It's been a bit - I actually deleted this blog because I was having a bit of an upheaval of my daily routine (funny how babies do that when they start to get in to everything) and also because I had epic gardening fail for a bit there.
I've adjusted more or less to the scheduling and am slowly finding a new normal in my day-to-day. Life is going pretty swimmingly here in Casa de Ashton.
My veg more or less all got eaten by bunnies. The only things that made it are two sad little brussel sprout plants and two corn plants, and one Mutant Failcorn of Doom, and my eggplant bush that has completely taken over the spot I put it in. My herbs are doing fabulously, especially my lemon verbena. I'll take pics of the eggplant bush and herbs tomorrow, in the meantime check out the sad remains of my experimental garden (next year I'll have it figured out) and also my Mutant Failcorn.
Saturday, June 26, 2010
Saturday, April 17, 2010
The tiny first garden
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
The raw beginnings
This is the beginning, the where-we-got-started. It's hard to get a good pic of our backyard - it's about a half acre but it's shaped like a triangle, with the house being in the center of the flat line at the bottom. We have about 1/4 acre of front yard, too, but without displaying too many personal details I can't take a good pic.
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
Once upon a time . . .
. . . there was a girl named Ashton. She'd wandered the globe and moved more times than she had fingers and toes. She'd lived in a bookmobile, in a high rise, in a trailer, on the beach and on and on. She was gypsying around the world, enjoying things, and there, in a hotel room overlooking the gorgeous blue waters of Guam, she got two pink lines on a little stick.
Something desperately prayed for but thought impossible happened there on the beaches, and she and her Husband danced and laughed and cried and held each other in joy. But now - a place to raise the precious peanut! So back home she went, to the midwest, to start her happily ever after.
Pregnant, she and her Husband scraped up and signed their names to a piece of paper and got a little house. A fixer upper sort of house, with cute little walls, two bedrooms and one bath, an enclosed garage that was one big room, and a living room and a kitchen and a little roof over their heads. A half acre of land underneath and a run down building in it, with a crooked little fence marking off their little piece of in-between in a place that wasn't in city limits but wasn't pasture land either.
A room-mate came with them - just for a little while - and moved all her things into the little house. She'd been in a bad relationship and needed an in-between place, and the little house was it. Her whole big house took over the tiny little house and the pregnant girl and her Husband lived in the big huge garage room.
A baby came and their family of three was complete. The room-mate decided to move to be with her Love, and start her own little family. The house would be empty, a blank slate to fill with her own things. So the gypsy girl that never stayed anywhere long enough to put down roots decided to go ahead - she'd love her crooked little in-between house, her little patch of land, and make it her home. She'd go domestic, as it were.
She planted some tulips randomly in her front yard and prayed for the best; and when they came up she looked at her baby just learning to laugh, and felt a Husband's kind hand on the small of her back, and felt at home - like this place was hers and could be amazing. She was overwhelmed with love and happiness and rightness and the feeling of the dirt under her toes grounded and centered and anchored and overjoyed her like she'd never been before.
This is the story in progress from a crooked little house with a run down yard to a happy little home with a beautiful happy little family in it - growing things, green things and colorful things and yummy things, fixing up the sweet little house and learning to be peaceful and calm and let the wind and joy and happiness flow through the gypsy girl instead of blowing her away to the far corners of the earth.
My happily ever after has already begun, hopefully you enjoy seeing the story unfold.
Something desperately prayed for but thought impossible happened there on the beaches, and she and her Husband danced and laughed and cried and held each other in joy. But now - a place to raise the precious peanut! So back home she went, to the midwest, to start her happily ever after.
Pregnant, she and her Husband scraped up and signed their names to a piece of paper and got a little house. A fixer upper sort of house, with cute little walls, two bedrooms and one bath, an enclosed garage that was one big room, and a living room and a kitchen and a little roof over their heads. A half acre of land underneath and a run down building in it, with a crooked little fence marking off their little piece of in-between in a place that wasn't in city limits but wasn't pasture land either.
A room-mate came with them - just for a little while - and moved all her things into the little house. She'd been in a bad relationship and needed an in-between place, and the little house was it. Her whole big house took over the tiny little house and the pregnant girl and her Husband lived in the big huge garage room.
A baby came and their family of three was complete. The room-mate decided to move to be with her Love, and start her own little family. The house would be empty, a blank slate to fill with her own things. So the gypsy girl that never stayed anywhere long enough to put down roots decided to go ahead - she'd love her crooked little in-between house, her little patch of land, and make it her home. She'd go domestic, as it were.
She planted some tulips randomly in her front yard and prayed for the best; and when they came up she looked at her baby just learning to laugh, and felt a Husband's kind hand on the small of her back, and felt at home - like this place was hers and could be amazing. She was overwhelmed with love and happiness and rightness and the feeling of the dirt under her toes grounded and centered and anchored and overjoyed her like she'd never been before.
This is the story in progress from a crooked little house with a run down yard to a happy little home with a beautiful happy little family in it - growing things, green things and colorful things and yummy things, fixing up the sweet little house and learning to be peaceful and calm and let the wind and joy and happiness flow through the gypsy girl instead of blowing her away to the far corners of the earth.
My happily ever after has already begun, hopefully you enjoy seeing the story unfold.
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