With over nineteen years working as a landscaper in New Mexico, I know the local plants, micro-climates, aesthetics, irrigation, flagstone work, the best trees and shrubs to use and so much more to help you create an outdoor living space.
I learnt a lot from landscaping at Ten Thousand Waves, then in a few years of working for myself I began supervising a ten person crew at The Daniels Residence (of the Opera), maintaining Southwest Cares, installing an architect's design for the Parade of Homes, designing the entrance to Ojo Caliente Hot Springs Spa, and working for your neighbors and friends.

I also have training in Firewise landscaping principles and as a wild land fire-fighter, offering you advice as to how to lessen the fire risks around your home. From pruning trees, maintenance, flagstone work, fencing, and troubleshooting irrigation systems, if I can't do it then I'll find you someone who can.

I maintain, design, and install designs, even other landscaper's ideas - as long as I agree with them that is! If you would like to see the photos and for some advice, I will come over as soon as possible and meet you.
Let me know how I can help! Send me an email from this website with your number and I'll call you back. Promise.
Thanks.

For suggestions as to what to plant and where, invite me over and we can work out some ideas and create a plan for your tastes and budget.

Thanks for looking at this site. I hope I can help.
On another note…one that complements my style and focus in gardening...
Sustainable building and alternative technologies are passions of mine. I finished the first majorbuilding project in the summer of 2003: I built myself a home in the high desert of northern New Mexico. I used a combination of straw bales and adobe bricks, local vigas, and pre-used or scrap building materials.
Now, in 2009, I have my own adobe home, a straw bale studio and my converted school bus to call home, in the Ortiz Mountains. Once again I focus on creating a sustainable low impact home for me and Harold the border collie.
The water I use comes from rain catchment. With a 400 square foot roof I am able to catch about 267 gallons of water for every inch of rainfall. Using a single 1600 gallon cistern I store enough water for one person for over six months of conscious use.
Because we have over 300 days of sunshine, I am able to get all my energy needs met from a small solar electrical system. I am using 2 panels with 75 watts of power. With an inverter I can use lights, television, and my computer fairly freely. I just made a solar oven, and today come home from work to a curry soup that tastes great! Followed by brownies and a cup of tea, I’m so amazed at what’s possible.
My intention is to help others realize their many choices. There are so many options out there that I never had any inkling of when I was growing up.
If I can build a house, brick by brick, then why can't you?
I can help teach the process as well as some of the actual hands-on skills needed. I'd love to visit different land projects and the individuals interested in sustainable, do-it-yourself building and help in whatever way I can.
Well it never really ends, building your own home is an ongoing project of love and creativity, changing as you change, growing as you grow.
ENJOY MY NOTES FROM THE BUILDING BLOCKS!
BRICKS 101
It’s
9 AM and Ed joins us for coffee in the living room. The sun is shining.
Trenlin is in her shorts.
The dogs are hyper. Ed
isn’t. I’m a little worried since
we’d arranged for him to work with me on the house. The plan was to build some bricks for a few hours. After the coffee he’s ready if not
quite keen.
We
walk up to little hill to the building site. I carry buckets of water. Ed carries nothing.
As I start to explain we need to do, he realizes he wants his
gloves. They’re down the hill in
his car. Whilst
he’s gone, I set up. Two
shovels. Two buckets. Cement. Water. There on
the wall to the east corner is where we’re building, I hope. There’s a post we need to brick around
it so it can’t move in any direction. The beam across its top is going to be
bearing the weight of the roof.
It’s
windy. May usually isn’t windy,
but to be honest, I don’t mind as it keeps it cooler than normal. No shorts for me today. Ed is back and we’re ready. “45 shovels of dirt, 3 shovels of
cement and add water until it holds itself together,” I explain. He knows this already as he’s helped my
neighbors, but I figure a little reminder is good for all. We dig. It’s hard work making the mix as it just gets heavier and
heavier. When it looks goods and
moist I fill a bucket and climb up to the side of the east wall. It’s hard to explain, but the house is
built into the hill and the walls at the east, west and north sides are being
built upon the rock. To complete
the semi-circle is a straight stretch of the south- facing wall. This wall will be built of straw-bales.
