the beach there was this driftwood beach shack – pretty sure it was inhabited.

If you are into small and alternative living spaces and gardens, be sure to check out some of the documentaries on Kirsten Dirksen’s channel, very entertaining.

https://www.youtube.com/user/kirstendirksen

Here is an interesting 2 hour intro-documentary film she made featuring individuals with alternative concepts of inhabiting, cultivating and harnessing nature…from Marfa to Austin to LA:

https://youtu.be/l3R4XNandug

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Even though there was just a slight breeze the sandwiches somehow managed to incorporate a rather disturbing amount of sand.

Sinistrofulgur perversum

She really wanted to take home some of these colorful lightning whelks,

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but they were all inhabited with hermit crabs who are apparently very partial to these particular shells, who wouldn’t be?

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Did you know they are the state shell of Texas?

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“We have been stuck in a temporal causality loop since last April ESP”

“Okay Spock, I get it!”

Back in Austin:

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I have recently been installing a design in the Shoal Creek area and decided to take a quick detour to check in on a corner lot planting I executed a couple of years ago.

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The plantings were doing well…pity about the introduction of the bright red curb!

Come on ponyfoot…giddy on up and cover that red ‘thang’!

I Digress.

Back to my latest design and installation in Shoal Creek:

It started with another substantial corner lot with a ton of potential.

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The front entrance was screaming out for better structure…the skinny concrete path was first on my ‘that needs to go’ list.

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There where a lot of conflicting mediums and contours towards the front door and around the house that obviously needed consolidation to afford a nicer experience moving in/out of the property and around to a future side courtyard.

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The biggest challenge of this scheme was this bare side yard (below) which was to be a courtyard.

The client wanted a sense of enclosure in the space without being totally and visually closed off from the street/foot traffic and neighbors.

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A sloping grade (in two directions) added to the design challenge and complexity of the area…

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a cunning plan was required.

Design and Visualization:

The before pictures are in the bottom right.

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My goal in these visuals was to communicate a more naturalistic and widened entryway to the sidewalk…more in scale with the expansive dimensions of the area.

Vertical height (left and right) was to be achieved with three blue ice cypress trees and trunking yucca in the same color palette.

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Contrasting grasses and architectural whales tongue agave are peppered and repeated throughout the scheme.

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For the side courtyard the introduction of three large steel panels with plasma cut ‘windows’ and integrated planter boxes enclose the space without totally privatizing it. A new house trim color was introduced to reflect the steel work and add some visual punch.

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Crude card mock-ups were constructed to determine the size of panels and cut-out dimensions.

The Normandy Phase:

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Contouring and tear-out.

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Prepping the area.

The existing sprinkler system had to be tweaked and electricity routed for pathway lighting.

Installation:

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Flagstone positioned and

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side courtyard is framed up.

Final Design:

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Steel panels as viewed from the street. Two sentry Texas red oaks will present future shade at both ends.

You can see the significant drop in grade.

Dwarf miscanthus grasses will fill in the area in front, echoing the rust color of the panels in the fall and winter months.

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The two planter boxes house baby, heat-tolerant opuntia (spineless prickly pear cactus).

 

Two stained cedar benches and a picnic table reflect the new cedar landing platform:

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The stained cedar platform covers the existing concrete steps (they are still under there) and offers a larger landing platform on which to enter the side door.

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The opuntia will quickly add architectural height and visually soften the sides of the steel panels.

They are also easy to ‘train’ by snapping off paddles where they are not needed or to keep the plant pruned to a desired height.

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Steel already starting to Patina.

A small corner planting bed and a stock tank (naturally) offer some convenient herbs from the side door.

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The steel work and burnt pine was fabricated and installed by the talented Andrew Miller (aminc13@gmail.com)

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Silvermist flagstone/edging and Tejas black gravel all work together to echo the grey of the house and rust of the steel work.

The entryway from the sidewalk was dramatically widened to eat into the real estate of the turf and be more inviting.

Perimeter planting will blend the edges as it matures.

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Some great colors on this flagstone.

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Large swooping arcs and widened pathways replace previous right angles:

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“Stop it!”

 

Stay Tuned For:

“The Funeral Pyre

 

All material © 2016 for eastsidepatch. Unauthorized
intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and
punishable by late (and extremely unpleasant)
14th century planet Earth techniques

 

“King Richard III”

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One more quick Scottish fling…err?

