I am constantly in awe of my wife.

Tara says I give her too much credit, make her sound too good on my blog, but I am truly impressed by some of her endeavors. The latest example: we really wanted to grow strawberries…but we have a yard full of critters who would treat those berries like their own personal buffet. Tara’s solution? A homemade cage to keep ’em out.

That’s pretty ingenious, right? (Plus, it’s always sexy when she breaks out the chop saw.)

The strawberry plants came from the most impressive nursery I have ever seen. SO many babies in diapers! (J/K. It was a plant nursery.) Ebert’s Greenhouse Village, to be exact–a name that seemed like hyperbole to me, until we pulled into the parking lot. This place, which started out as a humble family farm in rural Ixonia 50 years ago, has blossomed (pun intended) into 28 greenhouses spread over 55 acres. Complete with food carts and live music. I swear, it feels more like an entertainment complex than a garden center.

Getting there took some effort. Ixonia is barely a dot on the map. Beautiful setting, but it’s the very definition of middle of nowhere. It took us 30 minutes traveling down multiple two-lane county roads in what felt like a giant zigzag pattern. Totally worth the roundabout trip, though. I don’t care about annuals and perennials like Tara does, but even I was impressed. Just walking around the place is a feast for the senses.

Amazingly, we (she) didn’t even buy all that much. Just the two flats of strawberries and a few tomato plants. Once she gets the garden planted next weekend, we’re planning on making a return trip to stock up. Preferably on a weekday, because the place was hoppin’ last Saturday.

While Tara was busy working on the strawberry cage, I spent hours in the hot sun digging up a metric ton of lily of the valley—first using a shovel and then by hand. When I mentioned this to my mom, she was aghast. “I love lily of the valley!” she declared. I have nothing against the stuff; the little white bell-shaped flowers really pop against the green leaves, it smells nice, and it played a pivotal role in one of the greatest dramas of all time (Walt tried to poison a kid with it on Breaking Bad)–but it spreads so aggressively, it’ll take over your yard if you aren’t careful.

As much as we appreciate Dick’s landscaping, we have cursed the man more than once for planting lily of the valley and wild ginger and dead nettle, all of which have been thorns in our sides since day one. They grow rapidly and muscle their way into our garden beds and borders, crowding out the native vegetation. We have spent the last three years removing as much as possible–no easy task, because their extensive networks of underground rhizomes are all interconnected. You can’t just dig up each individual plant; you’ve got to attack those roots with gusto.

Here’s one section Tara transformed in 2024:

But there’s a lot more work to be done:

Come 2031, we might have a handle on all this shit.

On a positive note, I’m making great progress against my biggest nemesis, the poison ivy that has bedeviled me for years. I roam around the property with my spray bottle full of glyphosate-based herbicide, scrutinizing the ground closely for those telltale leaves of three, liberally dousing any I come across. There’s a lot less of it now, and many of the former problem areas are completely free of the devil weed.

I’ll notch that up as one small victory in a bigger war.

A 1,158-Day Milestone

We recently hit a big milestone without realizing it: As of May 1, 2026, we have lived in our Fort Atkinson house longer than we did in the Rapid City house. I guess that means Dick > Doris.

I knew we were getting close, and when I busted out the slide ruler and did the math last week, I learned we’d surpassed the 1,157 days in our RC home on the first day of the month (yes, I’m a numbers geek). This boggles my mind. Despite having spent 166 weeks in MarTar Manor, living here still feels like a novelty. Tara and I often step onto the deck, gaze upon our property, and say, “I can’t believe this is ours.” Happens all the time. I suspect because we both moved so often growing up, anything resembling permanence is hard to fathom.

We both agree this is a much better house. Sure, I miss that groovy wood-paneled SD basement (not to mention having three full bathrooms versus one), but overall, everything about this place is better–the layout, the usable space, the privacy. Plus, nobody keeled over dead in the kitchen, so: bonus!

There’s an even bigger achievement looming on the horizon. On November 7, we will have officially been Sconnies longer than Dakotans.

Unless we move before then, of course. I make no promises.

How long have you lived in your current house? Does it still feel like a novelty?


32 responses to “Getting to the root of the problem.”

  1. I’ve been digging up Lilly of the Valley at my house like crazy! Our real nemesis right now is called something like Creeping Tom, maybe? It’s a low-to-the-ground flowery thing with round leaves and purple/blue flowers, and it is now EVERYWHERE except under the ferns, and they are almost everywhere else. I have a feeling we’re going to have to lay plastic down all over that area and kill everything and start over, which would be a huge shame.

    I think Tara is super impressive, and no one needs to tell me that!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. We call it creeping Charlie and it is the bane of my existence. I battle it constantly but know I’ll never win. It’s easy to pull but grows and spreads faster than I can yank.
      😡

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I’ve just started to pull mine and declared it the winner, all in the same day. I don’t think it will crowd out what else is growing where it is so I’ll just see what happens. If y’all don’t here from me soon, know that the Creeping Charlie ate me.

        Liked by 2 people

      2. We have one section where it’s taken over a small section of lawn. It’s woven into the grass and very hard to separate.
        Grrr…

        Liked by 1 person

      3. Oh rats. Looks like I should at least try to protect the lawn, then.

        Liked by 2 people

    2. Yep, like River said, Creeping Charlie. Yet another obnoxious (though admittedly pretty-looking) invader that’s trying to take over the grass. I bought a special thatching rake to deal with the stuff, but you really have to pull it up by hand to get it all. Apparently, the yard service we just contracted with will help eradicate the stuff. Fingers crossed!

