May 21 - 25: Seeing what I have to work with . . .
After several visits, a few rounds of negotiations, and signing our names a gazillion times, my wife and I moved into our new home on May 15, 2009. Those initial visits allowed me to get an overview of what I was getting into. Now that I'm officially here, I can dive into a little more detail. My father-in-law, who was visiting from Austria, grabbed his much-nicer-than-mine camera and took a bunch of pictures for me. It's time to see what I have to work with.
The previously mentioned bush cluster seen on the far left of the photo above it is actually two separate bushes that have grown together, which can be seen a little more clearly from this angle. One of my new neighbors was kind enough to identify the two red-ish shrubs as loropetalums. I'm not familiar with the leafy green/yellow bush by the garage windows. But I also have more of it at the back of the driveway. And the two green shrubs to the right of the steps are some variety of holly. I have no idea what's in the planters on the porch.
At the time these pictures were taken, what I knew as "gardening" consisted of nothing beyond keeping the grass cut and the bushes trimmed. After I moved in, I looked at this yard and figured I would be ok because I could do both of those tasks quite well. What was before me was just a bigger version of what I had been doing for decades.
Actually "planting" something, however, was another story. My experience in trying to actually put something in the ground and get it to grow was mainly limited to filling in the bare spots in the grass. And that was hit or miss at best.Looking into the backyard, I see a lot of tall grass and shrubs that look like they haven't been trimmed in a long time. The ornamental grass seen in the photo above looks identical to what surrounds the crape myrtle next to the garage. I also see something that looks like it has fallen over near the neighboring fence.
In other words, I see I've got a lot of work to do with just basic maintenance. Grass needs cut, bushes need pruned, weeds need pulled, leaning dead trees need to be removed, etc. The best part is that all of those tasks fall under basic maintenance, something that I'm very familiar with and have been doing for decades. And I've got all summer to get everything done.