2006
DIVA DIARY
[Photo-heavy
and full of exclamation points, as usual!!]
Mindy jump-started the year: Happy
New Year Divas!! I hope everyone enjoyed their black-eyed peas…Bring those
calendars and we'll see you Saturday!! Buffy suggested the Waterloo on 360 at
2222…

With two new Divas to meet we had an
excuse for a second breakfast date; Mindy, immersed in French lessons for a
summer tour, knew just the place,
“Oui!! Aux Chez Elsi's!!
(just practicing)”
Elsi’s large new
location on Burnet had high ceilings and felt different from the cozy old
building, but the migas and corn tortillas were just as delicious here. When
Candy & Sophia arrived, we had one of those “It
seems like we’ve known each other for years!” experiences, a good omen for the gardening year ahead.
The Austin Marathon
is held each year around Valentine’s Day. Both Buffy and Mindy were running the
half-marathon and I had family members in the event, so we planned the first
meeting for the weekend after the big race.
This Saturday, rain or shine - if we
can't work (outside) there is another project inside the garage…weather has
cracked even more of the big terra cotta pots... help with transplanting three
spireas into a small shrub border… Also the mailbox bed is bugging me…give me
some inspiration! …See you soon! Glinda
Looking forward to seeing everybody
soon, rain or shine… hoping more for the shine!! Anxious to hear about the
marathon..brrr wasn't it COLD!!
Diva-Annie.
The marathon had started out with ice
on the edges of the road – would this weekend be any better?
The day was looming grey at 8 AM, and
the downpour started as the Divas arrived. We’d get to my projects eventually,
but we were still getting acquainted with our new members. By the time we’d
enjoyed mango-peach juice, Egg & Cheese Strata with turkey sausage, and
Ricotta & Cinnamon-filled crepes, the rain had tapered off.
I’d spent hundreds of dollars on
large terra cotta patio containers as a new Austin resident, then watched in
horror each spring as clay pots cracked and disintegrated. The heck with being
a garden snob – my plants were going into plastic pots!

The Divas redesigned a new large
container on the patio, using a small corkscrew willow in the center, a
treasure that had been rooted from my friend Barb’s tree back in IL. By putting
the willow in with other plants that appreciated extra moisture they would all
have a better chance to live on my Austin patio.
Diva-Annie wielded a hammer to smash
the old pot, as Sophia stood ready to catch the crinum-type lilies, dianthus
and Hawaiian white ginger/Hedychium coronaria. Divas Mindy, Candy &
Karla work on the Oleander container near the front porch.

The next task was moving three Bridal
wreath spireas. Two smaller shrubs were jammed close to the East fence, growing
flat on that side. A third Spiraea of a different variety was at war with our
mailbox – we had to prune it back every couple of months so the mail could be
delivered. I wanted all three shrubs planted in a sort of triangle, as the
‘bones’ of a new bed in the side yard. Here they’d have room to expand into
graceful blooming beauties with arching branches, the way they’re meant to
grow.
[Below left] The Divas wasted
no time – they dug the Spiraea, hauled them to the new area, planned, dug &
amended three large holes in the soil and planted them, which pleased me and
entertained the neighbors. With the framework in place, this area could become
a mixed bed, and since all the other beds in front were edged with
long-established Liriope, I would divide and transplant some to this new bed,
trying for unity in the front landscape.
[Below Right] Here’s the new
bed a few weeks later, sod removed, but before the Liriope was added. It had
already started to morph into the Austin Bat-shape Bed. This bed will take
years to mature, but what a difference it made in the side yard last summer!

We ran out of outdoor projects and
rain started as the Divas gathered inside. I’ve been writing garden songs for a
few years and was bold enough to sing a couple of them for the Divas, then
rewarded them for listening, by offering ham & turkey sandwiches, raw
vegetables & dip. The finale was a Mexican chocolate cake with a lop-sided,
frosting rendition of the half-marathon medal recently awarded to Buffy and
Mindy. We ate the cake – and kept a photo of the medal.

