A HOLY PURSUIT

Homemaking

dIY: Design Your Dream Garden

HomemakingDianne JagoComment

Before

We started small with the garden box on the right, added the one on the left, and recently decided to expand beyond this.

A few months ago, I shared how my garden kept me busy enough and how I had no plans to expand it. Things changed, however, when my kids received a generous homeschool scholarship this school-year. This scholarship has provided for their curriculum and lots of extra curriculars that we otherwise couldn’t afford. It’s been such a blessing to receive—another reason why I love the great state of Florida— and definitely deserves a post in and of itself. But we found out that some of the spending terms will change next year and all extracurriculars will not be funded. We decided that now is the time to expand our garden if they will pay for it this year. Now each child has a new garden bed, soil, and seeds to go along with it! What a gift. Of course this blesses our family with fresh food but the educational skills that come from gardening are incalculable! It’s brought me so much joy to learn these skills alongside my kids and watch their excitement as we harvest food that we eat the same day.

The struggle I ran into was the design process. If you’ve been following along with my gardening journey, you might recall I was nervous to start a new hobby that may be a flop so Ethan encouraged me to start small. Our first bed was the Vegogarden Kid’s bed and it was only 2’x3.5’. While I was surprised to see how much food I could grow in the small space, the issue I had with starting such a small bed is that I lacked the vision for what our garden could look like someday. I didn’t think beyond what I had before me because I wasn’t sure if this was a journey I would commit to. I really struggled with where to place the 2’x3.5’ and after lugging it around every portion of our yard, eventually decided upon a spot based on sunlight, wind, and visually where I could spot it from my window. It honestly looked goofy smack dab in the middle of such a large, empty space. When I added our 2’x8’ bed, it made sense to continue a line against the fence. But knowing that I would add another 3 beds threw me for a loop which led to many sketches trying to figure out the best placement for everything. If I had some concept in mind from the beginning, I probably couldn’t save myself time and having to work with weird configurations. While I am far from being a gardening expert, I've written this post for the new gardener who isn’t sure where to start when it comes to garden layouts.

1. purchase and place your first garden bed with your dream design in mind.

Before even purchasing a garden bed, I would recommend looking at garden inspiration on Pinterest, getting a general idea of what you might work towards someday, and then making a decision on your first garden bed with the greater picture in mind. Our kids garden bed was an affordable and great place to start, but due to its size it could never be a main focal point of a garden with expansion plans. Worst case scenario, you never expand it but best case you do and already have a plan in place. Reading reviews is helpful to know how your raised bed will hold up in the long term, as well as how it withstands severe weather.

2. Divide your backyard into zones

Backyards that have absolutely nothing in them are super intimidating to me. These kinds of yards are blank canvases with endless possibilities. For some, this may be exciting but for others like me, this is overwhelming. Creating zones helps immensely.

Consider all the ways you plan to utilize the space you have in your backyard. We have a shipping container that we use as a guest space in our backyard so that is one zone, another zone is the garden, and the other zone I created was for a fire-pit and chairs. When each zone has a purpose and when laid out properly, it can tie in the entirety of your backyard to make a magical space.

Once you’ve determined the “zone” for your garden, use graph paper or an online program like Canva to draw up and move around your beds to see how the spacing and positions look. Take into consideration where the sun rises and sets, where your water spicket is located, and if there will be shade from a fence, building, or home. Move things around until it makes sense both visually and practically.

The fun part is dreaming up and filling in the rest. In my “grand plans” that may never happen, I’ve also made space for a swimming pool, a row of blueberry bushes alongside our house, and a fruit tree. While these things may not happen, I can at least be mindful of the space I’m using in case we ever have the opportunity to add these items in.

How I Configured Our Plans

I decided to base everything off of our long 2’x8’ bed. I knew I needed to uproot the small kids bed next to it but had no desire to do that with the longer bed as I had plenty of plants growing in it. This meant that my entire design would be based off the location of our 2’x8’ bed.

My friend Bethany has these beautiful vinyl 4’x4’ garden beds. Since the scholarship would cover them, I decided to go big and add those into our plans. I wanted to break up the metal raised bed look with something that would match our house and add a pop of white by our dull, wooden fence. Mixing these in meant playing around a lot with placement. The small kids sized beds were hard to work with and, thankfully, Vegogarden offers extension pieces to lengthen beds. My 2’x3.5’ bed became a 2’x5.5’! We ordered a second kids bed with extensions to match alongside it. (Kids beds are 50% off if you post photos on social so this was the best deal.) Those new dimensions helped me moved things around “on paper” so that when it came to set up time, there was less physical re-configurating saving us time and muscle.

Ethan brought home some large pavers and we played around with adding some stepping stones between the beds. I loved how it came together and figured maybe someday we could add in a slab of pavement and a fire pit. Things started to take shape! And then the big surprise…guess what Ethan decided to gift me for our 15th wedding anniversary? He took the plans I had dreamed up and made them a reality! He contracted out the walkway from our door all the way down to firepit area. He also decided to to tear up the sod and add in gravel to tie it all together!

