Okay, y’all ready for another what-we’ve-been-doing-outside post? This particular rundown, as you may have guessed from my title (why yes I can pun in Spanish), is about some hosta business that we pulled off, thanks to a bunch of extra hostas growing randomly in our backyard (this backyard garden bed is a hot mess but we’ll get to it someday!).
Since they weren’t doing much for us back there, we dug ’em up – about five in total – and decided to put them to better use. For starters, they certainly could help our bedraggled mailbox (which became quite weedy this spring).
The mums that were there turned into dead sticks in the winter and, well, don’t mind that big rock. We found it elsewhere in the front yard and somehow it ended up there temporarily. Perhaps to distract from the weediness? Sure. That’s why. And look at poor Squirrel-y (see him tipped over behind that lone cowlick of a daffodil that’s completely done flowering?). This is the “first impression” we’re putting out to the neighbors. Ugh.
So we pulled all of the weeds out of the driveway (which was a surprisingly major improvement) and the iron squirrel temporarily took residence in the liriope.
Now, the advice from Katherine The Landscape Gal had been to either make the planting bed around the mailbox larger or just let it fill in with grass/ground cover. Good advice. We didn’t really have the energy to dig up a bigger plant bed at this point though, and we liked how the petunias looked there last year. But next year we’d definitely love to expand this bed so it’s larger and more gracefully curved for a little more curb appeal magic.
For the meantime, we got three pots of petunias at Home Depot and, paired with some of the hostas dug up from the backyard, we got to planting.
Here’s our little arrangement. It looks a bit spaced out right now, but having learned how well flowers grow in that area we’re pretty hopeful that it’ll fill in nicely within a month or two.
Oh yeah, and a little mulch never hurt. Here’s where it’s achingly obvious that Katherine was totally right- this little garden would look so much better if it was bigger. Someday…
At least it looks better than this ridiculousness….
Since we still had a handful of hostas with no place to call home, we decided to use them in this still-blank spot of our front planting bed that we last detailed here.
Ta-dah!
No, wait. Here’s the real ta-dah (again, thanks to the power of mulch). Although, this gives you a good idea of how mulch fades after a few weeks in the sun (and pollen). Haha. So hopefully that dorky mulch-tan-line won’t be there for long.
People always ask what kind of mulch we use, and we just grab the darkest brown wood mulch Home Depot sells (it’s usually on a special like three bags for $7 or something). But once we establish these beds (hopefully by next spring) we’d love to get a mulch delivery since we hear they can be a lot less than buying by the bag as you go.
Oh and those hostas will get nice and giant so they won’t look as dinky (they seem to keep growing well into the summer, and can get 20+ inches wide). The area is looking better now that we’ve extended our new plantings a bit more, but what will really help is something that’s still in the works. Perhaps this rendering below will give you a hint…
Maybe that was more than just a hint. It’s actually already starting to come in, but I haven’t had a chance to mow and take proper pictures yet. That’ll be a topic for another day! Has anyone else used transplanted bushes or flowers to spruce up their landscape lately? Are you a fan of the hosta? They’re one of our favorite shade plants (haven’t killed one yet!). And they always seem to be popping up randomly around our yard (the same was true for our first house) so it gives us a little thrill that we don’t have to pay $5- 7 for them at the store since they seem to just sprout up at whim.
And those dudes are pretty darn hard to kill. True story: we once found one in a pot within a large sealed tupperware bin in our basement growing without any light or water about two months after we put it there while we moved! We thought the pot had nothing in it but dirt when we popped it into the bin along with some other pots, and then in the spring it started to sprout right inside the tupperware. We laughed for about five minutes when we found it. It was a hosta miracle, I tell ya.
Psst- We really should update this master list of outside tasks (it feels like we’re inching along out there, but we actually have a bunch we can cross off now).
Emily says
Just be careful if you decide to get a truck of mulch. We did that last summer, and my husband was covered head-to-toe with poison ivy. This year, we went back to Home Depot for the bags. It’s definitely more expensive, but the bags usually say they were selective with what they “mulched.”
Hope you enjoy the holiday weekend!
YoungHouseLove says
Oh no!
xo,
s
Amanda says
I’ve been getting my mulch for free from the City of Richmond. I just load all my trash cans and buckets into the car and fill them at the dump. Maybe Chesterfield doesn’t offer the same service, which is why you all have to buy it. Otherwise, I can’t figure out why people purchase it. Is there a quality issue?
YoungHouseLove says
I’ve heard from a few folks not in chesterfield who do that but don’t know of a place here that offers it for our county!
xo,
s
Julia at Home on 129 Acres says
I too am a fan of the hosta. I especially like these variegated green and white ones. Kudos on reusing. Free plants are like a little present!
Lauren says
I love the cute steps by the flower bed near the house! I can’t remember if you’ve mentioned this before, but does your entire cobblestone driveway get weeds like the spot in the pic by the mailbox?
