Friday, March 21, 2014

Construction progress, and a carload full of orchids

Building a house is like being in the Army. "Hurry up and wait" is what goes on a lot. But the good news is that our forms are almost complete; the electric and plumbing lines are in trenches and roughed in inside what will be the house; and the solar electric lines are done, and all have been inspected, as well. Next week we treat for termites, seal up the ground, get yet another inspection, and then we can move forward to the Holy Grail for me- Pouring the slabs. After they're in, the "hurry up" part comes into play when they start framing in the main house and the master suite. I can hardly wait for that!

Immediately below is a video of my carload full of orchids that are now placed around our property. Next are pictures of the construction progress. Then there is a series of still shots of many of the orchids that have been blooming on our land since Robert and I arrived in Hawaii on January 9th. Enjoy, aloha!




In the center is Jeremiah, the solar electrician, and behind him in the cap and dark blue t-shirt is his son. The son was on Spring Break and Dad made him come out to work. I bet he would have been happier at the beach but we're glad they were helping finish their job. 

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This is my favorite on our land! We bought it in a tray of unmarked orchids with no flowers, and surprise, a year later, it's a beautiful one!




























Lena who sold me the carload full of orchids from this going out of business orchid farm. 



Saturday, March 8, 2014

The arrival experience part 1: Jungle driveway

Today's focus will be on the arrival experience designed by Robert Welsch, landscape designer and something else…oh, my husband! I am featuring the garden for the next couple of blogs because permitting is taking as long as everyone out here in Hawaii says it will take-longer than you expect! (But there is progress, trenches for electric and plumbing are dug, and work will start on them Monday).

To get to our land, you drive down a long gravel road through a forest of uluhe ferns and ohi'a trees. Once you arrive at our gate, Robert planted monkey pod trees five years ago (3 feet tall, look at them now!) to create a natural tunnel. Filled with dappled light, the drive down the driveway draws you into the embrace of the naturalistic elegance that Robert has created. Your eyes are drawn left and right as you pass palms, bamboo, elephant ears, twenty foot tall gingers, calatheas, orchids and many other plants.

Once you reach the end of the drive, the driveway opens up on a vista of the 400 palm trees in the distance. More on the rest of the garden later, for now, one bunch of pictures is worth a thousand words! The first picture is from 2007 for perspective. No monkey pods and no magic from Robert yet. When we started, there wasn't even a driveway, there was only jungle.
Driveway entrance Robert built in 2007

Driveway entrance 2014. The tallest trees are the monkeypods. 
Moving down the drive

Dappled sunlight bathes the driveway


Backlit plant
One of the many orchids we placed 


















This ginger in the middle is over 20 feet tall!




The end of the driveway, LH side
end of driveway, RH side

Palm tree inflorescence 




David
Robert