October Sunrise

Front Entry in Autumn 2006


My dad built this flower cart and gave it to us as a house warming gift. I've enjoyed filling it with petunias in the spring, mums and pumpkins and Indian corn in the fall, and Christmas decorations in winter. It makes a nice "landmark" to direct visiting friends to our house, and of course, it's special because Daddy made it.

The Arbor Garden

Spring 2006


Summer 2006


Late Summer 2006

Spring 2007

Mid-summer 2007

Front Porch Sittin' Summer 2006

The plants in this pot mix (beautifully designed by Lori Johnson of Hesston Plant Company) were still too pretty to throw away at the end of the season, but too big to bring inside, so we planted the whole mix, just as it was in the pot, in a wet corner of the backyard where only moss grew before. We added some of Grandpa's sandstone and the result is so nice that we've dubbed the corner "The Moss Garden." It's a favorite spot in the yard. I think the only thing that didn't survive the winter was the Diamond Frost (Euphorbia). The Creeping Wirevine, English Ivy, Creeping Jenny and Gaura are all thriving in the soggy corner by the fence.

Boulder Hill

March 2006

June 2007

Rock Hill Garden

March 2006

August 2006

March 2007



June 2007

Where it all started: a fenced in yard, a "cold" tub, and a dream . . . June 2005

When we moved to this house in July 2005, the backyard was a "plain vanilla" fenced in plot of grass with a nice deck and a hot tub that was really a "cold tub." My husband envisioned a beautiful garden with native prairie grasses and wildflowers. We offered the hot tub to some friends in exchange for them hauling it away (a more than fair trade), took out the bald cypress in the middle of the yard (because, according to Ken, it was right in the middle of our football field!) and he rolled up his sleeves and started in. Two years later, the yard is still an experiment with lots of trial and error, but we're enjoying the journey.