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Monthly Archives: June 2009

Step 10 – Resizing The Dry Stream Bed

The Garden Artist Posted on June 23, 2009 by Mary AhernAugust 25, 2009

(If you’d like to follow this project from the beginning you can start at Step 1 here)

Step 10 of Rear Garden Design Project.

September, 2008

When we finally hired Billy Ahern of Ahern’s Landscaping to finish the project I designed and we started in 2000 he recommended some changes. I agreed with him that the scale of the dry stream bed that I’d designed was too large for the location. He had his men resculpt the walls and add soil. I’d been stockpiling extra soil that was taken from the driveway when I’d had it widened.

The size of the dry stream bed was reduced and brought more in line with the scale of the surrounding garden
The size of the dry stream bed was reduced and brought more in line with the scale of the surrounding garden

The stream was narrowed and brought it into a good balance with the rest of the garden. He reused all the stone I’d dug up from the garden and the extra round river rock I’d purchased years before.

His men put the river rock in the irregular flowing pattern I’d designed and they had nearly enough to complete the dry stream bed. But not quite. We scavenged rock from around the garden but we ended up having to purchase another batch of rock. What a surprise. More rock!

What? More Stone? I'm afraid all this added weight might change the rotation of the earth.
What? More Stone? I’m afraid all this added weight might change the rotation of the earth.

Once the rock walls were in place they put the gravel base in place and put small river rock on top. There is so much rock on this project I sometimes feel that the earth will give way from the weight.

But that is just memories of my aching back.

All the river rock was placed on the newly sculpted walls.
River rock was placed on the newly sculpted walls.

It is so much easier to sign a check. I wouldn’t feel this way if I hadn’t worked on the project for so long and found that I’d bit off more then I could chew. So now I’m really happy to have help and to come closer to a completed design.

Crushed gravel was put down as a base for the small stone
Crushed gravel was put down as a base for the small stone

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Go to Step 11 – New Stone Walls

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Posted in Garden Design, My Garden | Tagged Garden Design, Garden Projects, My Garden

Step 9 – Bringing In The Pros

The Garden Artist Posted on June 20, 2009 by Mary AhernAugust 25, 2009

(If you’d like to follow this project from the beginning you can start at Step 1 here)

Step 9 of Rear Garden Design Project.

September, 2008

We jump ahead on the Rear Garden Design Project from 2002 until 2008. Sometimes life intervenes and projects get put on hold for a while.  In the ensuing years I gained another grandson and he grew enough to join my first. They played on the piles of rock, some of which were walls. They particularly have enjoyed bouncing on the bridge planks giving all of us nervous twitches, but they never managed to get hurt.

Bouncing on the boards and climbing on the stone. What fun!
Bouncing on the boards and climbing on the stone. What fun!

In 2008 I finally bit the bullet and called in the Pros. Billy Ahern of Ahern’s Landscaping in Huntington NY came to the rescue. (BTW. They are not relatives of mine, past or present) He understood immediately what I wanted to create and he worked from my original drawing plans.

Ahern's Landscaping of Huntington Long Island (Not a relative though)
Ahern’s Landscaping of Huntington Long Island

The first thing that Billy’s crew did was to dismantle the stone walls I’d built in fits and starts from 2002 through 2007. What took me days of laying one course of stone took the men seconds to undo.

The crew dismantling my carefully and painfully built stone walls.
The crew dismantling my carefully and painfully built stone walls.

It was quite dismaying and sad for me to watch the work I’d done disappear. I thought about the exhaustion and pain I’d experienced and all the trips to Nadine O’Neill my Chiropractor and The Pilates Place trying to get my self back in shape.

And then I’d think with optimism how nice it was going to look and I would be able to go back to gardening, not construction work.

Ahern's crew demolishing everything we'd built except the stone steps
Ahern’s crew demolishing everything we’d built except the stone steps

I was also very pleased that Billy Ahern decided to keep the stone steps that my husband Dave and I had so proudly built in 2002. He said that were rock solid. We’re very proud.

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Go to Step 10 – Resizing the Dry Stream Bed

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Posted in Garden Design, My Garden | Tagged Garden Design, Garden Projects, My Garden

Step 8 – Building The Flat Stone Wall

The Garden Artist Posted on June 19, 2009 by Mary AhernAugust 25, 2009

(If you’d like to follow this project from the beginning you can start at Step 1 here)

Step 8 of Rear Garden Design Project.

July through November, 2002

We decided to trash my first idea of continuing the theme of the garden and using round river rock for the walls at the rear entrance to the guest room. What would happen each time it rained was that the soil would creep in from behind the stones and eventually clog up the passive drainage system.

So I dismantled the walls, making a stack of rocks to the left of the door. Using my handy dandy Mantis tiller I excavated the base and leveled it smoothly.

July 7, 2002 Clear the base and level it
July 7, 2002 Clear the base and level it

I used crushed bluestone to fill the base and give an even and strong working surface to the first base layer of stone.

July 9, 2002 Spreading gravel is much harder then raking a lawn.
July 9, 2002 Spreading gravel is much harder then raking a lawn.

