I thought we could put a nice patio just out the back door. For one thing, that would take care of some square footage. The whole yard was being redone after our addition and I aspired to having no lawn at all, which meant I was in for a ton of horticultural maintenance. People whine about having to mow the lawn but it’s no big deal to scalp a short monoculture. But throw in a decent-size patio, at least that part was taken care of. Right?
You know, mostly. What Dave decided to do was use that area as his canvas for one cubic shit-ton of masonry. He wanted to cut pavers to perfection and lay them in some kind of pattern, which sounds straightforward enough if you have no skills, but unfortunately Dave did. This was going to be complicated.

The creator, with friend
I suggested he could make a Bear’s Paw pattern. That’s a readily recognizable quilt pattern and all my quilting buddies would pick up on it right away. Dave didn’t go that route, and frankly, what he did decide on required a lot more precision. Ultimately he made a patio with a center circle for a fire pit and radii of block, terminating in some tiny confetti-size triangles of paver, and he started by pouring a square border of concrete, but just shy of level, so that the eventual plane would carry water away from the house. Then he cut and installed five billion precisely cut pieces of paver laid without mortar—touching all around—that miraculously all fit perfectly. And shed water. It was a triumph. The Army Corps of Engineers is bugging him to design a dam.
Yes, sir, you couldn’t fit a credit card between the pavers anywhere. But plants could infiltrate. Mostly we got moss, which is fine, but tons of tiny weeds intervened as well, and after a nice damp winter that patio was sprouting. That patio was looking like a bald man with new plugs. For years we used a power washer on it. But that blasted a lot of the underlying sand out. I started tossing pots of boiling water over the cracks but hit my toes often as not. I tried vinegar. Seemed stupid. What’s next: croutons?
So this year I noticed that a lot of the joints were filled with moss, and maybe if that were encouraged it would keep the pointy weeds out. I started to try to pluck out the weeds. With, like, tweezers. I did a whole quadrant of the patio that way. Visualize Michelangelo painting the Sistine Chapel with a bundle of eyelashes. Then, hell. I just started in with my hori hori knife and scooped out the joints, moss and all. All five billion of them.
And while I was down there scraping away inch by inch, I truly appreciated the feat Dave had accomplished. This patio is now 25 years old. And, weeds notwithstanding, it would still be level, draining, perfect. The weather has not touched it. The power washer has not destroyed it. Weed roots have not rumpled it.
Ants, however.
Ants are a successful species. There are about 2.5 million ants in existence for every human being. That’s five million ants for Dave and me alone. They take vacations in our kitchen, but mostly they live under our patio.
This patio would still be perfect if ants had not undermined it. But they love Dave’s patio even more than we do and they’ve been shoveling sand out from under it for 25 years. Still, the worst of the blocks have subsided only a quarter inch in all that time. And only in the portions where I had to go and put a pot of flowers. They love to live under my flower pots. If you’re not a fan of grubs and goobers, you really don’t want to move those pots. Fully 3/4 of the patio is still perfect. It is absolutely extraordinary. It’s still a pain in the ass. It’s this amazing, perfectly engineered, precise as hell pain in the ass.
It’s Mount Rushmore. Such an extraordinary achievement! The work of a master! Probably should never have been done.
Great job on the patio, Dave! It’s a work of art!
And OMG… That’s also why I have the messy yard that I have now: I aspired to have zero grass! Neither Paul nor I enjoyed cutting grass, yet we had this ginormous yard. I started with just having wide swaths of mulched plantings under the trees, with river rock borders and river stone pathways in between various swaths. It was easy smothering the grass, and planting native plants. And fun. And it all looked very pretty and was attractive to birds and butterflies.
There was a low-lying bit of ground with heavy clay soil that retained water like a woman on her period. It obviously wanted to be a pond, so we made it one. We dug a big hole in that area, bought some flexible but heavy-duty pond liner at Home Depot and put that down. Got more river stones to line it. Absconded with larger rocks from local creeks and work sites to border the pond and some even larger rocks for the middle parts for birds to perch on. Got a pond fountain/filter for aeration and a pond heater for the winter. Got some “feeder fish” (rescue fish!) which bred and were happy. Basically a glorified bird bath. That took up another large area. There is a swampy area next to it which hosts various ferns. Our “bog garden.” This also took up a lot of the grassy area that was always too wet.
When our back steps needed to be replaced, instead of just steps, we had a deck put in. A large one to take up even more space. Steps go down to the driveway and garages, and also a set of steps to go down to the pond. Paul built a “boardwalk” that begins at the deck steps and leads to the pond. A veritable Shangri-La.
So what made it all go tits-up? We had an ice storm several years back. We had large pines in the side yard that provided shade for that entire area. (HAD being the operative word.) The ice storm not only lopped off one entire side of the pines, but the roots started coming up and made the trees veer toward the house. They had to come down.
So now, the side yard gets lots of sun and has no pine needles that spread out over the area, which had cut down on weeds. So the invasive plants celebrated the sun and the lack of pine needles and started propagating. Then my knees gave out due to arthritis, so Paul took over. Then he died.
