View allAll Photos Tagged sideyard
Potting area is set up. this are is not seen from any part of the inside of the unit. tenants have left their bikes here. although you may want to lock the gate. nothing has even been stolen in the back yard even thought the gate is always unlock in the past
Beavis sits on the extra stone left on top of our retaining wall. He's probably pressed up against the wall because he dosn't like the wet snowflakes hitting him.
sitting.
Beavis the cat, retaining wall, snow.
side yard, Clint and Carolyn's house, Alexandria, Virginia.
December 5, 2007.
... Read my blog at ClintJCL.wordpress.com
... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL.wordpress.com
... View videos of Beavis the cat at www.youtube.com/profile_videos?user=ClintJCL&search_q...
A video of Beavis's first steps in the snow can be found here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=BRu0eixMv0o
I thought these were pretty major icicles, but we actually ended up with much longer ones later.
You can also notice how the siding for the addition doesn't match the siding that we put on our house. The whole Virginia Design Builders addition experience was a total debacle: There's nobody who's damaged my life more than Daniel M. Lopez of Laurel, MD. Fortunately the wounds are healing. He's being sued for $400K by another couple. Hopefully they win! He should die bankrupt for exploiting homeowners with his shitty management style and lack of setting expectations. (Multiple written deadlines... All missed...)
house, icicles, snow, tree.
side yard, Clint and Carolyn's house, Alexandria, Virginia.
February 6, 2010.
... Read my blog at ClintJCL.wordpress.com
... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL.wordpress.com
The side yard has been re-graded so there is less of a slope while still maintaining the flow of water away from the house and into the swale between the two properties. The existing catch basin underneath the downspout now sits on a bed of Granular A and has been lowered slightly to allow it to be covered with pea gravel later. The A/C unit has been pushed back closer towards the house. Due to the amount of available hose, the whole unit had to be raised on blocks so that it will sit straight and level.
in the sideyard: dahlia, pear tree, patio rose, nectarine tree, peony tree, midget pear tree, 3 honeyberry bushes, hydrangea, patio rose
Last performance of the Anything Goes today. I am kind of sad that it's all over, but now I have time to do stuff other then musical practice, like take pictures.
The realtor said that this is the name of the builder.
In fact, the builder was one Richard. U. Collier.
the purple coneflowers my mom gave us turned out to be black-eyed susans. the taller plants are butterfly weeds I found at City Market.
The shape of the bed was measured and marked and a sod cutter was rented to make the initial part of excavation easier. The area beneath the existing Sunburst Honeylocust was excavated by hand to reduce damage to the roots. The depth of excavation was initially supposed to be 4" but the heavy clay beneath was like concrete in some areas and therefore the depth was only approximately 3-1/2".
www.city-data.com/city/Sugar-Valley-Resaca-Georgia.html
This was the sideyard of a little country church just outside of Resaca, Geogia, and their picnic area .
Clark County, NV
Listed: 02/20/1987
The nomination for the Jay Dayton Smith House incorporates two contributing buildings; a single-family dwelling and an accompanying, single story, single bay garage. The Jay Dayton Smith House at 624 South Sixth Street in Las Vegas, Nevada is an unaltered, typical Spanish Colonial Revival styled residence built in 1931-32. Modest compared to houses in major cities, the Smith House is elaborate for the Las Vegas of the early 1930s. The J.D. Smith House is notable for Las Vegas because it was designed by an architect. Designed by Warner & Nordstrom, it was built by the Hampton Brothers Construction Company.
The J. D. Smith House is exemplary of the Spanish Colonial Revival style in Las Vegas with its irregular massing, asymmetrical facades, and red tiled, low pitched gabled and. flat, red tiled roofs. The stuccoed exterior is pierched by round and pointed arches on the front facade. Its exterior details include a round tower, a wing wall enclosing the sideyards, and a carport with arched entry. The interior boasts a sunken living room with a timbered truss cathedral ceiling, a central fireplace with decorative trim, and a random width plank floor. Built in 1931-32, the structure survives intact and has undergone no major changes. The J. D. Smith House is a substantial example of the Spanish Colonial Revival style, a popular style in Las Vegas during the 1930s. 28 other residential structures and 10 apartment and commercial buildings have been identified as designed in the Spanish Colonial Revival or Mission Revival styles for the 1984 Clark County Historic Property Survey.