I've decided that clearing the garden is a job for chainsaw-wielding professionals: it needs a serious blitz!
Before: this border was over-run with ladder fern and weeds.
So recently two of the team from Ace Landscapes spent a coupla days pruning, mulching and weeding the garden. They took away 3 huge truckloads of garden waste with them - and there's more to go!
This is Part 1 of re-doing our garden: getting rid of the stuff we don't want.
(Part 2 will involve getting a landscape plan drawn up so that there's a scheme to work to - and Part 3 will consist of implementing this landscape plan, which will probably be done in stages... so keep tuned for the progress!)
The guys did a great job... it would have taken Mr Kiwi and I more than a week (probably more like 2 weeks) to do the work that the Ace Landscapes team did in a day or two. Man they worked FAST!
The only problem with the much-emptier garden was that it revealed just how badly the paint on the fence along one boundary is peeling!
After: the border is looking a lot less cluttered - but it's revealed the peeling fence!
So last weekend Mr Kiwi and I made the most of the great weather and picked up a 10L tub of fence paint (British Paints - 4 Seasons) for about $130-ish from Mitre 10 Mega and blitzed the fence.
The colour we used ("Karaka") is a very dark green - it was exactly the same colour that was there before. It's a really easy-to-live with colour, as it's not too green (so that you'd be thinking, ew, that's really green) and not too dark (so as to be sombre). It makes a really nice backdrop to the lush green of the tropical plants in our garden.
After: the freshly-painted fence AND a weed-free garden. Lovely!
Above: unfortunately Minnie the dog ended up sporting a dab of "Karaka" on her (no, we didn't use her as a roller! She just has to check out everything we do very closely! And it was too nice a day to shut her away inside!).
Fortunately the paint is water-based so it washed off beautifully and she is perfectly white again :-)
Saturday, March 28, 2009
Auckland Autumn Home Show
I've just been for a nosey round the Autumn Home Show - I won free tickets from http://www.interiorsonline.co.nz/ (thanks guys!).
So how was it? To be honest - disappointing...
For one thing, coming from the UK I'm used to hugely vast exhibitions - the NZ expos are much, much smaller and I still haven't gotten used to that.
But more importantly, it astounds me that companies make such a huge investment to be there (the stand, setting it up, the labour costs -it all adds up to a very significant sum) yet make little attempt to engage the public and/or build their database. (The marketing consultant in me can't switch off, even on a Sunday!)
Expos aren't the time to be introverted, shy or quiet - so if the staff or owners are suitably extrovert, then hire some outgoing people to engage the public!
And it's such a great opportunity to build a database (with a competition or something) and maybe even do some market research (what do the visitors think of your industry/product/service?). If a company isn't going to interact, they may as well not be there.
The most interactive stand? The Miracle Shammy. They put on such a good demo (and handed out freebies at the beginning) that I handed over $30 for a bunch of super-absorbent cleaning cloths. Great demo, fellas! (And hopefully the cloths will be handy for mopping water out of the bilges on the boat.)
A brochure I picked up that could be interesting for the future is from Granite Transformations (http://www.granitetransformations.co.nz/) - they put a real granite surface over existing bench tops. Could be good for us, as our kitchen is solidly constructed but looks dated, so it'll be interesting to see how much this option would be. (Though re-doing our kitchen is a few years away yet!)
I also saw a client there whom I'd recently done some copywriting work for - http://www.fishtanks.co.nz/ - he has very funky fish tanks!
Photo: the Miracle Shammy!
So how was it? To be honest - disappointing...
For one thing, coming from the UK I'm used to hugely vast exhibitions - the NZ expos are much, much smaller and I still haven't gotten used to that.
But more importantly, it astounds me that companies make such a huge investment to be there (the stand, setting it up, the labour costs -it all adds up to a very significant sum) yet make little attempt to engage the public and/or build their database. (The marketing consultant in me can't switch off, even on a Sunday!)
Make an exhibition of yourself!
At most stands, the stall holders stood there with their arms crossed looking unhappy. It doesn't really make you want to go up to them and enquire - it's quite off-putting.Expos aren't the time to be introverted, shy or quiet - so if the staff or owners are suitably extrovert, then hire some outgoing people to engage the public!
And it's such a great opportunity to build a database (with a competition or something) and maybe even do some market research (what do the visitors think of your industry/product/service?). If a company isn't going to interact, they may as well not be there.
The most interactive stand? The Miracle Shammy. They put on such a good demo (and handed out freebies at the beginning) that I handed over $30 for a bunch of super-absorbent cleaning cloths. Great demo, fellas! (And hopefully the cloths will be handy for mopping water out of the bilges on the boat.)
A brochure I picked up that could be interesting for the future is from Granite Transformations (http://www.granitetransformations.co.nz/) - they put a real granite surface over existing bench tops. Could be good for us, as our kitchen is solidly constructed but looks dated, so it'll be interesting to see how much this option would be. (Though re-doing our kitchen is a few years away yet!)
I also saw a client there whom I'd recently done some copywriting work for - http://www.fishtanks.co.nz/ - he has very funky fish tanks!
Photo: the Miracle Shammy!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)