YoungHouseLove says
It gets a few that I try to yank up but that corner gets them so bad for some reason! Maybe since it’s near the grass or the street?
xo,
s
Stacey says
We just started a shade garden this year and we’ve got four hostas out there from a mail order (they came as a bareroot plants – new experience for us!). Three have popped up lovely green leaves and are beginning to unfurl. One just sits there looking dead. We also put two in terra cotta pots by the back door – one is lovely, one looks dead. :(
Oh well, a 67% success rate isn’t bad for our first hosta experience!
YoungHouseLove says
I bet he’ll come back to ya! Fingers crossed!
xo
s
Diane says
My hostas are so hardy that they’re growing under the extra firewood rack we added this year (supplied by some trees we had removed.) There are green leaves peaking through the stand and the wood … As others have reported, I have some in full sun and some in mostly shade and they are all happy. Bulk mulch is great, but this year we finally got into the Boy Scout mulch program – they sell it by the 3 cu. ft. bags and deliver. Good for them, good for us, but they sell it early (March up here) for delivery in April. The bags are easier to move to where we need it in the yard, then you just slice and spread.
YoungHouseLove says
Thats’s awesome!
xo
s
Lauren says
I love hostas!! My mother swears by them as her gardening go-to. You never need to buy them either. You can just drive a shovel down the center of them, split and replant elsewhere and both plants will continue to grow and thrive. This is particularly helpful once they grow so big that they start become a dense wall-o-hosta. :) Enjoy!!
Christina says
Hostas are awesome; they do well in the shade but most types of hosta actually need some direct sunlight to reach their fullest potential. For me, I’ve learned that it’s mostly a trial and error thing when it comes to growing them, they tend to brown at the edge of the leaves if they’re getting too much sun, in which case you can replant them or plant something else next to it to provide some shade. One thing I’ve learned for sure though is if you have one of these guys with bluish-green leaves, keep them in the shade! All my blue angel hostas fried in the sunlight :( Variegated hostas usually do pretty great in full sun. Best of luck!
Stefanie says
Just because I think this topic hasn’t been completely knocked over the head yet, I think it has a lot to do with your location on how well your hostas can take the full sun. I tried two under a small tree (thinking they would grow together over time) and it wasn’t enough shade and they shriveled up to just barely a stem. But my parents live in Roanoke, Virginia (same climate as you) and their’s do fabulously! How lucky, I think!
YoungHouseLove says
So funny! Maybe it’s a Virginia thing!
xo,
s
Erica says
In the spirit of beating a dead horse, the exposure makes a world of difference, too. So, full sun on the north side of the house is less hot than full sun on the south side of the house. Also, people’s definition of “full sun” tends to vary widely. It technically means 8 hours of direct sunlight and most varieties of hosta won’t tolerate that. But a lot of people consider areas on their property that get 4-6 hours “full sun” and I think many hostas would do just fine with that, especially if they get enough water.
Linda says
Love hostas at my condo association – basically the immortals of plants! Re mulch, I would suggest doing some research into grades of mulch, etc., before buying a truckload – who knew there could be such a difference, and for our association it definitely was an issue of you get what you paid for. Our bargain mulch degraded pretty quickly. This year we sprung for a better quality mulch.
Off topic – thank you, Sherry, for your spray paint tutorials. My first try with a small resin table that had seen better days – Rustoleum and keeping that arm a-moving while spraying resulted in a table looks brand new! The first coat or two looked very sad – I kept telling myself, Sherry said it would look like that – just have faith! :-)
YoungHouseLove says
Yay, so glad! And thanks for the mulch grade tip!
xo,
s
Lynn @ SafeBeauty says
Thanks for this guys. We are going to be working tirelessly all weekend to get the front walkway to the house in order and we are scouring the land for some good plantage (shush squiggly line, I’m sure plantage is a word) to lay there. Those hostas say HOLLA! to me so I think we might have a contender…will let you know who wins out.
My best, Lynn
*I bet the super dark mulch takes even longer to fade huh? What do you think? Oh and I finally started up our house blog. If you’re bored…http://ourusefulhands.wordpress.com…it’s not much, but it’ll grow with us. :o)
YoungHouseLove says
Yay Lynn! Happy house blogging! And good luck with all the yard stuff this weekend!
xo,
s
Kari says
FYI (I didn’t read all the comments) but you can split hostas and they easily multiply in size. My mom can make fifty separate hostas out of one relatively large one. Like someone did say, they are total cockroach of plants !!
Lindsey says
I don’t know if this has been brought to your attention, but I came here yesterday on my iPod to read and tthe background is a picture of sherry, stenciling, maybe the sunroom tutorial, tiled all over, I can’t read anything!! Not sure if it’s your end or what, but I’ve read multiple times on my iPod without any issues!
YoungHouseLove says
That’s a weird iPhone / iPad glitch that pops up randomly on folks. Sometimes clearing your history will help, or it just clears up in its own in a day or two. Sorry!
