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And now back to Park Slope for another garden make-over…The only before picture we have gives an idea of what was here initially when we bought our North Slope garden duplex in 2002—a couple of bushes, and a lot of dirt. The dirt, of course, turned out to consist of a lot of glass and litter and other loveliness. We rented a dumpster and hauled it all out. There was also a narrow concrete area—about 8′ long and 3′ wide—that ran alongside the house. Our building (an old eight-family tenement on a brownstone block that was converted into four condos in 2000) is 85′ deep on a 100′ lot, so the garden is small, with some space lost to the stairs coming up from the basement. The garden faces north.

We hired a landscape designer to install the blue stone patio, where we have the table, chairs and barbecue. We really wanted…

…to hang a hammock somewhere, so she also laid out the rocky area over which the hammock now swings. It’s too overgrown to see now, but you can get an idea of the layout from the drawing of the garden plan. Otherwise, all we really wanted was a lush, almost tropical garden in Brooklyn . The initial plantings included rhododendrons, azaleas, two large hostas, some ferns, some tall grasses, and some non-invasive bamboo (some directly in the garden, and some in two large wooden planters), as well as a Japanese maple tree. Otherwise, much of the initial garden plantings were meant for a shade garden, but then the neighbors on one side cut down a huge tree which turned our shade garden into one with a lot of midday sun, so a lot of those initial plantings didn’t survive.

We know next to nothing about gardening! So we just strive for lushness and low maintenance. We’ve put in several more hostas, and some galium odoratum which grows full and silvery as the summer progresses. Last fall, we planted dozens of daffodils which were in full bloom in April, and we recently put in some sedum ground cover that we hope will fill in some empty areas. And though true gardeners will scoff, we usually put in some impatiens in the spring, which become luxuriant with flowers, almost like rose bushes, and add colorful blossoms to the garden all summer long—but didn’t do much of that this year, and now regret it because the garden needs some color. (Tip: don’t buy the scraggly impatiens they sell locally; pre-order them in the fall/winter from White Flower Farm, which ships them at the appropriate time for spring planting. We’re putting in our order in September!)

To the east and west are the backs of neighbors’ wooden fences, along with leaves from various vines that wander over from their gardens. Along the back (north) is a chain link fence that we covered (temporarily, we thought) with some cheap bamboo fencing, but which we’ve just kept there. So no money was spent on fencing at all. A hardy creeping vine climbs up an old laundry tower which would be a bit of an eyesore but now looks like part of nature.

Some would call this garden overgrown rather than lush—it certainly doesn’t adequately reflect the tremendous talent of our landscape designer, Susan Welti (of Susan Welti Landscape Design, 718-638-7547) since we’re not gardeners and don’t really do anything to care for it at all—but we like it.
Small Park Slope Garden Photos [Flickr]
Garden of the Day: Refining in Boerum Hill [Brownstoner]
Garden of the Day: On the Edge of Carroll Gardens [Brownstoner]
Garden of the Day: Rocking in Rockaway [Brownstoner]
Garden of the Day: Carroll Gardens Make-over [Brownstoner]
Garden of the Day: Whispy in Williamsburg [Brownstoner]
Garden of the Day: Kensington DIY, Four Years On [Brownstoner]
Garden of the Day: Ornamental Edibles [Brownstoner]
Garden of the Day: Center Slope Evolution [Brownstoner]
Garden of the Day: Brooklyn Japanese? [Brownstoner]
Garden of the Day: DIY in Bay Ridge [Brownstoner]
Garden of the Day: Serenity Now in Cobble Hill [Brownstoner]
Garden of the Day: Potted on Putnam [Brownstoner]
Garden of the Day: Cemetery Views [Brownstoner]
Garden of the Day: Made in the Shade [Brownstoner]
Garden of the Day: Praiseworthy in Park Slope [Brownstoner]
Garden of the Day: Crown Heights Verdant [Brownstoner]
Garden of the Day: Another Greenwood Heights Goodie [Brownstoner]
Garden of the Day: HGTV Does Greenwood Heights [Brownstoner]
Garden of the Day: PLG Make-Over [Brownstoner]
Submit Your Garden for ‘Garden of the Day’ [Brownstoner]


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  1. Nice garden! re vines: it’s Boston Ivy. Some in Great Briton say that ivy-covered walls are the reason cottages survive for centuries. The leaves protect the house from sun and heat in the summer, and also repel rain water. Small birds love to congregate in them. Aesthetically, it’s a bonanza–tender chartreuse buds in the spring, robust green leaves all summer, a wall on fire with color in the fall. The bare vines clinging to the wall collect bright white snowflakes in the winter before melting in the morning sun. Downsides already mentioned. But I figure, given the modest size of our gardens, yanking a few vines off the wall before they reach the roof or gutters or climb up the neighbor’s wall isn’t a big deal.

  2. Ah, yes, the mosquitos. Honestly, at this time of year we don’t use the garden as much as we do in the spring and fall for exactly that reason. I find it does help if you burn lots of citronella candles, and obviously make sure there is no standing water in any nearby containers. But as often as not, the bugs drive us back inside in short order. It’s a damned shame … but I still enjoy the view of the garden from our back windows!

  3. I like it, but lemme ask you a question…are you able to enjoy the hammock and the outdoor dining with the proliferation of mosquitos that seem to inhabit Park Slope backyards? Or is your backyard somehow immune? After being annihilated the first time I stepped out into ours, I’ve been trying to figure out a way to get rid of them without setting off a poison bomb.

  4. Thanks.

    I like the laaudry-ladder trellis. Those laundry ladders are very Brooklyn. I also like the irregular old wooden fence sagging down behind the garden furniture. The garden has a nice lazy feel to it.