3. Create a budget, stick with it, and add to your garden over time.

There are certain items you simply need in a garden in order to have success: good soil, quality seeds, trellises, and so forth. However, you don’t necessarily need the gravel surrounding the beds and that is something that can be added down the road. Prioritize what matters most. I love using spreadsheets to calculate how much everything will cost based on the bed size. Sometimes soil and rock is cheaper to buy in bulk from a local landscape business than from Home Depot or Lowe’s. Shop around and do your calculations to save you from making multiple trips.

Save Money on Soil

One way to save money is to “lasagna garden.” Fill your beds with wet cardboard (no glossy cardboard or tape), a branches and sticks (no pinecones or anything with seeds), top with some leaves (try to avoid trees spray with pesticides), spray with water, and repeat once more before adding your soil. These items will break down and give you rich soil underneath. I know this to be true because after uprooting one of our kid’s beds, the soil underneath was black and rich!

4. Invite others to help

This was such a fun family project to work on. While my kids may not say they had loads of fun—ha!, I really believe this kind of labor is beneficial for families as it gets you outside, requires working with hands, and gives a sense of accomplishment when it’s finished. Our kiddos were such a big help. Kaiden did a lot of heavy lifting and the girls helped with smaller tasks like securing the edging and helping me cut landscape fabric.

I also enlisted help by asking friends for bags of leaves and a farmer friend who gave me lots of compost to mix into our beds. You never know what others have or don’t need unless you ask!

Lastly, teaching others to garden is a great way to build relationships and implement Titus 2 discipleship. Ask younger women to help you on a project if you don’t have helping hands within the home.

5. Enjoy the fruit of your labor!

It’s all finished now and I couldn’t be happier!!!!!!!! We’ve spent time in this space every day since we finished sowing seeds, picking small weeds, checking on our plants, and watching things grow. On cool mornings, I hope to read my Bible out here or share coffee with friends and on cool nights, we plan to make s’mores and enjoy a nice fire.

We are thinking about adding some string lights and maybe even a white picket fence. I look forward to sharing pictures in a few months when, Lord willing, these beds will be filled with a variety of herbs, veggies, and flowers. Even if not, it will certainly be a space to do morning devotions, share coffee with others, and cultivating a love for gardening in my kids.

Slow and Simple: Inspiring DIY’s for Homemakers

Book Review, HomemakingDianne JagoComment

We once lived on a 3-acre farmette in the countryside of Pennsylvania. Our children and dogs had generous space to run and play, chasing fireflies around an old Magnolia tree. We had dozens of peony bushes where I cut flowers, gifted them to friends, and filled our house with it’s sweet scent. I hung laundry on a line and loved venturing out to nearby Amish markets and vegetable stands. When I think of a slow and simple lifestyle, I think of these memories (easily forgetting so much of what I did not enjoy about the state.)

I suppose this is the downside of having lived in so many places. When you’ve tasted and seen certain things, sometimes it’s hard not to compare the present with the former things. I miss the land we had in Pennsylvania but love living near the beach as we do now. I miss the accessibility to the mountains and woods like we did in California, but love freedom that we have in Florida. No single place that we’ve lived is perfect, attesting to the reality that true contentment isn’t found in people, places, or things, but in deep satisfaction of our good and gracious God. Rather than dwelling on the high points of every place we’ve lived and secretly wishing we could “have it all” in one location, we can take what we loved and implement it where God has placed us now.

When perusing books at our local library, I came across a book that I immediately fell in love with: “Simply Living Well” by Julie Watkins*. Her practical recipes and intentional, yet inspiring lifestyle reminds me of the creative traditions I witnessed in the Mennonite and Amish communities of Pennsylvania. Her lifestyle showcases that a simple and slower lifestyle can occur no matter what space one lives in. This book teaches the value in low-waste living, and I appreciate her balanced approach that isn’t burdensome to the reader. Yes, it’s easier to buy detergent at a store rather than making it yourself. Yes, plastic-wrap is the most convenient covering for leftovers. But this book helped me to see that there time-tested swaps that are not only environmentally-friendly and help save money in the long-run, but are actually fun to make. There is also something to be said about working with one’s hands and crafting some thing that is both useful and beautiful. And so, this book sent me on a journey of incorporating some of what I had left in Pennsylvania into our present living.

Here are a few things that I’ve tried my hand at since moving into our home here in Panama City Beach:

Headache Balm

This salve is made from beeswax, shea butter, and several different essential oils. I deal with chronic tension headaches and migraines and thought this would be fun to make as well as helpful to use. It doesn’t eliminate the headache but it is a great to use when massaging the forehead.

(The beautiful jar of lavender was gifted to me by some sweet friends from their lavender bushes in California. How dreamy!)

This recipe can be found in her book.


Homemade Playdough (scented!)

The kids loved this one and so do I! This was easy to make and my girls spent hours making pizzas and castles and taking in the sweet scents. I made this in October and it’s kept well in a glass container since then.

