I know the date of this post is sometime in July, but the story that I'm relaying happened on June 15th. My memories of it are somewhat foggy, but certain things do stand out. The husband was annoyed with me. Really annoyed. It had to do with my stubborn insistence to move 4,000 pounds of gravel in my brand new car, load by load, and do the spreading myself. This was infinitely more hellish than the moving and dumping of the dirt. But having had my finances erased to zero, this to me was my only option.
The morning of the first load, I stumbled around the yard heaving forty pounds of gravel while the husband yelled very emphatically from the patio, "I will NOT help you with that! Do you hear me?? I will NOT help! You are so stubborn!!! You need to hire someone to do that!!" I won't lie when I say that my inner Greek woman came out and told him to shut the F up and go back inside the effing house. It was hotter than Hades, and I was sweating like an ox. This is a picture of gravel hell:

You see, at first I was influenced by the non-gardening husband to lay down that black landscaping fabric before putting down the gravel. But late the night before I started, I lay googling in the dark and found every single gardener on the planet bemoaning their decision to use that stuff. The reason being, there is not a single method on this planet that will stop a weed, including landscape fabric, and weeds actually get choked in the fabric, making it impossible to pull them. I am not afraid of pulling weeds. So laying newspaper won my vote.
However.
In the satanic heat, punctuated by biting flies, I was following this protocol:
1. Remove the weeds from a small area
2. Lay newspaper
3. Break open 40 pound bag of gravel and dump.
In a moment of reconciliation, the husband appeared somewhat tentatively at my side and offered water. Bless him! But when our eldest suggested he HELP, he said "Mom said she doesn't need my 'bleeping' help".
And so the day continued. At about 2pm, I was starting to see double. I staggered around and rested by the gate for a moment. A hallucination appeared before me. A beautiful apparition, in fact. JOSE!!
"What are you DOING?" he asked, in sheer amazement. I was so happy, I felt like I'd been saved from three weeks out at sea. I don't know if he really was just there to cut the grass, or if the scolded husband had called him, but I mentally cashed in my daughters' secret fund and accepted his help. Within an hour, though he said to me, "next time, don't ask me!!" Because, besides the gravel, I had Jose and his two guys Move The Fountain. And that was a job for no mortal man. But here it is!!
I am not lying when I tell you that it probably weighs around 600 pounds. But huzzah! It is now moved! I could go on and tell you how angry the husband was when he saw that it wasn't EXACTLY equidistant from all four corners, etc, etc, but then I'd have to relive that moment, and I don't care to. Engineering science does not play into my garden vision, after all.
At the end of the day, Jose, Hector and Juan almost finished the job. Bless them. I love them!
But of course I was about 10 bags short. Blech. I instead, triumphantly planted some tomatoes. Finally!
Meanwhile, in other parts of the yard, things continue to bloom. Thank goodness!
Oh, did I mention? In the very civilized front yard, my daughters discovered this guy. There was a lot of screaming and terror, and I admit - I was not thrilled, despite the known fact that garter snakes are not poisonous. I still do not like seeing them.
Until next time - more was done today, but I had to do this catch-up post!