There was no rain for weeks on end in
Spring 2006. We needed it badly, but what little rain fell, seemed to fall on
the Divas:
Well, it looks like it may be another
rainy one for the Divas. Unlike Glinda, I do not have any inside
projects but a much bigger one…to make a new bed in the front yard… where the picket fence used to be!!…it has
been composted and ready to plant. I have purchased some of the plants…
Would also like to get a bed around the two trees in the front yard. let's just
play by ear and see what happens …
Karla
Hi Karla…Bummer...yet great joy! about the potential rain…Candy
…saw on news a 60% chance for
Saturday …Frankly my dear, I am going to sleep and worry about it tomorrow. AKA
Karla
Yes, we need the rain, but why on your garden date?? Hey, it's only 60%
chance so that leaves us 40% without!! AKA Annie
Somehow we made it through Karla’s
big project, telling ourselves every half hour that the rain was letting up,
but that drip and drizzle continued for the entire day. Karla stoked her crew
with a fabulous Fruit & Nut granola, yogurt, a layered cheese/egg/onion
casserole, both pork and chicken sausage links, melon, pineapple, grapes and
plenty of coffee.
Some previous projects that the Divas
had done in other years needed maintenance or redoing. Karla missed taking her
turn in 2005, as she dealt with the after effects of Hurricane Rita on her
family. She’d had little time since then for gardening; we wanted to make this
day count double, and did our best to help her.

The parkway was weeded, plants
groomed, Shasta & Blackfoot daisies, and steppingstones went in and all was
freshly mulched. Our big job would be to remove all the grass where Karla
wanted the new border, where the old wooden fence had been. After digging up
the grass, we’d amend the soil, and plant shrubs and flowers.
Some unhappy ornamental shrubs had
been trapped in containers for too long: hydrangeas, camellias, Abelia, Rose of
Sharon, mealy blue sages, etc. Their chances were better in the ground than on
Karla’s patio. We also planted some dwarf Pittosporum in the bed along the
front of the house, along with many red-budded impatiens plants, to bloom all
summer long.
Although the total rainfall measured
mere fractions of an inch, the drizzle never stopped. Everyone was dripping wet
and cold, until Karla came up with this plan: We would go into the garage every
so often to laugh and talk and thaw, while our jackets, shirts and hats tumbled
in the dryer. Then we’d put on the warm, dry clothes and go out to work again.
When we broke for lunch, we were
served a wonderful Chicken and Wild Rice salad. Karla found this great recipe
in an old Church cookbook, and it revitalized us for further sod removal, soil
amending and planting.
But our shoes and gloves were never
quite the same again!

Thank you! A huge thank you for doing
such a wonderful job…while having to endure all the discomforts of the
weather…my brother…said "wow, they are really a dedicated bunch" …I
went out first thing this morning to make sure it was real, and there it
was!!! …my friend wanted to know how she would find my house now - I
told her to look for the prettiest yard on the street! see you on the
1st.” Karla
Divas of the mud…Dedicated, you
bet!! For the divas we will do things that we would not do on our
own. No way would I spend a day outside in my yard in rain by myself. You
all are the motivation! I'm so glad you are happy with your yard.
It looks so different without the fence and the new bed. Thanks for the chicken
rice recipe, can't wait to make it...It was SO good! …Looking forward to
Marbridge on the first. Diva-Annie
DIVAS AT MARBRIDGE – April 1st was set for an appearance at Marbridge
Nursery’s Old Time Planters Festival, a fundraiser for the Marbridge
Foundation. Buffy took our logo to a local shop and paid to have it
computerized, ready to be embroidered on matching caps – thanks so much,
Buffy!! We were listed with the expert speakers, but we’re just experts on
having fun in dirt! We hoped that some people would talk with us, and we wanted
to see each other, and looked forward to rambles through the greenhouses,
shopping for our spring gardens.
Good Morning Divas!!! I will be
working at Marbridge today and will stop by the greenhouses this morning to get
final details…the idea is for us to just have fun and share our gardening
enthusiasm with everyone!!!
Everyone enjoy your day!! Mindy

