Flowers are always a good idea

Here it is, mid-August and my flower garden is filled with the most luscious blossoms. Autumn may be just around the corner, but I’m going to enjoy my flowers until  the first snowflake. Here are some of the beautiful flowers in my garden, starting with the spring lilacs and peonies, and moving on to the late summer blooms. Enjoy!

 

There are lots more beautiful blooms in my garden, but that’s all the photos I have at the moment. The window boxes on the front of my house are overflowing with petunias. More photos to come!

From a neglected house to a warm and inviting home…on a shoestring budget.

I love a challenge…

The big banner photo at the top of this blog is our house today (September 2015), just two-and-a-half years after moving in (sorry for the poor lighting in this photo). It’s a big transformation from the photo below that shows how it looked just two summers ago.

cropped-Frame_new-13_tripp_crescent_MLS_HID746807_ROOMMainExterior.jpg

 I have been posting updates on our progress here on Home at Last, and will continue to do so until…well, forever, I guess. I hope you will ride along with me on this shoestring budget transformation.

13-Tripp-June 2013 (4)And, now, for a look back to our first summer here…the first photo shows our “lawn” in the spring of 2013.

 

 

The second photo shows are lawn just two months later. See what some love, water and fertilizer can do? 

Lawn-spring 2013(I love my lawn…I really really love my lawn!)

Thanks for stopping by. Have a wonderful day…and don’t forget to fertilize your grass this fall (now’s the time). Come spring, you’ll be rewarded with a lush green lawn!

Window boxes are for every season!

This spring I finally got the window boxes I had always dreamed of. The pretty flowers added colour, dimension and curb appeal to our little bungalow. Alas, as the dog days of summer lingered on, and they eventually took their toll on the on my gorgeous blooms. But, the story doesn’t end here…

IMG_6968Front garden June 2015 (21)

 

Dollarama, Dollarama!

Fake flowers, according to the designers, are corny, kitschy, tacky, yucky, poo poo. Oh, did I mention that I don’t care what the designers think and that I do what makes me happy?  Anyway, I couldn’t just leave my beautiful window boxes empty until next spring, so I made a quick trip to the dollar store and bought some colourful silk flowers. Here’s how my window boxes look now…IMG_7235

And, as my husband just said, “no water watering required, Babe.” But, the story doesn’t end here, either…come back and see what I will be showcasing for this winter and Christmas.

My $10 Birdbath

Is there anything more exciting than finding something good in someone else’s garbage? I love the idea of reducing, reusing, recyling–and, of course, as the designers say, “upcycling.”

2015-07-28 19.03.12My recent trash-to-treasure find was an old cast iron birdbath that was in the garbage pile at a neighbour’s house. I just happened to be out walking Cookie and there it was, calling to me. So, I lugged it home–and it was heavy–visualizing how lovely it would be when I cleaned it up and repainted it! The bad news is that, unbeknownst to me, the bath part on the top of the base had a hole rusted right through the middle of it. I didn’t even have to worry about how to get it off because one touch of my hand and it fell to the ground. Sigh…

Birdbath-2Instinct told me to keep the pretty cast iron base and try to find some sort of basin to form the bath part. A couple of weeks later, on a Sunday afternoon drive in the countryside, we came across a little antique shop. There, like a star shining on a dark night, sat a huge, shallow, heavy glass dish…or something. It weighed a ton and the underside was coated with mother-of-pearl. The price tag read $10. Oh, yes! This was my birdbath!

Birdbath-5The project couldn’t have been easier or quicker. I sprayed a couple of coats of Varathane on the underside of the bath to protect it from the elements. When it was dry, I spread two-hour epoxy on both pieces, sat the bath on top of the base, added a weight on top to ensure a good bond and then waited 48 hours for the epoxy to seal. By the way, I used marine epoxy because it can even glue things together under water. No worries about the rain affecting the bond on this birdbath. (The shimmering blue colours of the mother-of-pearl don’t show up in these photos…darn!)

So that’s it, that’s all, for now. Keep an eye on your neighbours’ garbage. You never know what trash-to-treasure items are waiting for you.

Thanks for stopping by!

Gloria

P.S. I’m still wandering around my yard looking for just the right place to display my beautiful new garden treasure.