Beavis and Butt-head

Thankfully this one does not involve roaches or any other unmentionables…well, apart from a few King Richards.

http://www.eastsidepatch.com/2011/11/little-monsters/

Devil's Beef Tub“It looks as if four hills were laying their heads together, to shut out daylight from the dark hollow space between them. A damned deep, black, blackguard-looking abyss of a hole it is.” Sir Walter Scott

This deep glacial hollow is called the Devil’s Beef Tub it is located five miles north of the small tourist town of Moffat in the Scottish borders. It is surrounded by four hills; Great Hill, Peat Knowe, Annanhead Hill and Ericstane Hill (which used to be a Roman signal station), the valleys form the headwaters of the River Annan.

The Beef Tub is also known as MacCleran’s Loup after a tumbling highlander. Fleeing the aftermath of the failure of the Jacobite rising of 1745 the soldier decided his only course of action to escape certain death amid a hail of enemy gunfire was to curl up and roll down the hill, that’s right, roll down the hill’

It worked and he escaped but I bet he was a wee bit sore the following morning.

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“Oh yesh, and at a fair rate he mushed have been going ashwell with that incline.”

Did you know EshPatch that dotted acrosh these hills are shmall relic stands of rare mountain plants..and the occasional pocket of ash and hazel woodland – a reminder of landscapes pasht.”

I did not but thank you Juan Sánchez Villa-Lobos Ramírez!

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“Your very welcome EshPatch”

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You can get a sense of the scale of these hills from the sheep in the distance.

If you are visiting the area, mind you don’t step on a King Richard the 3rd, the sheep roam everywhere up here.

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“What!”

DSC00127The landmark’s unusual name is derived from its use as the hiding place for cattle stolen by the notorious Border Reivers, otherwise known as the Johnstone clan, who were commonly referred to by their enemies as ‘devils’.

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“Calm down William I have not forgotten”…

William Wallace is reputed to have used the concealed hollows of the Devil’s Beef Tub for covert gatherings with men from the Border Clans and the Ettrick Forest ahead of his first attack against the English in 1297…and this concludes my final timeline-disjointed history installment from the Scottish borders. Programming will be back to normal next week with a re-run of the popular “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.”

dietrich01Illustration: Christian Wilhelm Ernst Dietrich (1712-74) Sea Storm and Shipwreck

Back up to date in the Patch:

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Ah yes it is that time of year again, lets see if these wolf pumpkins will hold their integrity until Halloween – I really do not want an oozing repeat of last years stinky porch disaster.

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Talking of things stinky…

IMG_0151 Starfish Flower, Carrion Flower

…This Stapelia gigantea stinks!

Also known as “Starfish Flower” and “Carrion Flower” the plant looks like a cactus, smells like an abattoir, but actually belongs to the milkweed family.

blowfly Female blowflies, attracted by the stench, deposit their eggs in the corona of the flower and subsequently pick up some pollen to fertilize other stapelia plants…

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…at least that is the cunning plan.

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I hatched a cunning plan of my own this week:

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This pond-side planting bed has been bothering me for quite some time.

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As the Mediterranean palm on the right gets larger (it will eventually get very large):

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the pathway was getting too narrow.

The scene needed more breathing space.

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So much more space!

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All It needs now is a fresh top-coat of granite.

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I will leave you with a few before and after shots of a back garden I recently designed and installed.

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The space lacked definition and structure and the client was open and excited to remove the existing turf that was (contrary to the next shot) struggling due to a lack of sunlight,

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and very poor drainage:

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Here is the design intent superimposed on the same house image:

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The idea was to offer multiple branching flagstone pathways to visually break up the rectangular space, at the same time addressing the drainage issues by raising the grade a couple of inches.

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The flagstone pathways would expand out into a patio area and lead the eye down to a destination, in this case a stock-tank pond.

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In-progress flagstone layout, bed definition and a shiny new stock tank -(label strategically orientated to the rear)- well lets face it, there is no point trying to remove it!

Here is the finished design with fledgling planting scheme:

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A new designated patio area:

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and no more walking out of the back door directly onto mud or dirt:

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The new pond now has fish in it,

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and its first water lily.

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Stay Tuned For:

Victorians Gone Wild”

 

All material © 2014 for eastsidepatch. Unauthorized
intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and
punishable by late (and extremely unpleasant)
14th century planet Earth techniques.

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