Any guesses as to where this landscape is?
Maybe this view will help?
Yes that’s the impressive crop of moss growing on our roof!
Inspired by Alan at It’s Not Work Its Gardening, who took advantage of gutter cleaning day to snap some photos of his garden from above, I handed the camera to Andrew when he was up on the ladder taking care of our gutters. This was actually the first photo he snapped, of the sedum growing on our fireplace. I still wish I knew how it got there.
Here he’s captured the front garden, all but the large planting area against the house where the Bishop’s Weed used to be (on the right side of the sidewalk where you can't see). The space is actually a little bit larger than it looks, since the slope down to the street is all but lost from this angle.
Next he turned the camera on the back garden…
Looking at this photo a couple of things caught my eye, first how shapely Clifford (the leafless Magnolia tree on the left) is. And secondly just how big those houses behind us are. When you're on the patio they disappear behind the bamboo and laurel, thank god! In case you're surprised how small it looks our lot measures 45.38 ft by 111.2 ft, just a slight variation from the Portland standard 50 x 100 lot.
He was quite taken with the different colors on the Hydrangea...
From the "spring-green" leaves back near the garage to the yellowing leaves toward the front, the rose colored blooms, forest-green of the clematis leaves and the sprinkling of blue blossoms...
Looking to the north. This is a shot that would have been great for my "backyard project" post.
These do make a nice pair...
And the different textures in this photo are lovely. Heck happy banana leaves the 3rd week of December! Who'da thought?
Inspired by those banana leaves I did a little research on frost dates here in Portland and discovered my memory isn't as good as I thought it was! Here are the dates of our first frosts at the Airport (4.9 miles from my house) and Downtown Portland (5.5 miles away) starting in 2004, the year we moved to Portland...
2004
Airport: Nov 5th, at 31F
Downtown: Nov 28th, at 32F
2005
Airport: Nov 20th, at 31F
Downtown: Nov 21st, at 31F
2006
Airport: Oct 30th, at 32F
Downtown: Nov 28th, at 29F
2007
Airport: Nov 2nd, at 32F
Downtown: Nov 25th, at 30F
2008
Airport: Dec 5th, at 30F
Downtown: Dec 14th, at 26F
2009
Airport: Dec 2nd, at 31F
Downtown: Dec 4th, at 32F
2010
Airport: Nov 21st, at 32F
Downtown: Nov 21st, at 32F
2011
Airport: Nov 2nd, at 30F
Downtown: Nov 20th, at 31F
2012
still waiting...(although we did briefly have snow yesterday still no freeze!). The latest frost date on record at the airport was December 25th 1966, with 1934 beating that since there never was an autumn frost that year.
Maybe this view will help?
Yes that’s the impressive crop of moss growing on our roof!
Inspired by Alan at It’s Not Work Its Gardening, who took advantage of gutter cleaning day to snap some photos of his garden from above, I handed the camera to Andrew when he was up on the ladder taking care of our gutters. This was actually the first photo he snapped, of the sedum growing on our fireplace. I still wish I knew how it got there.
Here he’s captured the front garden, all but the large planting area against the house where the Bishop’s Weed used to be (on the right side of the sidewalk where you can't see). The space is actually a little bit larger than it looks, since the slope down to the street is all but lost from this angle.
Next he turned the camera on the back garden…
Looking at this photo a couple of things caught my eye, first how shapely Clifford (the leafless Magnolia tree on the left) is. And secondly just how big those houses behind us are. When you're on the patio they disappear behind the bamboo and laurel, thank god! In case you're surprised how small it looks our lot measures 45.38 ft by 111.2 ft, just a slight variation from the Portland standard 50 x 100 lot.
He was quite taken with the different colors on the Hydrangea...
From the "spring-green" leaves back near the garage to the yellowing leaves toward the front, the rose colored blooms, forest-green of the clematis leaves and the sprinkling of blue blossoms...
Looking to the north. This is a shot that would have been great for my "backyard project" post.
These do make a nice pair...
And the different textures in this photo are lovely. Heck happy banana leaves the 3rd week of December! Who'da thought?
Inspired by those banana leaves I did a little research on frost dates here in Portland and discovered my memory isn't as good as I thought it was! Here are the dates of our first frosts at the Airport (4.9 miles from my house) and Downtown Portland (5.5 miles away) starting in 2004, the year we moved to Portland...
2004
Airport: Nov 5th, at 31F
Downtown: Nov 28th, at 32F
2005
Airport: Nov 20th, at 31F
Downtown: Nov 21st, at 31F
2006
Airport: Oct 30th, at 32F
Downtown: Nov 28th, at 29F
2007
Airport: Nov 2nd, at 32F
Downtown: Nov 25th, at 30F
2008
Airport: Dec 5th, at 30F
Downtown: Dec 14th, at 26F
2009
Airport: Dec 2nd, at 31F
Downtown: Dec 4th, at 32F
2010
Airport: Nov 21st, at 32F
Downtown: Nov 21st, at 32F
2011
Airport: Nov 2nd, at 30F
Downtown: Nov 20th, at 31F
2012
still waiting...(although we did briefly have snow yesterday still no freeze!). The latest frost date on record at the airport was December 25th 1966, with 1934 beating that since there never was an autumn frost that year.