I put landscapers cloth down first to keep back the soil and put the first course of stone down. This one is so critical because it sets the tone for the entire wall. I used levels to make sure the row was plumb.

September 8, 2002 Picking the right stones for the puzzle takes a long time
September 8, 2002 Picking the right stones for the puzzle takes a long time

The work was so laborious that I could only work on one or two courses a day and then it would take me a day or two to recover. Thank goodness for my Chiropractor, Dr. Nadine O’Neill in Northport for keeping my aching body going.

November, 9, 2002 The leaves are beautiful the unfinished wall isn't
November, 9, 2002 The leaves are beautiful, the unfinished walls are not

By the fall of 2002 I had to stop the project because I couldn’t fight the leaves everyday just to get started lifting stone. The project stood at a standstill for quite some time. Years in fact.

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Go to Step 9 – Bringing In The Pros

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Posted in Garden Design, My Garden | Tagged Garden Design, Garden Projects, My Garden

Northport Historical Society Garden Tour – June 2009

In June of 2009 my garden was featured on the annual Northport Historical Society garden tour event. Weeks of preparation for a full day of garden connoisseurs visiting your garden takes an act of courage and lots and lots of hard physical work. The day was a rousing success and I’m glad I did it. 

Sharon Ruedeman captured the event and created this energetic video of that time.


June 14, 2009 by Mary Ahern Posted in Garden Artist, Garden Design, My Garden, Plants, Video Tagged Garden Artist, Garden Design, Garden Projects, My Garden, Video

Step 7 – Building Our Stone Steps

The Garden Artist Posted on June 12, 2009 by Mary AhernAugust 25, 2009

(If you’d like to follow this project from the beginning you can start at Step 1 here)

Step 7 of Rear Garden Design Project.

July, 2002

We’ve read lots of books on building stone walls and steps so we are fully armed with knowledge on how to proceed with our latest step in the project. We dug below the soil line, filled and leveled the base with gravel poured onto landscape fabric. Great beginning.

We removed the temporary steps in preparation for the stone work. Note the pile of river rock piled against the back wall. We've begun dismantling the garden walls.
We removed the temporary steps in preparation for the stone work. Note the pile of river rock piled against the back wall. We’ve begun dismantling the garden walls.

We found the largest stones from amidst the three tons of stone we had delivered and started to put down our first step. We measured the height and width of the area and determined the riser and run dimensions of the steps making sure that they would all equal. This is a safety issue.

My husband Dave quit stone work after this part of the project and went back to computers.
My husband Dave quit stone work after we built the stairs and went back to computers.

At the end of our first day we were proud of having completed our first step. We used levels to make sure the stones were sloped correctly and concrete dust to stabilize each step.

So now that we had our first step the rest would be a cinch. Right?

No beauty pageant winner here. I'm far to exhausted to care.
No beauty pageant winner here. I’m far to exhausted to care. Stair 2 has been completed.

What we found is that we could only build one step a day. Sifting through the tons of stones, bringing them from the driveway using our handtruck. Shimmying them down to the base of the project and then lifting them into place. Absolutely exhausting work!

I didn't even commit a crime and I've been sentenced to hard labor on the rock pile. I should have been naughty.
I didn’t even commit a crime and I’ve been sentenced to hard labor on the rock pile. I should have been naughty.

At the end of each day we took photos since we couldn’t believe how hard this project was for us physically. Oh, so you mean, working with computers all day doesn’t make you fit enough to haul huge stones? Who would have thought?

The steps are done and I'll never, ever build another set. Yippee!
The steps are done and I’ll never, ever build another set. Yippee!

And so the day finally comes and we’ve finished the steps. We are still proud of them and thankful that we’ll never have to ever do something like that again in our entire lives!

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Go to Step 8 – Building The Flat Stone Wall

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Posted in Garden Design, My Garden | Tagged Garden Design, Garden Projects, My Garden

Step 6 – Stone Walled. Rethinking the Project.

The Garden Artist Posted on June 11, 2009 by Mary AhernAugust 25, 2009

(If you’d like to follow this project from the beginning you can start at Step 1 here)

Step 6 of Rear Garden Design Project.

June, 2002

River rock walls with temporary steps reclaimed from the basement
River rock walls with temporary steps reclaimed from the basement

Sometimes you design a project and don’t foresee some of the unexpected pitfalls to your vision so you try to make it work. It is important to recognize when to change course and try another solution. This happened with my idea about using round river rock on the terraced stone walls.

I wanted to keep the materials for the walls somewhat aligned with the natural stone found on the property. I didn’t have enough of my own local stone to do all the walls for the entry and the dry streambed so I bought 3 bins of Pennsylvania River Rock to supplement what I already had.

Running out of rock. To the right is the temporary bridge over the dry stream bed
Running out of rock. To the right is the temporary bridge over the dry stream bed

What I didn’t expect was that, even with landscape fabric behind the rocks, the soil was going to come through the walls and seep into the drainage system. We worried each time we had a major rainstorm that if the drains clogged the guest room would flood. This development was so unacceptable to us we zigged and zagged for an acceptable design solution.

We bought more stone as the solution to all our problems. Hmmm.
We bought more stone as the solution to all our problems. Hmmm.