April Fools Day was a gloriously
sunny & windy day, but not the place for a CD player! We gave up trying to
play our theme song over the snap & flap of the tent, and concentrated on
keeping our display from blowing away, We loved how our new hats shaded our
eyes.
Candy couldn’t be there but six Divas
had fun, talked to some nice people and bought wagonloads of Marbridge plants!

Mindy’s husband Warren had added a
new structure to their large country garden. Using concrete, wood and plastic,
he’d made a greenhouse. Today the Divas would help Mindy put new beds at the
entrance, while making another new bed along a fence.
It promised to be a perfect day as
Karla and I drove down MoPac – talking about her upcoming trip to NY, where she
would see the play “Hairspray”. When we got to Mindy’s, we first checked out
the new greenhouse. There were no plants inside, but Mindy had some pretty
interesting decorations hanging from the rafters!

We went in to eat breakfast. Mindy makes lovely waffles, and she’d also made eggs with fresh
basil, a perfect combination, served with blackberries and grapes. She told us
about her experimental purchase from High Country Gardens. Two ‘gardens’ had
been delivered, in boxes containing plans, planting instructions and many
containers of small plants.
The digging and clearing commenced,
with garden hoses used to delineate edges for the new beds. We were shocked to
discover friable soil after previous experiences with the concrete-like caliche
in other parts of Mindy’s land. She had lots of topsoil and cotton bur compost
to add.

We had the project well in hand by
the time we broke for lunch, enjoying colorful mixed-green salad, Chicken
tortellini, focaccia, and delicious Chocolate Silk Pie. We wandered over the
patio, deck and pond area. There were flowers blooming on the deck, ready for
the hummingbirds, and the plants near the pond were beautiful, like this Salvia
greggii, Rosemary, and Heartleaf Skullcap.

Then came the fun of planting the
deer-resistant assortment from the boxes: Lavender, Caryopteris, Achillea,
Teucrium, Salvia, Thyme, Agastache and Veronica, and some Russian
Sage/Perovskia added by Mindy. We left two new garden areas for her to enjoy,
and hoped the deer would spare them.
On the way back, Buffy and I stopped
to check out the Natural Gardener – it was too close to closing time to do more
than look at the labyrinth, but I had time to find white Turks Cap and a ‘Black
Knight’ Buddleia.
Friday, May 05, 2006
Hi everybody! Here is a map of my
house…The plan is to build 1-2 beds in
the backyard (which has sticks all over from the storm!)…that means taking out
one bed the dogs jump all over and switching around a little. Buffy, thanks for
coming out at “all hours” for a last minute consult! Looking forward to seeing
you all tomorrow! Sophia
Sophia’s pets are sweeties, but
they’d been ruling the back yard for too long. Sophia and her husband Roger
were ready to stage a revolution, and we were thrilled when she gave us
free rein to help her make it fun for people, too.
Buffy went to Sophia’s house
ahead of time to make shrub & plant suggestions and advice on types
and amounts of compost, mulch, soil & sod. Gardening with dogs means
using canine psychology, building the paths where the dogs will use them and
letting the dogs get to the perimeter of the property. Because they have a
basic canine need to patrol the edges and see whatever is moving, one idea is
to leave a corridor next to the fence, planting the shrubs further out where
they can disguise the trail, shade the path, and give the dogs a sheltered
hideaway.

The iris bed was located close to the
patio, making the space seem closed in and smaller than it was. For Sophia’s
project, the sun shone and the rain stopped. Soon the iris bed was removed, and
we planned how to re-use the iris and Liriope.

