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Got a garden space you want to share? Send us a note. And now, your very own DIBS presents his deck and garden project. I purchased the brownstone in Bed Stuy in May of 2007 and began work on the deck and yard in the fall. I used recommendations found here on brownstoner and Susan from Sketch and Hammer did a wonderful job on the deck along with her iron man Manny. Chuck Dorr from Dig and his crew did the yard. I was suspect of Chuck and his crew as they were the first group of contractors I’ve ever hired who listened to NPR while they were working! Both the deck and the yard turned out fine and although both were on the expensive side I’d heartily recommend both of them.

The yard was your standard 40′ X 20′ overgrown mess with a concrete slab off the back of the house. They removed all the debris and, as per my design, installed the pebble walk, the fountain and, in the spring, finished the plantings. There was a beautiful fruit-bearing golden delicious apple tree in the middle of the yard and I had that moved to the side. because of the move it did not bear fruit this year but I’m hopeful for next year. There was a 40′ catalpa tree in the back left corner which stayed but I susequently had it taken down as the mess from the pods was just too much to deal with. Although I hated to take down a perfectly fine tree you can’t understand the extent of the pod problem unless you have one.

The plantings are: a few hydrangeas, an original rose, rhododendrons, rose of sharon across the back, a few winterberrys (both male and female required) and my tomato/onion/lettuce raised bed to the side. The only regret I have that I developed in seeing other posters’ gardens was that I did not actually employ more usable hardscape areas. However, I primarily use the deck and really enjoy the view and the fountain.

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  1. The problem with the catalpa was not only the mess created by the leaves and the long pods but; and I’ve never seen this before, that the seeds from the pods would start rooting almost immediately and would be 3 feet tall in about two weeks if you didn’t keep up with them. I’ve never seen seeds root so fast and they had a deep tap root that’s hard to pull out. I just couldn’t keep up with it what with spending so many hard hours at work plus my brownstoner posting schedule and drinking at night!

    Another recommendation from brownstoner: Family Tree Service…talk to Joe.

  2. ownh…..that’s a great idea

    bessie…i haven’t thought about the Rose of Sharon roots but they are against the back wall.

    wasder..we can talk off line someday about permits

    cmu…yes Susan is a piece of work…as long as you give it right back to her she’s managable!!! Manny asked how I wanted something done and I said just do it the way you want to and his son laughed because there apparently aren’t many customers that aren’t all over them all day long on every little detail!! Manny are a great father and son routine, cursing and swearing at each other all day. But that job got designed fast and erected even faster. I was very happy with all of them.

  3. Great design! I hope you have better luck with your apple than I did. I planted an apple tree 20 years ago and have had a love/hate relationship with it for the last 15. Since I don’t use insecticides, the flies have found a lovely home and the fruit is no longer edible. Except for the the wildlife. I love all the birds that it attracts ( yellow belly sap suckers, orioles, jays, cards etc)the squirrels, no so much. They sit high in a branch and peg half eaten apples at our dogs head. Thus I end up with a catalpa-esque mess and more flies.Still, I will not remove it.

  4. just read that you took down the catalpa, they are a bit ungainly for an urban garden. Dogwoods are nice especially the doubles, hard to find but worth the effort. You have to buy them in bloom to really know what you are getting.

  5. Nice that the catalpa and rhodos bloom at the same time. The photo is very nice. You may want to look at climbing hydrangeas for the sidewalls and a little bamboo for texture. The nice thing about a garden like this is that you can keep adding to it. Perhaps you can train clematis up the trunk of the catalpa, they are fussy so it may not work but if does it will be a wow highlight. I do a bit of gardening myself. It is a life-enhancing hobby.

    Cheers!

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