What a summer! Even though it was a HOT, muddy, dirty process the time spent building the New Norris House landscape is one that I will always remember fondly. I even miss the manual labor, but maybe that's because I'm in an air conditioned room right now...
During the landscape mini-term we accomplished so much. We finished building and installed plants on the terraced bioretention beds.
We excavated for, and built, the raised vegetable beds and installed the 200 gallon irrigation cistern.
We successfully installed the stormwater overflow from the irrigation cistern to the bioretention beds and installed the pipe that brings the house's greywater into the greywater bioretention bed. We also built a gravel plinth for forest-side seating, installed over 200 linear feet of aluminum bed edging, dug beds for the perennial plantings, worked with a local contractor to finish the site grading, installed a stepping stone path connecting the sidewalk to the existing walking trails behind our property, weeded, watered and installed erosion control measures.
Some of us even got a lesson in how to operate landscape machinery!
So far, the plants are doing fantastic. The bioretention beds are lush and the perennial beds are off to a great start. We have plans for native shrub and tree planting in the fall, but for now it is so nice to be able to see what started as just an idea on paper growing and thriving in reality. Thank you to everyone who helped make the mini-term such a huge success!
Sunday, September 11, 2011
Summer Landscape Mini-Term Recap
Labels:
cistern,
digging,
erosion,
excavation,
grading,
landscape,
native plants,
rain garden,
stormwater
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