From top to bottom (of picture 1):

  1. No Dye | We wanted to keep this one the off-white color but we did use lavender oil to scent this one.

  2. Cocoa Powder | This dyed the ball brown but also made it smell HEAVENLY. It was hard not to eat this, ha.

  3. Turmeric | This bright yellow came from just a little turmeric. To make it smell sweetly, we added lemon essential oil.

  4. Paprika & Cinnamon | We tried paprika to make it look orange but that didn’t seem to work well and the smell was quite strong, so we added in cinnamon which gave it a different shade of brown and an amazing scent that cancelled out the paprika.

Julie made this recipe available online!


Beeswax Wrappers

I’ve heard of beeswax wrappers but didn’t know much about them. I found one on sale at Fresh Market and now understand the hype behind them. These are an excellent alternative to plastic wrap. They are anti-microbial, can be washed, and reused again and again. Just simply top your container with one of these or cover your fruit or cheese, and it will keep very well (better than plastic wrap, in my opinion.)

Buying them at the store is pricey so I decided to try Julie’s recipe and make my own. These are 100% cotton pieces of fabric painted with a beeswax and pine rosin mixture and baked to seal it all in. It is a little messy but the kids and I had fun making them.

This DIY is found in her book.


The other recipes from her book that I’ve made but haven’t photographed are homemade dish detergent (from vinegar, washing soda, and citric acid) and citrus spray (from vinegar and citrus peels). Both work wonderfully! I am going to soon attempt her laundry detergent recipe, dish detergent tablets, an all-natural hair rinse, and whipped body lotion. If you have any tried and true recipes, please send them my way!

*I do use Amazon affiliate links in this post, however, I am not affiliated with the author or the publisher. I just genuinely love this book and want to share it with you! P.S. This is not a Christian or faith-based book.

A Life Update and Some Sewing Fun

All, Homemaking, MomhoodadminComment
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I've learned many things in the four years that the Lord has allowed me to run Deeply Rooted but one important lesson that I've only recently learned is how vital it is to make time for personal projects. It is so easy to get into a rhythm of deadlines, to-do lists, and serving others while neglecting time for the things I'm passionate about in the process. By the end of last year, I felt like a machine trying my hardest to care for my family and home well while juggling the craziness of DR sales that always come around Christmas time. While my goal was to be as efficient and productive as possible -- to be the best wife, mom, local church member, and business owner for the glory of God that I could be -- I wore myself thin. I must've forgotten that I am a person and not a robot. 😅 And so my husband encouraged me to enter into 2018 by taking some time off from Deeply Rooted and social media to recharge and reprioritize.It worked out well because we spent a few weeks in Wisconsin with my family and we remained away from home (the place where personal life and business life tend to blur.) We slowed down operations as much as we could for our team. I spent time focusing extra time on my relationship with God through consistent time in the Word and prayer. I was intentional about connecting deeper with the needs of my family. (I often have to check my heart to make sure that I'm not allowing the demands of DR to consume me and thereby neglect my first callings.) I also spent time getting back into hobbies that I love. This included visiting an art museum, studying art and writing books, studying nature, photographing for the sake of photographing, drawing, and using Pinterest as a tool to create mood boards for everything that inspired me. The result of this mini-"sabbatical" was a refreshed and nourished soul. During this time, the Lord revealed a lot of idols within my heart that I was clinging to and by His grace, He has helped me remove them one by one. Of course, I'm constantly finding new ones pop up but my goal was to get rid of anything in my life that makes me spiritually numb (which basically is anything that doesn't build me up or stir my affections for God.) Creatively speaking, this break led to fresh-vision for the look and feel of the next issue of Deeply Rooted. (It's going to be such an amazing issue!)In that process, my hopes for regular blog posting went out the window. Sharing things online, in general, has been something I've cut back on drastically for a number of reasons. However, the one thing that does remain is my desire to write for the glory of God. I want to share what He has been teaching me and what He is doing in my heart, but much more beyond that, I want to proclaim His glory and His Gospel. Biblical illiteracy within the Church has been an area of great weight in my heart and while I'm not sure what the Lord will do with that burden (outside of our mission with Deeply Rooted), I'm convicted all the more to study my Bible cover to cover.All this to say, I've been making time to get back into the things I love. The other day I dusted off my sewing machine to hem some curtains in our mudroom that were dragging on the ground. It was an easy project that has been on my to-do list since moving into this house and I'm glad to finally check that to-do off my list. I'm glad I did it because the process reignited my love for sewing. I make no claims to be a seamstress but my mom taught me some basic sewing machine skills when I was in high school. I dug out some old fabric and followed a free pattern I found online. I made Cora a dress out of some cheaper cotton fabric to test out the pattern. When I discovered the ease of it, I then tried it out on some beautiful mustard colored linen that I had purchased back when Skye was a baby. (Again, for another project that never happened, ha!) Linen is, hands down, my favorite material and I'm excited to play more around with it this year as I attempt some clothes for my kiddos and maybe even for myself.Here are a few shots that I took of the girls yesterday afternoon as they tried on their new clothes for the first time. ❤️ This was kind of a random life update but if you've been curious about what's going on in our corner of the world, there you go. Here's to dusting off the sewing machine and dusting off this blog (again.) 👍🏼

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