      Like

      1. What will it do once it gets in my grass–will it kill the grass?

        Liked by 1 person

      2. It won’t kill it outright, but it’ll prevent it from growing. Which is almost the same thing, I suppose.

        Like

  2. Good luck with the strawberries, the cage seems like a good solution. Oddly enough our critters don’t like them. They’ll inhale blueberries and raspberries but leave the strawberries alone.
    Who in the right mind plants nettles? No offense to the previous owner, but that’s nuts! Lily of the valley is great if you have a huge shady spot to cover, but in a garden bed? Never. Good luck with the war
    That greenhouse looks wonderful. I’m hitting one of our big ones on Thursday.
    😊

    Liked by 1 person

    1. We’re presuming the strawberries would quickly be devoured. Better safe than sorry (though our raspberries do pretty well behind the fence…we haven’t had too many issues with animals eating them, knock on wood).

      Liked by 1 person

  3. I bet anyone that gardens purposefully has a favorite nemesis. Right now mine is the Russian sage that sprouts through the root system and is self-spreading. It’s a common CO xeriscape plant. My greens patch is doing wonderfully. I’m already harvesting chard and should be picking lettuce but it’s pouring rain right now. Good on Tara for her cage.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. How funny. Tara loves Russian sage and has gone out of her way to plant it, both here and in South Dakota. It’s an excellent deer deterrent!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. It’s lovely to look at in bloom, smells great, the bees adore it- but try to convince it to stay in the beds and avoid the small area of lawn we’re allowed- ours just isn’t getting the message.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. How rude! (Or how root, more to the point.)

        Liked by 1 person

  4. Kenn would love that nursery!

    We’ve lived in The Cabin for 8.5 years now. I regularly have “I can’t believe this is ours” moments. I don’t think this place will ever stop being a wonder to me.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’ve seen pics of The Cabin. I don’t blame you; it’s quite the nice place!

      Like

  5. Yeah, that’s how I feel, too, after moving six times before high school and then living in 10 different apartments before our house here. Especially when looking at trees we grew from seedlings that are taller than us now.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I had the satisfaction of watching saplings grow into tall trees at my first house in Vancouver, WA. I lived there for 10 years, which to this day is a record (though I have every intention of surpassing that here).

      Like

  6. The Main Event in our backyard is Creeping Charlie vs Lily of the Valley. I’m not sure of the long term effectiveness, but I poured my boiling pasta water onto poison ivy while camping in Door County. I stayed in the same campsite later that summer and that poison ivy was dead.

    That last photo looks like the epitome of 1964. And how can you call Ixonia the middle of nowhere? They even have a school!

    As for my house – 30 years so far and back then I only moved across the street (from a rented house).

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I tried the boiling water approach initially (year one). It killed the poison ivy, but the next year, new growth took its place. Year two, I dug it up by the roots, which was a little more effective as long as you got the entire root (harder than you’d think). I switched to the chemical approach in year three and that has been the best long-term solution yet. It’s been a lot of trial and error.

      Ixonia’s actually larger than a lot of WI towns (5,120), but it’s still surrounded by a whole lot of nothin’!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I figured that (boiling water) was too easy to be effective. Like all the time I spent with a dandelion digger as a kid – a tool that cuts the root just below ground level so it has no lasting effect. But I guess if you wanted to eat dandelion greens (it still amazes me that people pay for them), it’s an effective harvesting method.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. It’s a great idea in theory, but in reality? Too good to be true.

        Like

  7. Pachysandra has been my nemesis. We had a professional come in to remove the humongous patch in our front landscaping around 2020 and I’m still finding it all over. Never plant it!

    This is only our second home. We’ve been here 14 years this summer. Our previous home we had for 21.5 years. It did feel like a novelty for the first 10 years, surprisingly enough!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks for the tip. I had to google pachysandra. It looks just as invasive as all the stuff I’m dealing with!

      Like

  8. I’ve lived in my current house for 30 years–which seems incredible to me. I would love that plant nursery; I am a fanatic about planting annuals and getting other plants for various seasons. Cyclamen in the cooler weather for example. Tara’s idea for strawberries is ingenious! There are so many invasive plants; even though they’re sometimes pretty, they can be a nuisance.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I haven’t even mentioned all the garlic mustard spreading throughout the woods and fields around our property. That stuff can seriously harm the ecosystem, and aside from pulling it out of our yard (literally hundreds of plants; that was an entire weekend earlier this month), there isn’t much we can do to stop the spread.

      Like

  9. I see Strawberry Shortcake in your future!

    Liked by 1 person

  10. It’s one awesome cage she built there! 😀

    I grew up in apartments. Moved a lot till finally I got this house in 2001 (didn’t want it and had hoped to move before the family started). Never thought to measure or calculate things… But I guess this means I’ve been here longer than I have anywhere else.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I haven’t done the math yet, but it’ll be sometime in late 2033 before I’ve lived in this house longer than any other. (Hopefully by then, I’m not still pulling up all these damn invasive plants!)

      Like

  11. I love lily-of-the-valley too, but unchecked it will just take over. My old neighbour planted goutweed in the area between our houses and it just was SUCH a pain, digging those insane roots out.

    We have been in this house for almost three years and I am still thrilled about our closet space, ensuite, pantry, etc.! It never gets old!

    Like

  12. Chicks with chop-saws? Like and subscribe.

    Dick > Doris, lol.

    Like

Leave a comment

THE LATEST SCOOP

Why are you reporting this comment?

Report type