Last Friday, Mark went to the quarry in Waterloo to get a pickup-load of quartzite chips to finish the pond project. Though we'd had 14 cu. yards of the chips delivered, he wanted a tad more to get it all even and to the height he wanted.
He spent Saturday unloading them and getting the surface completely even. On Sunday he got out all the big garden forks and rakes and tried them out to see what kind of patterns he could make in this gravel.
None of them were quite the right size to make marks of a scale that works with an area this large.
So he went to the hardware store yesterday and came back and made his own temporary wooden "rake." We both agreed that he's moving in the right direction.
Here's his temporary rake: The handle and screw plate from a sponge-style floor mop fitted with a board into which he inserted dowels. Once he decides exactly the size and spacing of the dowel markers, he plans to make a more artistic version in keeping with the artfulness of the garden as a whole.
Mark dug out a huge swath of Carex siderosticha variegata to make a working route from our gravel garden path down to the pond. Along the way he decided to leave the path as a way to get closer to the gravel garden. You now walk down a gray gravel path with these limestone bars (filled with Mexican river rocks) across it. You can then step out onto the grindstone and flat rock in the third photo above.
This whole project is coming together nicely. He now needs to work on the rock placement around the edges of the "pond;" then I follow with the plants.
I love his garden fork - and the lines!
Posted by: Barbara H. | Tuesday, August 17, 2021 at 02:29 PM
Art of a more unusual kind requiring a great deal of patience and a delicate touch - and vision.
Posted by: Kris P | Tuesday, August 17, 2021 at 03:00 PM
So beautiful. You guys are so artistic and talented. Hope to see the garden again next summer. :)
Posted by: Beth@PlantPostings | Tuesday, August 17, 2021 at 06:59 PM
I saw Mark's rake and thought "how ingenious!" followed by "but I bet he's working to design something more artistic"...
Posted by: danger garden | Friday, August 20, 2021 at 11:45 AM