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Jamaica Plain Realtor goes Japanese

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

I’ve been working on my garden now for about 5 years. When I bought my house it was basically a crack house. I actually never really saw the 1st floor before I put in an offer – and I certainly never did a home inspection.  I remember when I first moved in and I spent hours just walking around it looking at the design (or lack of it), and waffling between being elated that I was finally a homeowner, and utterly depressed at what a shitbox I had purchased.

The veggie bed and patio area.

The entire yard from edge to edge was paved with thick, stinky asphalt. Not a blade of grass was visible. As I have tendency to do everything 110%, I began renovating the inside of the dwelling as well as recycling ALL of the asphalt and sifting the top twelve inches of soil on the entire property.

We are basically right on top of the culvert that contains the Stony Brook, and although we’ve never had any significant water in our basement, I wanted to take steps to keep it the foundation as dry as possible. I dug a big ditch under the patio to the right and hooked it around in an “L” shape all the way to where the driveway meets the sidewalk. There I dug a 9′x4′x3′ ditch and dropped into it.

Drain burrito

I lined the bottom of the ditch with gravel and then a layer of landscaping cloth and then laid the drainage tub (oddly named “drain tile”) inside, poured gravel on top and wrapped up a big drainage burrito. This was a really inexpensive way to deliver the access water away from my foundation quickly.

Around this time we had traveled to San Diego’s Balboa Park and a couple other places that had Japanese Gardens including Portland and Seattle. I fell in love. I was also studying Japanese construction techniques and the space saving, ingenious ideas that they often employ.

My daughter Vitoria in a beautiful stand of Black Bamboo

My daughter Vitoria in a beautiful stand of Black Bamboo

My favorite is drawers in each stair step of a staircase. How cool is that? Anyway, I was determined to have a Japanese garden right here in JP. I met with a landscape architect who talked things through with me. Basically, some of the criteria and parameters I had to work around didn’t combine well with the style. For instance I think Boston is a zone 6 (garden speak for the climate we have here) and the hard winters are rough on bamboo and many of the plants native to Japan. Over time, I’ve learned that by combining more hearty Japanese species in the design with some very basic ground covers – I could fake it. In addition, we wanted a garden that would absorb a great deal of water, never need to be cut or need very much attention. It has taken a lot of trial and error, as well as the very skilled advice, tutelage, and hard work by my friend Rich Gargiulo at Treeworks (617-983-0813) but we now have a passable Japanese garden. I am very proud of my hard work – which is rewarded every time someone walks by and compliments us. Now if I could just keep people from letting their dogs pee pn my bushes I’d have it made!

Japanese styled gardens in front of my home.

Japanese styled gardens in front of my home.

I’d love if some of our readers could offer up any anecdotal information about their gardens, resources they might find helpful in the area, etc. I’d love to hear any tips and advice you have for surviving the winter, etc. Also, in the near future – I will have too much ground cover, and I’d be willing to trade plugs of creeper for other small plants that might fit in to my scheme. Feel free to drop me a line if you’d like to come by and see my tiny garden!

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