I had decided I wanted the retaining wall that forms the boundary between the upstairs garden in the downstairs garden rebuilt; I was scared it was going to collapse. But when I was showing the stonemason around that I would later give the job, I was reminded of how inaccessible that wall is. That end of my garden is a bit wild; from the lawn, access to it is blocked on the right by my garden shed, and on the left by a huge Himalayan honeysuckle. And I had had my doubts about that honeysuckle. It is a bit out of control. And it is pretty; but it also means that the part of the garden behind it, that in theory could be a lot prettier, is just entirely blocked now. So when I decided to give the stonemason the job I promised him I would remove it. In the long run, it is what I would have wanted to do anyway!
The honeysuckle seen from above; you can’t even see the garden shed |
The honeysuckle seen from the front |
Originally the stonemason would start in October. That would give me some time to get rid of the honeysuckle. But then I got a message from him; a hole had appeared in his diary and he could start earlier. So that meant that the shrub had to go earlier!
He would start on the Thursday of the fieldwork; the one day I had off. So in the morning I donned my gardening gloves, grabbed a saw and a pair of secateurs, and set to work. And it is a sizable shrub; I basically just cut it off close to the ground, and removed it. Digging it out looked like a much bigger job. But for now at least the builders had access!
After! |
With that shrub gone the garden already looked fundamentally different. A lot more open and tidy! And in the near future, it will look like a building site, but once the wall is back up again, I will have to make that part of the garden look civilised. I think in the end it will look an awful lot better for it! And I won't have to be particularly afraid that all my work will be undone by a wall collapsing on top of it!
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