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My tiny bungalow in my new home in Nova Scotia sits back somewhat on the main street in Annapolis Royal. The former owner, who lived here for 50 years, was not a gardener. The front yard is composed of a large Acer pseudoplatanus, a Tilia and Quercus robur (which are widely naturalized in this province). In front of the house was the usual tiny bed of common weeds. Squished up against the foundaition were masses of hosta, and innapropriate woody plants (lilacs, junipers, hydrangea)---which have all been removed.My property is on one of the major deer runs in town; working their way through the sheltered woody area in back, to the river across the street and back again. It is my first experience gardening with deer. There is not a day that groups of them are not passing through the property.10 days ago I went into panic mode about all the plants that had accompanied me and were still sitting in a holding area in pots. The first mild frost had hit here on September 9th (even earlier than I had ever experienced it in Ontario).And thus, a "panic garden" was quickly created; although I have tried to keep in mind my eventual fantasy of rock and crevice gardens in the entire area close to the house. A "woodland garden" abutts the street in a large curve, inside of which I have made a tiny start on the rock garden, which can keep me busy for many years to come, especially since, unlike in Ontario, I have to drag each rock home piece by piece.My moving boxes also managed to get properly recycled. AND, dear generous friends (you know who you are) thank you for your emergency shipping of Corydalis bulbs across the ocean to help me re-establish these small woodland gems, all of which I lost last winter in Ontario. They are now all safely planted in the garden.
good approach..i've heard of similar approaches for killing turf, just not the step of putting soil on top..i'm just working with soils/materials that occur right here for now, until i may get some gravel or rocks sometime..i've tried some areas with covering to kill growth underneath (turf would be an oversimplification, as i have no areas that are all grass)--had some spots alongside my veg garden that i piled grass/leaves etc several inches thick; one area doesnt seem to have grown through, others have, must need to be thicker yet; had some spots covered with tarps, that was only partially effective--some of the things grow right through the tarp!; havent tried cardboard yet, though i have intended to..havent been organised enough to cover areas far enough ahead, so when i want the bed ready, i have to dig anyway..i think i still will have to dig, no matter what, as i'd like to get some of the tree roots out, though i know they will come back..i think the covering might be most useful for areas where i'd like to plant natives and don't need to cultivate much, just give them barer soil for less competition to get established; i'd still be planting them in the native soil, though, not putting other soil on top...
Makes my new little bits look very - little! And I can't get going as the weather is just awful. A couple of weeks now without a decent day. Raining heavily again today, making every shovelful of soil twice as heavy.