Sophia had pots of shrubs and flowers
ready to plant, a pile of fresh sod sat ready, and we discovered all sorts of
containers, portable garden furniture and interesting garden art, including a
fanciful metal fish! There were building stones, rocks, hangers and plant
stands… the family had collected all the elements for a cool garden - now we
would have the fun of putting it all together in new ways.
The patio was extended, and a rustic
step set in place; now it was easy to move through the spaces, with hardscape
to step on when walking from the patio door to the gate or side yard. The new
lawn would be placed out of the main traffic area, next to flowers surrounding
a bench. This corner was slated to be a focal point by the end of the day –
could we do it?

When Sophia cooks for her extended
family, she, her husband and her son work together, making large batches of
wonderful homemade dishes – it was fun to be temporary members of her family,
and we loved her retro dining area. Breakfast was a feast and lunch was lovely;
from the time we arrived we savored basil frittata, fruit, homemade lemonade,
boneless fried chicken, potato salad, pies, enormous bowls of watermelon and
honeydew melon, and two kinds of pizzelle, including chocolate!

Bricks and rocks became paths and
steps and there were places to stage containers. Below, left, Candy found the
garden pillar unused in a storage corner, and made it the star of a bed near
the house.
Sophia & Roger went for more sod
and mulch, and hours later, the transformed vista pleased Diva-Sophia and
Diva-Annie. The rest of us could not stop smiling as we looked around what had
been a back yard, but was now definitely a garden.

Barely a half-hour
after the Divas sorted their tools and drove off, the storms came back in,
settling the garden and watering the new St. Augustine lawn at Sophia’s house.
Sophia wrote, “I woke up today,
looked outside, and it wasn’t a dream!! Everything looks so good… Thank you all
so much for your excellent vision and work…everything worked out perfectly with
the weather!… the 5pm thunder told us enough is enough!”
Buffy replied, “So far this has
been our best most dramatic conversion!!!! It is so beautiful, Sophia!!!”
Diva-Annie agreed, “Sophia, yours has been a wonderful
transformation!! Hope the dogs aren't enjoying it too much. It was
a good day and the food was simply delicious!!
JUNE – BUFFY
Re: Gardening on June 3rd.
Is everyone ready for this coming Saturday?!!! We will be making a new
bed and cleaning and mulching some old beds. We will also (if we have
time) put some decomposed granite down by my shed.
I can't wait to see every one!
Happy Gardening!!!
Mindy wondered, ...did anyone find
my pink and white gloves and a pair of hand pruners after last project...if so
just bring with you to Buffy's. The beds we put in are fairing well with only a
few deer nibbles and keeping the dayflowers from emerging (those little
creeping plants with the blue flowers).
I leave July 10th … I will definitely be here for Buffy’s
planting--can't wait to see you again...I think I'm still braggin' to
everyone in sight about Sophia's project:)
Buffy’s table was lovely, with
melons, berries, fluffy biscuits, Mayhaw jelly, Hash brown potatoes, and an Egg
Casserole from the Junior Forum Cookbook.
Buffy works on her landscape all
year, so we’re not usually called on for major renovations. If I may use an
equine analogy – gardening at Buffy’s is not like breaking a wild mustang –
it’s more like grooming a champion Palomino for the horse show!
But she does have many square
feet of planted areas, so a great deal of grooming is needed and our days here
are seldom short.
Before her garden day, Buffy had a
landscape person prune the Pyracantha way back [yay!], and now wanted to make a
new garden gate bed in the freed-up territory. In the before-and-after photos
of the redone area, the change is more subtle than dramatic, but edging,
pruning and the addition of perennials and mulch makes the gate area blend
better with the back garden as a whole:

A bed near the covered porch needed
attention. Buffy had recently bought decorative metal fence sections, and one
of them looked good in the redone bed, while a shady area off the patio became
a tropical garden with the addition of caladium and impatiens to the variegated
ginger.
The lunch menu was suited to June in
Austin – hot dogs on the grill, with so much sauerkraut and chili that you
could hardly hold the bun, and potato salad on the side. We had an ice cream
Turtle cake for dessert to celebrate the birthday of our friend Bill.

