Love, Laughter, and Life

Adventures With a Book Lover

History of the Garden Arbor

6 Comments

It’s fun to go back and look at pictures to see how things have changed over time. Our garden area is constantly changing.

The garden started with three simple garden beds placed in the pasture, which used to be mostly dirt and weeds. As you can see, it was already looking good with “greens” growing.

Frequent feathered guests foraged in the pasture and wide-open garden beds. Which transitioned into even more visitors, of the furry and voracious garden eating variety. The chickens were fine with me, but when bunnies ate down all of my plants, something had to be done.

My honey put a low fence around the whole lot. The main purpose was to keep the bunnies out. It worked great! Actually, the fence is so short, most of us can easily step over it. But the bunnies were befuddled and my plants could grow free.

And then. I found one of those old metal chain-link fence gates while visiting my buddy in Seattle. One of those “free yard sale” treasures! Guaranteed to make my honey whisk his eyebrows up when I drove into the yard with my little Mazda packed to the gills. Gate included. So, we added an easy access gate. By we, I mean him. πŸ˜‰

And then. I really wanted an arbor. Over that awesome gate. We had this other piece of metal junk hanging in our shaded car park area. Just an old rusted metal grate of some sort. I think it was left on the property from the previous owner. And ta-dah! Instant unique arbor! Instant for me. A bit of hard work for my honey and Taylor.

I might add how HEAVY that thing is! And I am blessed to have 2 strong guys to let me come up these wild ideas and they make it happen. Oh, and it’s rusty. One of my favorite garden colors and textures.

My honey bought me a honeysuckle plant for Mother’s Day. You can see it above just starting out. Below, you can see I’ve been working on training it up. It’s nearly reached the top!

And here we are today. I just took this picture. It smells so good! Last week I stood and watched a hummingbird feast on the fragrant blooms, for so long that I wandered off before it did. That is my kind of garden.

Ahhhh. The garden continues to grow and change.

What about you? Any big changes in your garden or yard over the years? Any cool rusty items??

Unknown's avatar

Author: Angie

I live with my husband and crazy kitty. Much of my time is spent writing, reading, and playing with the grands. You can usually find me sipping tea or coffee, nibbling on dark chocolate, and contemplating what to plant next in the garden. If not those pursuits, then I am probably trying to figure out how to cook and live in an RV, creating cards with rubber stamps, walking, hiking, or out snapping photos with my camera.

6 thoughts on “History of the Garden Arbor

  1. Kim A Larson's avatar

    Lovely garden!

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Danna Smith's avatar

    The hard work has paid off. Love the arbor and garden. I’m getting ready to pull my tomato and zucchini plants. It’s a sad day… LOL

    Liked by 1 person

    • Angie's avatar

      Oh, so sad to pull out those hard workers! I still have my cherry and pear tomatoes (they went nuts this year). NONE of my zucchini seeds grew. All were nibbled off or did not sprout. But my pumpkins made up for it. We did a partial harvest (my grands and me) and ended up with 32 larger pumpkins (bigger than sugar pie, but not the huge ones), and I think about 48 mini pumpkins! Amazing! We still have one bed to harvest.
      I love that arbor too! Rusty and using up stuff laying around.

      Like

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