Anyway I
climb up the hill to the back of the house and prepare to make my first brick
of the week. The grain bag is open
and in place. I empty the mix in
to it. Ed brings me another bucket
of mix, and that’s enough for the one brick. I fold the top of the bag and tip it horizontally. Then with my hands I shape it into a
rough semblance of a brick. Last
summer when I started this process Dave lent me his metal tamper until Flip
welded this one for me. It’s the
perfect size and weight to stand above and drops onto the horizontal surface
until I feel the mud-cement compact.
It has this ‘thud’ sound that tells me it is solid. I thump, thump, thump till I thud. Ed takes the empty buckets to
refill for me. I balance on the
wall (we build the bricks in place) and kneel down so I can spend some minutes
with a fired-brick in my hand that compacts the sides and edges. I test it with my hand. It feels solid. Resting back on my haunches I look
around. This is my house. The second thought is, “I’m tired now.”
As
Ed passes me more mix I set about the next brick.
“How
many bricks do you think you’ll have made by the time the house is built? Two thousand? More?”
We
both stop and look for any excuse to rest.
“Less
I think. Trenlin said she counted
the bricks in her studio last winter and it was over two thousand even before
it was enclosed…”
“You
could work it out,” he suggests as he passes the full bucket up to me with a
grunt.
“I
could…but I probably won’t,” I grunt back. My God that man fills his buckets…
Soon
the first batch is used up, three bricks are made…time for a break. This is definitely a labor-intensive
building method. Yet somehow it
suits me. “Good honest work” I had
explained to Alberto last year.
His response was; “It’s
a long time since I heard that phrase, but I know what you mean.”
I
look at Ed and grin. “Good honest work.”
ONE
VIGA
My
mother is right. I am a “stubborn
young woman.” Why else would I
decide, at 7 PM on a Sunday night to lift and move a 20 foot viga (beam), 8”
diameter up and onto the roof of the house I’m building?
God
knows how much it weighs. More
than I can lift, that’s for sure.
But I was determined. I
succeeded, and now I’m smiling as I sit here with a cup of tea looking over at
the lone viga. It’s the
first. It’s monumental. I did it, all by myself. Daisy, my dog, didn’t even come over to
cheer me on. Instead she sat by
her empty food bowl and gave me the look.
(She’s happy now by the way, after raising my roof, or rather one of
many vigas, I fed her well.) I’m
stubborn, I admit. The trouble is
I have been planning a viga-raising party here soon. Ed was helping me one day when I asked him to help me out on
that Saturday as the supervisor.
“That way, I can explain to those friends who’ve not been here before
what we’re all doing…” He’s happy to help; in fact thrilled I think to be asked
to really be a part of the process.
Fedor also came over today to talk about the viga-raising and how was I
planning to do it? “Nick has a boom truck, a crane that can lift these 26’
vigas up, over, and into place for you.”
All
day I’ve been talking to different visitors about the bricks, the landscape,
the mountains, the roof-raising.
All day I’ve been talking.
By late afternoon everyone had left. I took Daisy for a walk. Standing on the cliff top above my building site, I felt the
urge creeping up on me. I wanted
to put one viga up. Just one. By myself. Running back down the hill I was thinking of rope, and tying
one end and simply pulling the beast.
Back
at the site I found a long rope and took it to the two 20’ vigas sitting there,
all ready to go. I pushed one out
of the way. I tied the other and
gave it a pull. Very little
happened. I pulled again and it
moved an inch or two. I was not
discouraged. I was instead even
more determined. I swivelled it in
place and then it was facing up the flagstone steps. I needed to pull it up 20’ of steps to the area level with
the back wall. Luckily the house
is built into the clay and rock hill.
That’s not so bad, I thought, it could be worse. I pulled. I pushed. I
pulled. I pushed. I was chipping the steps but I didn’t
mind. Until today they were my
babies. The viga was now the baby,
deserving all of my attention. I
pulled. I pushed. As I tried to catch my breath once we,
the viga and I, were half way there, I saw a 2-foot length of a round piece of
another viga. An idea came to
mind, and I got it, then put it under the uphill end. I pushed from below and it rolled along. I was impressed. It flew uphill, or so it felt. In no time at all, I had it in
position, with one end on the back wall, the other on the front beam. I cranked the generator and found the
drill and ½ drill bit. I drilled
two holes, each through the viga and its beam underneath. With great glee I hammered in 12” of
rebars into each end. The viga was
now pinned in place. Turning off the generator, I look up at my roof
-line. I sip my tea and admire the
viga. It’s a beauty from this
perspective. Suddenly I can sense
how this home will feel when it’s enclosed. I’m excited.
