Get 'er done.
I wondered why my shoulders and elbow hurt so much this past week or so. Duh! Raking gravel out of the yard and putting it in piles to put it back on the driveway after the snowstorms are finished for the season might be a reason!
For understanding, I've had both shoulders and one elbow surgically 'worked' on years ago. So when I aggravate them they let me know. I tend to forget about those places until I do my spring clean up each year and they remind me.
I considered just not doing more, but common sense is never my best decisions in these circumstances.
Besides, I'd let the growth around the outhouse go wild last spring so it seemed to be a good idea to clean it up this spring.
The poor outhouse is beginning to list to the back where I think the concrete has started to sink into the ground. I suppose after being in this spot for over 40 years it has a right to begin to fail. It really isn't used as an outhouse any more. I clean it out each spring and usually put gardening tools inside it.
I think I'll give it one more year and then knock it down and clean it up next fall or spring. Once I fill the hole underneath it, I'll add flowers to the dirt.
In its glory days, the grandkids loved to use it. And it was rather pretty.
And it was handy as we had a hitching rail around it for saddling mules and heading out for rides. With poo on your boots, you could empty your bladder without running into the house and making a mess.
Now it is surrounded by Bee Balm, Peonies, Irises, and Hostas. It looks rather dull and awful right now, but everything looks listless and brownish in March.
The area pictured below will be crowded with perennials later this spring. In fact I need to clean some out. Once I had large rocks circling the outhouse garden as a border, but I moved the rocks away. It is easier to mow close to the flowers than to constantly try and keep the rocks tidy.
24 years ago, it was a nice place to sit and watch the world with a cup of coffee. In 2007, when we had no electricity for 7 days and no flushing toilet, this was our saving grace.
I wish I could save it. But I don't think it is worth it.
I spent some time reminiscing about the outhouse as I cleaned gravel out of the yard and deposited the old garden debris in the pasture. It has served its purpose and given us so much joy and laughter over the years. The walls inside the outhouse are filled with poems and sayings that kids wrote while visiting.
The walls inside are made out of melamine board. The cup of markers in the outhouse for writing on the wall are still there!
[Yes, it needs cleaning! Those Asian Beetles love to enter here in the fall!]
Poor thing. Wish I could save it. One more year...
The outhouse has years of story telling funnies. The year we had guests from Missouri and they shut a kitten inside the outhouse by accident. We had 14 people here and many used the outhouse.
The kitten fell into the hole and scrambled out again covered in you know what.
It absolutely made a nasty mess inside the outhouse. Use your imagination!
Grands playing hide n go seek would use it.
The time the Jehovah's witnesses pulled up in the yard with my husband contemplating life while sitting there with the door open....
I hope to surround it with magnificent flowers this year. The front of it will have a mass of bee balm and I am hoping to get sunflowers on its left [west side].
Poor thing. It looks neglected and
unloved.
After seeing the old photo of the Hollyhocks, I'm thinking of making a spot for them again. I did love the colors of the Hollyhocks.
Hollyhocks, Morning Glories, Zinnias, Sunflowers, Bachelor Buttons, Cosmos, ... hmmm, what else can I add? Maybe some Joe Pye Weed?
I quit after hours of also picking gravel up from the yard. I may take a rest from raking today and do some digging.
Got some favorite flowers you like to grow?
Oh, yes. Digging is so much more of a rest than raking! I would also feel sad to see it go if it were mine.Favorite flower.....just about all of them. I cannot choose.
ReplyDeleteHow about you suggest a flower I didn't name? I'm thinking of adding coneflowers to my gardens...
DeleteI forgot to mention nasturtiums. I may try them in a hanging basket this year!
Your outhouse is well worth saving (my .02). I miss having one about the place. We actually have two, but not in use. I once lived for a summer on a great-grandparents' homestead, papered the walls of its outhouse with whatever came my way (cards, photos, etc.) and was sorry to leave it behind ...