This birdbath area, above right, is
in a quiet, sun-dappled part of Buffy’s back yard. It’s always beautiful, but
it looked especially lovely that day.
In one part of a shady garden we
planted a beautiful Variegated Turks Cap, also called Wax Mallow, or
Malvaviscus. Salvias went in, too, and under the trees, Buffy had us add lots
of Caladium plants, with colorful, patterned leaves.
What a pleasant day it had been, and we left a tidy, blooming
garden behind as we went home.
We had plenty of planned excitement
this summer – with some trips to be taken by Divas, as well as visits by
friends and family members to Divas. Karla would be having fun with her
niece; Diva-Annie & Chip went to the Texas coast; Mindy was off to France,
a family reunion in Carolina was Glinda’s plan, and we all hoped to hear about
close encounters with Rock Stars from Candy, who has a very cool job and was
involved with Lollapalooza .
The summer was hot and dry – and
world news was grim. In our lives there were surgeries, job changes, the
ailments of aging parents, house projects, worries about children, problems
with pets. But none of us were prepared for what happened in mid-summer:
“Yo! Divas!! Julie Bonnin of the
AustinAmerican Statesman is interested in writing about the Divas of the Dirt
for a possible article…Do any of you have a problem with this or is it okay
with you-all?” Glinda
Well if a group of gals callin'
themselves "Fishin' Chix" can make the Sunday morning TV, I guess we
can start with the AAS!!!:) Mindy
We explained to Julie that we took
off July & August before working in each other’s gardens again, and had
September and October projects still to come. Julie planned to come and hang
out with us, bringing a photographer. Divas Annie and Candy were the Divas with
September and October turns, so we let them ponder what project would look good
in print.
Mindy blithely took off for France,
and had a spectacular time wandering
through gardens as Lance raced to Paris on the Tour de France. She sent photos
from the Continent, and told us, Bonjour friends
& family !!! Okay, it takes me awhile as usual...here is a chicken
salad recipe I sent to a friend the other day …pix from the trip
attached, Mindy

Even though it was hot and horrible,
I also went blithely off to meet with family in Carolina, mainly because Karla
and Buffy were here in Austin, watering my plants. I can’t believe halos don’t
show up when I take their photographs!
A word about those duplicate names:
In June I began a garden blog, writing as “Annie in Austin”, a name I’d used
for years. Posting to “The Transplantable Rose” has been fun, and through it
I’ve met other Austin garden bloggers, and corresponded with many others.
But in a ditzy moment, I’d also used
the name “Annie” for one of the Divas, while giving myself the name “Glinda”
for the Diva website.
I wasn’t trying to confuse any
theoretical readers – these names evolved separately, and after all, don’t we
all have friends with the same names as we do?
Anyway - please don’t let my friend “Diva-Annie” get the blame for
anything that I do as Glinda/”Annie in Austin”!
In August, Diva-Annie set up her
date, choosing the Saturday in September that could fit in her schedule. But that
date was impossible for Candy, since it was the Austin City Limits festival,
the busiest weekend of her year. Coordinating the dates in our lives has always
been the most difficult part of being a Diva of the Dirt, and as lives get
busier, it gets harder for everyone. We just wished Candy could be with us,
too.
With the presence of the reporter
& a photographer confirmed, Diva-Annie told us: Well girls it looks like we are in for a different type of
gardening day! …See everyone on Saturday. Plan on bringing usual garden tools
to create, expand a bed, maybe make a new one.
Anyone with access to some flat rocks that would work for stepping
stones? (or know a source?) There is going to be tons of spreading blue shade
ruellia up for grabs.
September was still summer here in
Austin, and the day was warm and very humid. Going to Annie’s house is never
ordinary! Her specialty is creating perfectly planned vignettes of
hospitality – beautifully set tables
with food that not only tastes great, but also pleases the eye, all done with
artistic, hand wrought details. On this day, Diva-Annie’s settings for her two
square tables were an expression of joy in being together in the garden. She’d
used special tools to make flowers from fruit, choosing china and linens in
color and patterns that came together to make a perfect picture.

