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How to Endure and Possibly Triumph Over the Adorable Tyrant
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Monday
Oct272008

Mulch madness.

It was the mulch that did it.

Before we moved to the suburbs, I thought gardening was a hobby for well-mannered senior citizens who wore long gloves and big floppy hats and pruned a bit each morning as they hummed their favorite oldies. I thought keeping up a yard meant mowing and watering. The End. I thought picking out lovely plants and keeping them in good shape just meant going to the nursery, saying "I'll take those, those, and those," and then they'd magically show up in our yard, and because I'm a spunky sort who doesn't need things done for me, nossir, I'd plunk them into neat holes that wouldn't be any problem to dig. Maybe I'd make Scott dig them, if the holes were large.

I was wrong on all these counts, of course. Planting and gardening involves science and heavy lifting. It involves endless weeding and finding out that your yard is composed of clay and unexpectedly large rocks. It means pulling muscles you never knew you had. Gardening is not for sissies. Those old people who like to garden? I wouldn't mess with them if you paid me, now. Who knows what they could do with a shovel?

But the mulch, damn it, the mulch was too much. I knew about mulch and its importance, vaguely, so the first time I planted some things I came home with a couple of bags of mulch—which were surprisingly heavy! Huh!—and proceeded to pull every muscle in my body dumping them out all over the garden bed, my feet, and most of my legs. I raked the mulch around, and then saw how little of the ground I had covered. And I wept.

It turns out, and I know you know this and you're shaking your head at what an idiot I am, you need truckfuls of mulch. You need to visit Mulch Planet, and fight the natives until they surrender or die, and then denude their Mulch Mountains and Valleys, and transport all that mulch directly to your backyard, and maybe that would be enough. So much mulch, you need.

And the mulch doesn't stay. It goes. And then you need MORE MULCH.

A sane person would say, well, we could have hired a landscaping company to do the lawn upkeep and the mulching for us. That would have been the sane, sensible thing to do, but it would also be the thing to do if we had any cash with which to do that. Sadly, if we were to keep our yard looking halfway decent, we'd have to perform the upkeep ourselves.

I thought I'd get used to the fertilizing, the pruning, and of course the mulching. But I never did. I'm sorry to say this, yard, but now I dislike you. I see you and you're just a nagging reminder of all that I need to do, all that I haven't done, or the half-assed job that I did do just to make myself feel better. And now that I've mulched everything in the front yard that required mulching and I can't lift my arms without screaming, I am officially over having a yard. I want to move to a magical place where I'm only responsible for the inside of my home. Where if I feel any guilt, it's just because I haven't used the vacuum cleaner in a week.

Reader Comments (59)

.. in the city...
October 27, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterBOSSY
mulch is evil. I think it shrinks as you spread it around. I wish I could go back to the days of the townhouse; when all we had was a 4x4 square of back patio with just 2 small low maintenance bushes and a potted plant. The front yard was handled by the HOA and it looked wonderful. sigh. The good old days.
October 27, 2008 | Unregistered Commentercrazylovescompany
Gardening is hard work. Me and my hubby have a nice garden in the back of our house but he loves to take care of it more than me. So this weekend during our 10th anniversary he bought me a pair of gorgeous diamond earrings from www.idonowidont.com and I surprsed him with all new gardening tools so get rid of all those weeds and plant roses!
October 27, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterMichelleB
I have progressed to the stage in which I am trying in vain to kill my garden. It would seem I gave it such good care in its youth nothing will kill it now. That is why I pruned my climbing rose with a chainsaw last weekend. And forget mulch. It smells bad, and as you note, it evaporates.
October 27, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterTheQueen
Yeah. WFT? No matter how many bags of mulch you buy, thinking surely, this is waaay too much.....you are always at least one bag short. I've started coming up with a figure of how many bags I 'think' I need and then adding 10. It's worked a couple of times.

Apartment living sounds good - no yard! Who has time for this shit?
October 27, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterAngie
i had a big house with a big yard, and since i live in the desert southwest, most of that yard was a horrible gravel, and STILL it became a jungle.

Then i moved to to a townhouse, with a postage-stamp sized yard and exactly five plants, and STILL i spend entire weekends caring for it. HOW i ask you, HOW.