I still have pictures of how the yard looked back then, and I can’t believe it’s the same yard. We get these grandiose ideas in the initial excitement phase. Then we get older and less capable of maintaining it. It probably would have been easier just going with the lawn, like everyone else. But I wanted a backyard wildlife sanctuary. I wish I still had the energy, enthusiasm, and stamina of Young Mimi. I miss her.
Doggone. This moved me as much as anything you’ve written.
Entropy. Sigh…
I live in a duplex in a condominium community. I own the property around my half of the building, but it’s a tiny lawn. Takes about a half hour to mow and an hour or so to rake the leaves in the fall.
There was a lawn behind the house when I moved in, but I never watered it. Drifts of sunflower seed hulls from the birds choked out whatever had survived the drought.
I stopped bird feeding several years ago when the rats showed up. It might be different if I was in my own separate house, but encouraging rats seemed like a really bad idea.
Common evening primrose got established and this year I decided to let it take over the backyard. I ended up with a back lawn filled with nine foot tall stalks that pulled in the pollinators when the flowers blossomed.
I also encouraged sweet clematis for several years. This year I wasn’t out much to tend the bonsai and when I finally did go out I found that I had a huge mass of clematis, which was also a hit with the pollinators.
Yesterday I uprooted all of that as the flowers had ended. The primrose stalks got chucked back in the woods behind me and the clematis got mulched, which hopefully will improve the lawn.
It’s different everywhere, but all I know is when you maintain a garden or a habitat, it will change yearly and you’ll never be done. Kind of good news, in a way.
What a wonderful photo of Dave with a beer & a chickadee!
That’s Studley Windowson with Dave. Brave little chickadee that Murr and Dave socialized to take meal worms from our hands to feed his many (sequential) broods, and his mate, Marge. We miss him!
IS IT NOT wonderful, Sharon! This is one of my favorite photos ever. Sculptor 1 got to meet Studley on the personal and it changes a person, I’ll tell you.
Ants- ” and they all came marching in….” My ants love my kitchen tho I keep it clean. When I moved here in 1986 the former owners and all the neighbors said ” we go tents in this neighborhood” and they weren’t lying. They go on vacations and come back with new energy…… I pour hot water down the hole on the rare occasion I can find one……. but mostly I think they just like the countertops.
You just made me realize that I had NO ant incursions into the house this year. Is it the apocalypse?
fer coing out loud…. ” we got ants”……..
Here I had visions of your neighbors all going camping during ant season!
Exterminator friends recommended the ant traps with borax bait. I used those with good success for years. Switched to Raid this year and the ants kept showing up. I thought it was the same active ingredient and that the ants had just evolved tolerance for it. Checked just now. Nope, different bait.
Boric Acid is the stuff, man! I had a problem with what is called “water bugs” here, but are actually a sort of roach. I mixed boric acid with confectioners sugar and put it in tiny lids (caps from various bottles) and stuck them under furniture where I was sure that my birds couldn’t get to it. Result? No more roaches.
Also had a problem with ants on my front porch, as I had an outdoor bird cage out there for one of my parrots (R.I.P. Mikey!) They formed a conga line around the window sill from the door. Spread boric acid along the sill. Ants went buh-bye. (Didn’t even NEED the addition of sugar.)
Oh thanks for that. I had to admit, I was curious what you meant.
Boring acid.. just went on my shopping list. The wee beasties always try to come in my house this time of year.
Boric- spellcheck strikes again, but I had to chuckle- boric acid has me anything BUT bored just now.
Just make sure that if you have pets that they can’t get into it. Boric Acid is a desiccant. It kills the ants and roaches by drying them to a husk.
A Dessic Ant.
A brilliant pun must be acknowledged
Out on our patio, this summer we had groups of cicada killer wasps (Sphecius speciosus) swirling around a tree in a pot with an upside-down concrete basin acting as a base. The wasps had found a perfect spot to carry their victims into the damp, dark sand beneath the basin. They sure look scary, but the males have no stinger, and the females are not aggressive, unless you’re a big, fat cicada.
One unusual talent of cicada killer wasps is that they will climb up a tree, hauling the cicada along, until the wasp reaches an altitude that helps launch the flight to the burrow.
Hi Susan!:
I’ve worked as a groundskeeper several times. During one of those efforts I was dispatched to kill giant wasps that were digging up the lawn around a sidewalk. The locals were terrified and in fear for their lives.
I had an enjoyable several hours digging up one burrow. If memory serves it was down several feet and had one cicada at the bottom.
I think cicada killers were a new thing in my area at the time, but even if they weren’t most people have a death to insects mentality.
This past summer I happened upon a cicada killer on a paralyzed cicada on one of my walks. I got up close and personal with my phone’s camera and she took grim exception to that intrusion and escorted me about twenty feet away from her prey. Sadly she then flew off and left the cicada behind. I moved it off the road and the next day it was gone, hopefully taken by the wasp.
I was having trouble with the tree in the pot with an upside-down concrete basin but then I sorted it all out in my head.