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Ditching The Tree and Doubling Our Acreage

When we bought our house three years ago, we immediately began making plans for a garden in the front yard. We ripped out grass and weeds, fought with topsoil, built raised beds, and started growing. That first year we had four raised beds. This year we doubled the number of beds and started growing strawberries and blueberries. Our harvests have been abundant, but there’s still never enough space to grow everything we want.

Do you see the 85 foot tall douglas fir right in the middle of all the action? The poor thing had been topped twice, and it didn’t fit in the space provided anymore. To give you some perspective of just how big this tree was, our house is the tallest in the neighborhood. We have ten foot ceilings and an attic big enough to be a third floor. I’d estimate the top of our house (at the peak of the roof) is probably 55 feet tall… Maybe 60 feet. The branches of the fir tree scraped the gutters and filled them with needles. There were pinecones (fircones?) all over the yard. Last year the tree got an infestation of tent worms. All in all, it was a disaster waiting to happen. We worried that a wind storm would bring down branches into our house or the neighbor’s house. We fought the horrid ground cover growing beneath that damned tree. We watched as sun-loving garden plants were hidden in shade through most of the day. Worst of all, the squirrels who lived in the tree routinely planted peanuts in our potato sacks.

Aimee and I had talked about having the tree removed since the day we moved in. I finally made a few calls two weekends ago. Three bids and a week later, Doug Fir is gone. I took Monday off work to supervise from the upstairs window sill (mug of tea in one hand, camera in other hand). The Tree Pirate (I swear, I did not make that part up) strapped on his spiked shoes and started climbing. He cut down branches as he moved higher, and some of the branches had to be roped and wrangled to keep them clear of the house. To their credit, this company did a fantastic job. Believe it or not, they didn’t hurt a single raised bed, the fence was barely touched as they tossed branches over, and they cleaned up the neighbor’s yard before they left.

Now look at the space! Oh, and the sunlight. You’ve never seen such light. There’s enough room to build another ten or twelve beds in the space that’s been cleared. We’ll be working on a rough plan over the summer, but I’m hoping we’ll have all the beds in place before winter hits.

Do you have any ideas for this space? How about berries or apple trees? What are you growing in your urban or suburban farms?

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  1. City Fruit Offers Tree Pruning Classes
  2. Tips on Becoming an Urban Farmer
  3. Urban Homesteading: Design and Build a Chicken Coop

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2 Responses to “Ditching The Tree and Doubling Our Acreage”

  1. Diana says:

    Oh this is great! A huge new space to play with!

    I have not had very good luck with apple trees. If you do go that route I’d check in with City Fruit to see what variety is really disease resistant.

    I am getting more and more intrigued by the idea of permaculture. What about some berry bushes along the fence and a nice bed for asparagus and rhubarb and maybe some artichokes? I planted a gooseberry bush from Raintree that has tasty red berries on it and am trying out a thornless blackberry too.

    Best of luck and look forward to hearing how it all evolves.

  2. Robin Taylor says:

    All great ideas! Yes, berries are definitely in our future. A few of our neighbors have unwanted rhubarb crowns that we may divide up.


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