We may have acted a little
more reserved once the photographer arrived and began taking photos, and were
no doubt somewhat reserved when Julie arrived, notebook in hand. Annie
served us German Apple Pancakes, using a Martha Stewart recipe, along with a
Canadian Bacon Quiche, then encouraged us to dismantle the centerpieces and eat
the pineapples, melons and grapes. Soon our inner Divas took over and we
loosened up and had a fine time, except when the photographer clicked the
shutter in mid-chew. But the breakfast conversation had to move outside so that
we could get to work.
Diva-Annie had her materials staged
in the drive, and she knew how she wanted her new front bed to look. She also
wanted help removing some overly exuberant Ruellia “Blue Shades” in the Secret
Garden; these spreading plants had grown from tiny divisions into a wall of
green & blue that moved in every direction. Some of the pulled-out plants
went home with brave Divas, and some were transplanted to the base of a Vitex
agnus castus/ Chaste tree.

A Chinese Pistache has grown well in
front, and there are other small trees, including Senna and a Desert Willow.
Over the years, the Divas have helped to make a flower border tucked in the
front corner of the house, and another one near the driveway. The front of this
cottage is charming, but the porch could only be accessed from the drive, with
just a sea of grass between the street and the house.

A flowery path would be a more appropriate approach to this
Diva’s door.
Tearing up St Augustine is not easy
–physically or emotionally. Even a small patch of green can be a solace to the
weary eye in an Austin summer. But a lawn alone is not a garden - grass must be
shaded by trees, and balanced with shrub borders, flowers, groundcovers and
native plants. The new bed was delineated with the garden hose and tools flew
into action, first the spades [that photo may be seen in the Statesman article]
and then hand tools at ground level, here used by Diva-Annie and Buffy.

The photographer and reporter
couldn’t stay for the whole project, because it us took hours and hours just to
get the ground cleared, add bag after bag of composts to the soil, lay &
level the brick border mulch the whole thing and arrange the stepping stones.
By that time, we were already feeling the happy buzz that comes when we’re
creating something beautiful together.

Diva-Annie had more culinary delights in store for us – and a
special surprise that astounded even those of us who have become accustomed to
her skills. She had decided to go down-home Austin for lunch, with a
barbecued brisket of beef, egg salad, potato salad, and a big bowl of addictive
coleslaw with seeds and nuts. Then she unveiled her Secret Garden Cake, which
Martha’s site had also inspired. Do you see those marzipan ears of corn
and radishes among the candy flowers? Diva-Annie didn’t buy them – she made
every tiny little carrot and leaf herself. And then encouraged us to not only
admire this confection, but to pick up our forks and eat it.

We returned to the new garden and
installed the plants – some new ones, some unusual kinds from the plant nursery
‘rescue table’ that may not make it through winter, some hand-me-down plants
from other Divas. Look around her front yard – you’ll see plants advised for
Austin, like Rosemary, Lantanas, milkweeds, many varieties of Salvia,
tough-as-nails Crepe Myrtles and native Penstemons. But you’ll also see Bottlebrush,
a Camellia, and a stand of African Foxglove as well as a Fig tree, cannas and
Vinca. We planted daffodil bulbs and bearded irises, bulbine and rainlilies,
Dietes/African Iris, heirloom daylilies and lavender, too. This is a cottage
garden, so the individual plants will change constantly – some will live, some
die, some reseed and many will be transplanted elsewhere within the garden.
But the path and the brick-edged bed
remain constants, speaking to those who pass by, telling them that in this home
there lives a gardener!
Divas, Thank you for such a wonderful
diva day!! The amount of work that you did yesterday was amazing
especially in such hot humid weather. I LOVE, LOVE my new front
bed. Keep wandering outside just to walk around it, my neighbors must
think I'm nuts. Even ate my breakfast of leftover apple pancakes on the
porch so I would just sit and enjoy the view…