ReplyDeleteMy first farm had a two seater outhouse. My Aunts had them also. At night we had to use to the ceramic commode that was under the bed and empty them in the morning.
DeleteNo thanks, not in the winter time!
Raking is hard work especially gravel because it is son heavy. We had two outhouses at the resort and they both came in handy. I can imagine the Jehovah Witnesses expressions ...thanks for the smile:)
ReplyDeleteYes, rake, shovel, toss, rake shovel...toss. Over and over!
DeleteYep, they were...surprised.
Coneflowers, Hollyhocks...Bee Balm:)
ReplyDeleteConeflowers I do not have! Hollyhocks are on my mind!
DeleteAww the picture with the flowers outside it is so fun! Such a cute little outhouse. I am all for the spring home projects. We just started having our kitchen cabinets refaced. I am excited to see what you end up doing with your place. Thanks for sharing!!!
ReplyDeleteMaybe if you're doing baskets, some trailing type petunias?
ReplyDeleteI may do a basket of petunias. I used to grow them in another garden and they took a lot of daily work which I enjoyed. Good suggestion!
DeleteWhen I was eight, we got a septic field and indoor plumbing put in our house. That meant the old outhouse had to go. The hole was filled in and my Mom decided to plant rhubarb there, figuring it would thrive in such a spot. It did not.
ReplyDeleteLove the photos of your outhouse in its glory days, nicely painted with white trim and surrounded by beautiful flowers. I too love hollyhocks and other "heritage" flowers.
Our outhouse has never been used regularly. People used to tell me I had the fanciest outhouse. I have lace curtains in it too!
DeleteI even considered painting it again, but not sure I will. Thanks, hearing about others and their outhouses are fun!
Well, yours IS fancy-shmancy! A real toilet seat? That's putting on the dog! We just had a hole cut in the plywood. On the other hand, my mother ensured we used actual toilet paper in ours, not the Eaton's catalogue like our low-class neighbours did. WE had standards.
DeleteHah! I love it. I don't think my Aunts had real toilet paper in theirs, but we had it in ours. The toilet paper holder is hilarious in the outhouse. It has a sign asking for .05 cents to use the paper!
DeleteWe got a good laugh at that when a neighbor put that in our outhouse when we were not home.
Make sure you won't need it. My section of my apartment needed all new pipes, and I bought a portable commode with bucket and liners. Took a month. An outhouse would have been nice. Linda in Kansas
ReplyDeleteI bet it would. We have a commode for hubby now that he is in Hospice, he'd never make it to the outhouse!
Delete:)
I vote for hollyhocks! Lori
ReplyDeleteI think I have the perfect place for them!
DeleteIt looks good there, and it will be surrounded by beauty. I think it’s a fab outhouse
ReplyDeleteI hope so! I'm tempted to paint it up fancy once more.
DeleteLooks like the outhouse may save you the trouble of knocking it down. I think it’s ready to succumb all by itself!
ReplyDeleteI'm going to give it one more summer at least! Then take it down and use that space as a flower garden.
DeleteWhat an awesome outhouse, full of memories and less #@$! I would absolutely save it!! Before you topple it (or it topples) consider keeping a fav piece of it for garden art or whatever your creative mind fancies. You could even make a frame using it's weathered wood for one of your a flowery outhouse pics.
ReplyDeleteYou have lotsa great flowers ideas to add! One of my favs in my butterfly garden is Verbena Bonariensis (aka Tall Verbena). Mine self seeds and forms a well behaved patch. Butterflies love it! If interested, I can share some of my collected seeds. I should have put some in one of those boxes, haa!
Also, Coneflowers & Black Eyed Susans are frequently planted together. As you know, I could talk gardening for daze!
I'm considering Black Eyed Susans and Coneflowers for the garden I have prepped in my old veggie garden area.
DeleteI had verbena flowers last year. Not those kind though, they look amazing.
I'm going to be doing a lot of changing things around this year since I have to stick close by.
I have lots of plans...though we will see how they work out.
I just love the writing on the wall!
ReplyDelete