Wednesday, August 09, 2006

Yard has cats, picket fence and lots of birdhouses, but no grass

In Andrea MacDonald's dreams about her perfect home, she'd see a butterfly-friendly herb garden and a white picket fence.

Four years ago, MacDonald and her husband, Bill, made that dream come true at their 71-year-old home in Fresno, Calif.

They dug out the lawn in the front yard and planted oregano, sage, rosemary and mint. They added roses, perennials, daffodils and tulips.

They poured a concrete rock walkway, built an arbor, added a birdbath and surrounded it all with a white fence, each picket cut for them by a neighbor. Atop the pillars, they added 15 birdhouses-- some gifts, some purchased, four made by neighbors.

Their efforts (with help from neighbors on their friendly block) created a splendid yard that regularly draws butterflies, birds and admiring looks from passers-by.

It's a lot of fun, said MacDonald, a teacher. It's a happy yard.

The couple was so pleased with their project that a year and a half ago they turned their attention to the backyard. Again, they dug out the lawn by hand and turned the area into large flower beds with pathways of poured concrete rock.

Many rose bushes, dahlias, daisies and cannas fill the beds near the house, and espaliered apple trees climb the wall of the detached garage. Behind the garage is a large garden with tomatoes, beans, eggplants, peppers, onions, basil, cucumbers, strawberries and grapes.

Benches and chairs beckon visitors to sit and enjoy the surroundings. Or visitors can view the most unusual feature of the yard, a mural on the back of the garage featuring two three- dimensional cats flying above a colorful garden scene painted by Marsha Williams, a neighbor.

MacDonald said the wood felines with papier-mache wings represent her cats, Hash and Mandy. The wings allow them to soar above the garden and hunt birds, which they don't do well in real life, she said.

The yard also includes a cabana with trellised sides and roof, trumpet vines and climbing roses poking through the slats. A built- in outdoor fireplace provides enough warmth that the MacDonalds can use the cabana well into fall.

Adjacent is an 8-by-16-foot summer house the couple built on concrete piers. They used lumber, doors and windows salvaged and donated by friends. MacDonald estimated they only spent about $500 on the playhouse.

MacDonald, a Fresno County master gardener, uses a potting bench in the summer house for small projects (she has another bench outside) and keeps her library of gardening books nearby.


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