So what did we do? We bought more stone of course. This time it was flat stone, which we felt would be a tighter solution to the seeping soil problem. We’re on our way forward…again.

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Go to Step 7 – Building Our Stone Steps

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Posted in Garden Design, My Garden | Tagged Garden Design, Garden Projects, My Garden

Step 5 – Hard Labor on the Rock Pile

The Garden Artist Posted on June 6, 2009 by Mary AhernAugust 25, 2009

(If you’d like to follow this project from the beginning you can start at Step 1 here)

Step 5 of Rear Garden Design Project.

September 2000

If anyone had ever told me that I would be sentenced to hard labor on a rock pile I would have mocked them. Welcome to my life.

The garden rocks begin to accumulate in the dry stream bed from months of gardening
The garden rocks begin to accumulate in the dry stream bed from months of gardening

On the program, “Inside the Actor’s Studio“, James Lipton asks ten questions at the end of his interview with the guest artist. Two of those questions are:

  • What profession other than your own would you like to attempt?
  • What profession would you not like to do?

My answer to the second is instantly and consistently: Ditch Digger.
I then remember that I’m a gardener and I dig ditches and holes all the time.

Nobody could pay me enough to do this backbreaking work but I'm doing it for free here
Nobody could pay me enough to do this backbreaking work but I’m doing it in my own garden for free

I guess I would also have to include working hard labor on the rock pile under professions I would not like to do.

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Go to Step 6 – Stone Walled. Rethinking the Project

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Posted in Garden Design, My Garden | Tagged Garden Design, Garden Projects, My Garden

Step 4 – The Stones Get Delivered

The Garden Artist Posted on June 5, 2009 by Mary AhernAugust 25, 2009

(If you’d like to follow this project from the beginning you can start at Step 1 here)

Step 4 of Rear Garden Design Project.

June 2000

On June 19, 2000 I had three bins of Pennsylvania river rock delivered for me to use in building the walls of the terraced back entry. Though my property is rich with stone, (I do live along a road named Stony Hollow after all) I knew there wouldn’t be enough rock to complete the project as designed. The wire bins which contained the stone eventually became repurposed as my compost bins offering me many years of service.

Pennsylvania river rock delivered to the project site
Pennsylvania river rock delivered to the project site

The non-native river rock has a slightly different color than the native rock. It has a cooler shade of gray then the more earth toned local material. I was and am, somewhat bothered by this color shift.

2000-06-25-dry-stream-bed
Rocks dug from the garden help to define the dry stream bed

With each shovel dug into the ground over decades of gardening I’ve unearthed more and more stone treasures. I use these treasures to design and delineate my ideas, walkways and planting beds.

First hose and then rocks help to define the woodland walkways
First hose and then rocks help to define the woodland walkways

I use garden hoses in the early stages of creating the curves. You can see the hose towards the right hand curve. This allows me to visualize the movement and width of the walkways from many perspectives without breaking my back. Once I feel somewhat satisfied, I then replace the hose with rocks. I have been known to move the rocks over and over as time helps me to consider and reconsider the flow of plants and the land.

It is so creative to plan a garden so what’s a little pain!

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Go to Step 5 – Hard Labor on the Rock Pile

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Posted in Garden Design, My Garden | Tagged Garden Design, Garden Projects, My Garden

Step 3 – After Destruction Comes Construction

The Garden Artist Posted on June 2, 2009 by Mary AhernAugust 25, 2009

(If you’d like to follow this project from the beginning you can start at Step 1 here)

Step 3 of Rear Garden Design Project.

April, 2000

After we scooped out the soil for the creation of a back entrance to our home certain considerations needed to be addressed. The water and gas lines running to our home needed to be lowered to a new appropriate frost depth. The John Borrelli Plumbing Company brought in heavy equipment and reinstalled all our lines after the town located the entry points of our utilities.

Borelli Plumbing putting in the new gas and water lines
Borelli Plumbing putting in the new gas and water lines

The digging for the utility lines was planned to do the least damage to our existing garden. We used the plans for the dry streambed as part of our guide.

Digging the trenches for the utility lines

Digging the trenches for the utility lines

And then the rains came and came and came. The sandy soil on the sides started to slide down towards our new door. We stared out our new back window for hours hoping that the passive drainage system I designed was going to do its job. It worked exactly as I intended but we really needed to get some structure to the entryway.

Seemingly endless rains began to erode the sandy backfill

Seemingly endless rains began to erode the sandy backfill

Since I collect round things, so much of my design work entails circles. The entrance was no exception since I wanted a semi-circle as the entrance. I plotted it out on paper and then used twine to circumscribe the dimensions.

I inscribed a semi-circle for the entry platform

I inscribed a semi-circle for the entry platform

About a week later the cement was poured onto the sand base and we breathed a sigh of release. No more soil leading right up to the doorway.

The concrete had to be brought in by wheelbarrow since the truck was so big

The concrete had to be brought in by wheelbarrow since the truck was so big

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Go to Step 4 – The Stones Get Delivered

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Posted in Garden Design, My Garden | Tagged Garden Design, Garden Projects, My Garden

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