OCTOBER- CANDY
Candy set the date, “Hi all…looks
like 10/28 will work...so that's the official date for my gig…Last night I
finally solidified my plan of action. It's ambitious, but I'm not depending on
y'all to do it all. I'll hire some help
to do the infrastructure the weekend before.
Then the Divas will help...make it pretty!
We'll be working in my front yard….
to help deaden the noise from the street … planning to make the wall around 4'
tall, and kind of organic in style…we
will rejuvenate existing… beds…and re-plant the plants on the street side of the wall…We'll see how much of this we can get done. I'm so thrilled to be tackling this project
with y'all!
“28th will still work. Candy, when
you plan big, you plan BIG!! A four foot wall!! How big is your yard? … Looking
forward to it”, Diva-Annie
“…we are all so fueled and floating
on the euphoria of last garden gathering that we can't wait for yours next
month” Mindy
…my editor is interested in getting more photos. When is the next
Diva get-together… thanks, Julie
“Hi Julie, I'm the next Diva on
the schedule… I'm using this opportunity to do some bigger projects in my
yard…Some stuff is planned; some will kind of evolve organically. So if this still sounds interesting, stop by
for photos or a drive-by at your convenience.” Candy
Friday … plan on gathering at
9am…the weather is going to be FABULOUS so no need to beat the heat!…The only
special clothing I ask that you wear is your THINKING CAP… I've got the wall up
(and I like what I see!) but have not detailed out the re-vamp of the
surrounding garden areas. I will be
looking for insight and ideas…I look forward to tomorrow! Candy
As we drove up that morning the wall
was easy to spot – not monolithic or forbidding, but definitely Austin looking,
making a dramatic backdrop for the long beds along the street. Candy planned to
rework the area, keeping plants that were tough, attractive and waterwise.

The Divas were going to participate in a fascinating urban horticultural experiment,
under the direction of an inspired, ecology-minded leader. We could tell that
digging the stomped ground on the inside of the wall would be tough - but the
results should be exciting.
This would not be an instant
makeover, but on some future day, we imagined Candy looking out from the house,
no longer seeing dry unhappy grass and a busy street, but an enclosed and
protected flower & vegetable border, with the wall framing a view to the
lively world beyond the greening wall, muffling the noise, but without
excluding the funky, friendly neighborhood.
The Divas arrived in stages, and
photographer Amber found us ready for breakfast. Julie the reporter came, and
soon nine women were around the table, having conversations, planning
photographs, taking notes and enjoying what Candy had prepared. There were two
kinds of quiche, broccoli and bacon, so both meat-lovers and meat-avoiders were
happy. She also served a Cranberry-raisin bread that was impossible to
resist.
As the long, satisfying day unfolded,
the grass was banished, trees and shrubs were pruned, and the ground dug. The
mound of compost slowly disappeared, and the Divas considered where the plants
should be set into the new beds.

During this busy day we also enjoyed
Candy’s healthy and delicious salad lunch - Olive Pasta Salad, Chicken Salad
with Yogurt Dressing, and a mixed green salad, with berries and peaches as a
finale. We were ready to tackle the rest of the project.

As the Cenizo waved magenta blossoms
in the breeze, the heap of stones was transformed into paths, stepping stones
led foot traffic through the entrance garden, and the soil-stuffed wall
sprouted a froth of vegetable plants on the top. Soon sedum was punched into
the gateway section of the wall, and a nursery-run by Buffy delivered Creeping
fig to climb up from the base, young plant-pioneers in what should eventually
become a living wall of green.

.
When Mindy & Candy realized that the punctured garden hose
produced two sprays of water at once, they watered the new garden Diva-style,
working together while having fun. This is one of our favorite photos, ever!

