did this weekend go by quickly, or what?
i spent most of it upstairs in the living room stripping paint. on sunday morning the heat gun decided to konk out (temporarily, just for me) so i continued by chipping the paint away carefully but with some force. this method turned out to be much better: toxic paint fumes weren’t released into the air, it was quieter, used less energy and surprisingly was less damaging to the trim. sometimes the heat would cause parts of the trim to fall off (because they were originally glued on?) and sometimes if i lingered too long the heat would scorch the wood.
mathew’s sister eva came over on sunday, to generously spend one of her last days in town, cultivating our backyard garden. she arrived with a tomato plant and some herb plants. mathew and eva then went to the local garden store and picked up soil, chicken poop and a variety of additional plants.
the chicken poop was definitely stinky and as eva worked she heard the neighbors asking, “what’s that smell..?” the large avocado plant from our front yard was finally transplanted in the back yard. halfway through the day we stopped to go for a walk and have lunch at cafe gratitude.
(left) mathew spent part of the day in the yard with eva and part of the day plastering the ceiling upstairs. you probably can’t tell from the size of this photo, but he’s got a glob of plaster stuck to his ear. he says the plaster often jumps off the ceiling and “attacks” him. (right) as the day was coming to an end, eva brought us downstairs to see the garden she had created for us. (soon to be) blue and purple flowers and ice plants line the bed, a jalapeno plant and the tomato plant get special buckets nestled into the ground and basil, cilantro, and thyme fill in the spaces. eva also planted some sugar snap peas from seeds. mathew created a little sign that says “garden of eva 2.”
(left) here eva is pointing out which plants need more water. (right) in its own little circle of soil to the right are two tiny basil plants, there was lots of basil and we’re looking forward to one day making pesto and salsa from our garden. thanks eva! we can’t wait to see this garden grow.
before the sun went down mathew set up his drip irrigation system. even though eva said we could let things die if we needed to, we’re really excited to see this garden take shape.
note: mathew collected soil samples from each spot in the yard. we plan to get the soil tested for lead before we start eating vegetables grown in it. this was why the jalapeno and tomato plants got their own buckets with new soil. if we find there is lead we’ll do the same for the herbs and transplant them into additional buckets.