I’m proud of myself. I’m
glad I can be stubborn…
A
YEAR LATER
I
started this building process a year ago.
I remember how I canceled some jobs, shuffled some others, and was able
to get away for a week. I drove up
here with Daisy and set up camp as soon as I could. The sun was intense.
It was in the 80’s, the late 80’s, a hot dry heat, with mosquitoes and
flies. I set my tent in what
is now becoming the orchard, next to the parking lot. There was one Juniper tree near by. It gave only a little shade. I baked. I’d got up as soon as the tent felt the sun. I’d build a few bricks along the back
wall. I have a photo, a
self-portrait of myself, red-faced with a row of about 10 brick behind me. “The First Week.” It was a perfect reminder; I need to
take another such photo, to show what I have achieved within that first year.
What
have I achieved? Two
irrigation systems. Threes,
shrubs, vines. A ‘palapa’; giving
shade for my friends and family.
In fact, I’ve built a whole outdoor living room up where I originally
camped.
And
the house itself? Well, let me put
it this way; tomorrow we are having a roof-raising party. A viga-raising. Nick and Ed are being paid to help me
install the 26’ x 8” diameter vigas (beams) up on the front post and beam
structure with the other ends
lying across the back wall. I’m so excited. I can taste it. I can imagine standing inside this 20 x
40’ structure that I am building with my own hands. It’s the most amazing feeling to see the house take
form. No longer do I have to
explain the vision,. I can see it
happen. My visitors can see the
shapes, the texture, the energy of the place.
This is a dream come true!
What
a wonderful birthday gift to myself!
DECKING THE
ROOF
It’s
only 65° outside – cloudy, overcast making it cool and moist. The table I am working at is even wet
--- hmm, perhaps I should cover it up in the rains? You see, it’s sitting in what will be the kitchen. The roof is only half finished. When Ed came up today to see the
progress over the last month, I made a comment about it being a house at
last. “Not quite. It’s a haybarn, but soon to be a home I
think.”
Daisy
is sitting in the corner that will be in the living room. John the puppy is at my feet. We are in the kitchen. The roof. Yes, the roof.
Since
I last sat down to write about the house, I have had help putting up 9 vigas,
varying in length from 22’ – 26’.
Long and heavy. Since that
weekend I have been putting up the decking, using 1 x 6” rough sawn lumber
spanning across the beams/vigas.
The first time with the decking was the scariest as I had to stand on
the 8’ ladder, reaching up hopefully place the planks in line with the front of
the beams. A clean line I
wanted. Once in place, I had to
screw these 10’ lengths of wood in the beams they were sitting on. Once I had about 6 planks up there, it
meant I could climb up onto them and start working with more placements and
screwing them above.
I
couldn’t stop! I stood on my roof,
looked around and grinned to widely it hurt…I positively beamed at the world.
Pam
drove up to hers, saw me up there, saw my expression and laughed with me.
What
progress! Of course, I
didn’t get it all done that day. I
used up what wood I had that weekend.
Since then I have had to return to making bricks. I decided to finish the bricks and
windows on ht East Side. This way
I can finish the decking part of the roof as soon as I can buy some more 1 x
6’s. After last weekend, I am
ready. You see, once I had
finished the bricks, the decking I can actually insulate and put up the tin
roof. Even if one side of the
house is unfinished, I can start enclosing the space. I can’t imagine how it will feel to start collecting rain
off my roof. Since I plan to use
straw bales on the south wall, I’m waiting for the roof to be done as much as
possible before I build with bales.
I want them to be protected from the rainy season.
Today
was spent making some bricks on the west wall. I also spent time on the roof, working with 2 x 4’s, placing
them every 4 feet (the same spacing as the vigas) and screwing them into place. These 2 x 4’s are going to be the
framework for holding the rigid insulation in place. They’ll also serve as the frame for the tin to be attached
to.
I’m
sitting here at the kitchen table, drinking my beer. Time to relax after a full days work. As I have said before “Good Honest
Work.”