Hi everyone- I enjoyed working and
learning today! What a great gang of
folks you all are… Candy-Thank you for the wonderful meals-everything was great
and the wall was definitely a new experience for me. Sophia
…I was so motivated by what the divas
were accomplishing that I allowed myself to spend the afternoon moving stuff
around in my garden and making little changes here and there. Thank you for the
inspiration... Julie
Yes, yesterday was a great day! The
weather was perfect, the food delicious. Only soreness is in hands from
digging and pulling! Candy - hope you are enjoying your new front yard… Diva-Annie
A truly A-MAZING DAY!!!!… an absolute
joy to discover and experience--you have such imagination!! Thank you so
much for my Lacey Oak…enjoy a great fall week ahead, I hear the rain won't be
here until Thursday... Mindy
Dear Divas,
I love, love, LOVE my garden!!! And
thankfully, it's not yet all done, so there's plenty of putzing around to
do. Don't you hate it when you've been designing a project for a long
time and then - BANG - it's over? Kinda depressing. I don't mind
having continuing opportunity for evolution and embellishment. But the
status quo is pretty dad-gum grand!!!
Thanks you all for staying so late
and working so hard! I will enjoy the fruits (and vegetables!) of
your labor for a long time to come.
Candy
PS Mindy, I hope you had time to
wash up before you hunkered down to cheer for the home team, because that
game was quite the nail-biter, huh?! Whew!

We were pretty freaked when we saw
this promo on Tuesday. Then “Digging, Dishing and Derring-do” appeared in the
Thursday, November 16th edition of the Statesman and we had our 15
minutes of fame. This was not what we’d expected back in July! Instead of a
small, plant-centered story on the gardening page at the back of the Saturday
paper, we found ourselves pictured on the front page of the Style Section, and
the focus had shifted to the way our group of Austin women had fun as we
gardened. Julie had told our story well, and thank heavens, we saw no photos of
us with food in our mouths at Diva-Annie’s. Instead there were Shelley’s photo
of the cake, and her shot of the chorus line of turf-removing Divas. We loved
our group photo, taken by Amber Novak at Candy’s.
I don’t know how long this link to
the newspaper will last:
http://www.statesman.com/life/content/life/stories/style/11/16/16divas.html
Divas had phone calls from friends
and family, and were hailed by neighbors who saw the story – then it was picked
up by a few bloggers. The author of the Human Flower project took our story and
used it as a jumping-off point to talk about women’s gardening groups.
http://humanflowerproject.com/index.php/weblog/comments/girl_gangs_and_gardening/
GardenRant picked it up, adding their
spin to our concept.
http://www.gardenrant.com/my_weblog/2006/11/are_garden_club.html#comments
Before the article came out, my son
& husband helped me make a YouTube of our song. I linked to the Divas website
and to the various articles from a post on my blog:
http://annieinaustin.blogspot.com/2006/11/read-all-about-it.html
It was great fun for all of us.
Karla was efficient, planning the
date before going to California for Thanksgiving…but things kept happening in
the Diva world – changing work
schedules, conflicts with work parties, serious parental illness and finally,
Karla herself caught the bug that had hit her family. By the time we finally
got together, we were six instead of seven – because Sophia’s schedule
prevented her from being with us.
Although Karla had joined the Divas
of the Dirt back in February of 2001, this was her first turn to act as hostess
for the Holi-Diva party. Oh my, did she have fun with the tables!

Karla had turned her living-dining
room into a sparkly, golden place for a party – with Christmas-patterned china
that was perfectly coordinated with the whole room –actually with the whole
house! Karla told us her secret – the china didn’t match the room – it was the
other way around. She’d loved the pattern so much that these colors were the
ones she used when first painting the walls and trim in her living room, dining
room and kitchen, and when choosing fabric for the furniture and selecting
accessories. No wonder everything looked so perfect!
Perhaps we were in a continental f