Sloping gardens
Proserpina Offline
South Yorkshire
#11
(06-02-2021, 04:29 PM)PyreneesPlot Wrote: As an aside, we put wooden decking down on our outside sitting area havng experienced the unbearable radiating heat from stone or tiled terraces down here, The wood is much nicer on the feet when the temperature heads towards 40.  Smile

Ah, that sounds a valid consideration in the heat! I think I'm actually not that fond of terraces made from any material, though maybe I'd feel differently if I were expecting to be doing more socialising at home. I do need something vaguely level to put my lawn chair on though Smile
Formerly self-contained, but expanding my gardening horizons beyond pots!
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Veggie Online
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#12
The problem I found with decking is - it gets slippery when wet/winter.
The Moneyless Chicken says:- 
Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without.
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Small chilli Offline
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#13
That’s a lovely looking house & the garden definitely has fantastic potential.
Builder that would like to go play in the garden.
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Proserpina Offline
South Yorkshire
#14
(06-02-2021, 05:51 PM)Veggie Wrote: More crazy photos at https://gigglingintwogardens.blogspot.co...mment-form

My defunct blog!!

And that is the Veggiest possible shed! Did you put it up there yourself? It's fantastic Big Grin
Formerly self-contained, but expanding my gardening horizons beyond pots!
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Veggie Online
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#15
The tree house was one of the big attractions of that house and the summerhouse and the swing and the view..............so much so that I overlooked the problems with access and the sagging roof!!

Moral of the story - don't get so taken with the gimmicky stuff that you overlook the basics of a sound house - and the right location is very important.
The Moneyless Chicken says:- 
Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without.
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PyreneesPlot Offline
Mountain Dweller
#16
(06-02-2021, 05:56 PM)Veggie Wrote: The problem I found with decking is - it gets slippery when wet/winter.

I send MrPP out with the deck brush in the rain once ot twice a year, otherwise it is a death trap!
Has Anyone Seen the Plot?

Hautes-Pyrénées (65), France
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Can the Man Offline
Can the Man with the van
#17
I like that house with the slope down garden and you could create a stepped garden, it would require a fair bit of work but you could also build in drainage if you felt it was needed.
Coffee keeps me busy until it’s acceptable to drink whiskey.
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Mark_Riga Offline
Member from Cheshire
#18
A south facing slope could be good as plants would not be shaded much by others a bit down the hill, as long as it isn't too steep. It doesn't look to steep in the picture.

The garden is a bit narrow but not too bad. Is it about 18' all the way? The fences look parallel.
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Proserpina Offline
South Yorkshire
#19
So, I went to see it. Unfortunately, although there was no snow where I started out, the house is above the snowline and the whole area was absolutely covered. It was freezing cold and I got there an hour early, then had to wander about in the freezing snow until my viewing time. All in all, I was out for three hours and my post-COVID lungs are not at all happy with me now. The most I've done since I caught COVID before Christmas is the ten-minute walk up the road to the mini-Tesco. So, I mention all this to say that I was perhaps not in the best state to make sensible decisions about the biggest purchase of my life (to date).

The house was immaculate. Beautifully done up. All very tasteful. Kitchen was 8 years old and absolutely pristine. Electrics and boiler weren't new, but a lot newer than any of the houses I've seen so far (including the probate sale where the estate agents and vendors hadn't actually managed to *find* the boiler yet, but were sure there must be one...). The rooms were smaller than they look in the photos, but the house was also older than I expected (1936). You couldn't fit an adult single bed in the third "bedroom". However, I'm just buying for me, so the extra space is more for occasional guests and storage. Biggest negative in the house was that passersby would be looking straight into the living room from the street (as it's lower down) and you could feel a bit exposed even with a nice voile or blinds. The vendor was the one showing me around and was clearly very motivated for a quick sale after his previous buyers pulled out at the last minute leaving his onward purchase in danger.

It was hard to fully appreciate the garden in the snow! There was far too much decking, even if we put aside my general dislike of it, but still a good enough area of garden that was neither decked nor shaded by the trees at the bottom to grow a goodly number of veggies needing 6+ hours of sun, and I'm sure plenty of things like fruit bushes would do just fine lower down (based on my Mum's north-east and shaded by trees garden where she gets more currants, gooseberries and rhubarb than our family of five could polish off each year). And scope to remove levels of decking at a later date too. It did seem far less overlooked than I expected and the dodgy looking flats at the bottom are actually for the elderly and the vendor says he thinks a lot aren't occupied anyway. The tree at the top is a lovely established cooking apple tree. I didn't peer in the shed window, but the vendor said it was in good condition, and there's also a great under-the-house storage area that's the size of a small shed and remarkably dry.

All in all, it was the perfect house for a sensible first-time-buyer working full-time with little leftover time or energy to throw into renovating a house, even without a raging global pandemic in the background.

Hmm. 

But, here's the thing: apparently I'm not a sensible first-time-buyer being sure not to bite off more than they can chew  Sad  The house was perfect, but it just didn't do it for me. On paper, everything lined up and looked great. Writing it all out, I'm frustrated with myself for not wanting it! But I just don't. 

While I was wandering around waiting for my viewing (and trying not to freeze to death), I was able to walk past the Victorian money pit (with the huge garden) that is in need of the "full scheme of modernisation". Guess which house I've been thinking about all afternoon? I know that house is a step too far (even if I did watch the video walkthrough and get excited that it has a modern boiler and overall looks better than I expected) because I don't have the free time to do it justice, but is it too much to ask to find something in between perfect and money pit? Hopefully, I'll find my happy medium house soon!
Formerly self-contained, but expanding my gardening horizons beyond pots!
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Veggie Online
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#20
At last!! I've been waiting for your verdict. If it "doesn't do it for you" that all that matters. You did make a sensible decision, whatever your state of mind, because it would have been far less sensible to buy it and regret it later!!
When buying a house, I've found, that you'll never find one that is perfect. There was a Flamingo Pink bathroom in my house when we bought it - it was awful - but it worked and didn't need changing until we were in a position to do so. The kitchen was even more bizarre, modelled on a local pub's dining area with wooden roofs over all the work surfaces and louvre doors on everything - it was like something out a cowboy film. But it worked, we could cook and eat in it - and amuse our friends when they visited. The CH boiler worked - but was undersized for the number of radiators - which you didn't realise until you'd live with it through a winter............but, the house was where we wanted to live, it was big enough, had a decent sized garden and those were they things that we couldn't change.
So concentrate on your priority list - location, size, garden, structurally sound - the rest follows when you're in residence.
The Moneyless Chicken says:- 
Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without.
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