If it weren't for the dogs and the delight of a dog door, all i would need would be a balcony.
October 27, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterislaygirl
I don't know what mulch is or what it does but if I see any I'll be crossing the street. Come join us on the houseboats! All the togertherness of a cul-de-sac minus the yard work.
October 27, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterMrs. Gregorton
Yeah, my husband wants to move into a house, but I'm totally okay with apartment living as long as it means that I have no yard to maintain. I do not envy you. At all.
October 27, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterCourtney
Ah, that is the reason I live on a wooded, hilly lot in a tree house. No plants but the wilds.
October 27, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterpatois
Ah, Mulch Madness! This is the term my own father uses to refer to annual delivery of the 75+ bags of mulch which his yard requires. It is always quite impressive to see that quantity of mulch stacked in the driveway. He then, wisely, hires someone to help him put it around. He is wise like that.

I love that you found the same phraseology as my dad in writing about your own gardening woes. It's almost like you are one of the family now (Care to join us for Thanksgiving?).
October 28, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterMulch Madness!
Come back to Brooklyn...come back to Brooklyn...

--Your former neighbor
October 28, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterPandechion
I feel your PAIN. My arms are strong from gardening.
October 28, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterJoanna Schmidt
Don't feel bad...mulch is the devil. And I haven't used my vacuum in a week times four.
October 28, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterCat
Amen, sister! I have a townhouse across the street from a fantastic city park. My son has a great place to play, and I never do a bit of yard work or gardening beyond killing potted flowers every summer. Everybody wins!
October 28, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterShirty
Come to Brooklyn. It's nice here.
October 28, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterb
And this is why the outside of my house is a sad, dilapidated mess. That, and I have a Black Thumb.
October 28, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterNo Mother Earth
I know, I know.We have an "easy care" front yard. What "easy care" means, in fact, is that all we have to do is spread fertilizer twice monthly, spread several hundred dollars worth of mulch twice yearly, pay for the sprinkler system to be fixed when it breaks (don't just switch off the broken portion, like I did, because then you will also be *replacing large patches of lawn* and that is not cheap either), and, of course, pay the lawn service.Let's not forget the pruning. I lopped the sticky outy parts of the hedges off myself, but couldn't reach the tops. So the hedges have alien antennae. We thought we would save on a tree service this year. Result? A branch came down in a hurricane and flattened the fence. We could have paid five tree services with what it cost to put back up again.

Are you moving back to Brooklyn?
October 28, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterSophie, Inzaburbs
This is helpful to me. We live in a condo in Chicago where we do NONE of the yardwork. Our condo-mates, who love gardening, do it. I'm, well, the Treasurer. Not because I'm fantastic with money, but because it's *not* gardening. But at times I indulge in that fantasy of moving into a single family home and having a garden...my husband thanks you for bursting that little fantasy.
October 28, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterJordan
See, what you need to do is have a tree fall ON your house, and then to punish said tree, you mulch it up into billions of bits. Although...even then the 7 yards of mulch we got didn't make a dent in the 3 1/2 acres. Or if you have a cute little town you can get free mulch from everyone's yard trimmings, but you have to shovel it yourself. That is not fun...
October 28, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterMaren
Maybe this is why people down here use so much pine straw instead of mulch? I'm way too lazy to have learned this by experience, but I think your hard work has really helped me better understand my neighbors. I still like mulch better, but not muscle injury better.
October 28, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterNikki
I hear you! Even halfway across the world I have the same problem. The good old Aussie back yard - fantastic for the kids - pain for mum and dad. The effort! The mowing! The weeding! The lack of time to do any of it! Who with kids can look after a garden properly? Not us. Good luck with the sale.
October 28, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterSuseoin
Mulch? Yard? I refuse to look beyond the concrete of my driveway. If there is any mowing or yard work done, I do not know who does it. I prefer my sandpit, where I do my ostrich immitation: yard? what yard?

Besides, the inside is absolutely enough to keep me busy.
October 28, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterRay
Ok, so just beware of the critters that come when you build that beautiful yard!! Deer--DEER!!! (cue the buggs bunny music, the kind that plays during the sun rising over the green quiet misty glades....)Mean ornery deer that bang on your front door waiting for the REST of the garden you didn't mean to take inside with you. The deer that tackle halloween pumpkins--BEFORE they're carved. No sweet fallish displays including real live pumpkins here ma'am. The deer that rush the dog bowls when they're being fed... a gang of doe are scary!!Let's not forget the porcupine that wandered into the back yard looking for whatever. 3 of our 4 dogs ended up looking like pincushions with one having to make the trip to the vet for quill removal (I still have the baggie of quills!).

Gardening rocks!!!



October 29, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterRobin
Ah, yes. Mulch. Mulch is evil. I loved the description of having to go to Mulch planet.

Good luck!
October 29, 2008 | Unregistered Commentermostcurious
I'm thinking frosted windows would be a good idea. If you can't actually see the outdoors, do they really exist?
October 29, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterBarb

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