-John
Not My Mother says
I love hostas and they look so good round the mailbox! I was wondering… you know that special sand you put on your patio to stop the weeds, could you add that to your driveway after the fact or is it only something that can be applied at the time? (I have selfish reasons for asking, of course :-)
YoungHouseLove says
Yes! It worked so well on the patio we’d love to eventually!
xo,
s
Jennifer Ashmore says
This doesn’t really have anything to do with this post, but I just love your yellow front door. I think it is so fun!
Paul says
Did you cut the dry mums stalks off -they should grow back every year, and if they get to tall, you can cut them back before the flower head appears.
YoungHouseLove says
They got dug up when we planted new stuff. We’ll have to try that next time!
xo,
s
Jody says
Love your new garden transplants! We are working on a very similar project here, and I am loving our hostas.
Not sure if you have something similar in Richmond, but here (Ithaca, NY) we have two free mulch pits in town. I think they are formed from the remains of any tree waste that the city cleans up. Residents can take one load per day, so my hubby just backs our truck up to the big pile and starts shoveling. It doesn’t have the same deep brown color as yours, but after putting lots of $$ into plants, stones, etc. for the garden, it’s so nice to get the mulch for free!
YoungHouseLove says
Wow, that’s awesome!
-John
may says
I love hostas, they are my favorite and most reliable perennial. They are so hardy and there are so many varieties, they can make quite an impact – you cannot go wrong!
deena says
Mulch tan line! LOL Yeah I’ve had a few of those.
Laura @cookicrumbsandsawdust.blogspot.com says
Oh yea – hostas are great for no maintainence gardeners, like me. Actually there lots of varieties too, shade or sun loving, variegated, mounding, etc.
And those suckers are bullet proof, or cement proof as we learned after replacing our front steps. My husband wasn’t too careful with the cement and lots got into our front beds.
And wouldn’t you know it, those babies came right up again after being trampled by a full size van and about a thousand trips of the wheel barrow, right thru the cement laden soil. Like other perrenials, their returning power is in their roots.
YoungHouseLove says
Haha, so funny how many trials you’ve put yours through and they keep popping back up for more!
xo,
s
Laura says
Hostas are the best! so lucky they are already in your yard to divide. My current project is building a rain garden. It is a “go green” initiative to conquer a water issue from sump pump drainage by using native plants to absorb the water in a specific garden.It keeps water from entering the storm drains. Tomorrow is the “big dig”. Maybe I can send a photos of the process when it is complete!
Lydia says
Off topic but I have to thank you for the cut in paint brush recommendation…it is awesome!
YoungHouseLove says
So glad!
xo,
s
Steph says
Great post!!! I just love working outside.
I must say your street looks amazing, so pretty and private. There is a bit of a view of it in one of the pics. It must be great for little ones, humans and dogs that is!!!
YoungHouseLove says
Aw thanks Steph! We got so lucky with our neighborhood! Everyone is so sweet and there are tons of old trees.
xo,
s
Alexis Shannon says
Wow, everything looks great! I really love the refreshing color of hostas.
Just an FYI, you can pick up as much free mulch as you want from the Henrico county Dump. It’s made from recycled yard scraps people take to the dump and you would be quite surprised at how nice it actually looks! This year, we got together with some friends, filled the bed of a pick up truck and helped each other cover most all of our beds in both of our yards. We have been very happy with it so far!
YoungHouseLove says
That’s awesome! Thanks for the tip!
xo,
s
Keisha says
FYI if you have a yard waste recycling center nearby, they have mulch and compost much cheaper than you can get pretty much everywhere else, at least that has been our experience.
Also, I just noticed that teeny tiny smiley face at the bottom of the page by the line with your privacy policy. I kept trying to wipe it off my screen until I realized what it was. :)
YoungHouseLove says
Haha- isn’t that funny? It’s put there by our stat tracker (it counts how many times the smiley face loads to tell us page-load numbers. I love that he’s friendly!
xo,
s
carol jane says
Love the hostas and petunias by the mailbox. Just wondering though, Hostas are for shade, and petunias are for sun? Do you get alot of sun in the front?
YoungHouseLove says
You can scroll back through the comments for some interesting info about them (apparently here in VA the variagated ones are great in the sun or shade- we have them in both and they seem to be very happy!).
xo,
s
Ronica says
I just put some in the front of my house that gets full, hot sun, and they are thriving. Apparently, the type I have is sun-hardy, just won’t flower (which is fine for me). I also tossed in some liriope and creeping sedum–all free. I did a FB post asking for plants, and friends came through with stuff they needed divided anyway. :) I put in some peonies and lilies from bulbs, but I think all the rain we get in central PA may have rotted them. Also made an herb garden, and am adding things bit by bit. A landscape architect friend told me to bury pots and put the mint and tarragon in them so they won’t take over like they were before. Also used cocoa shell mulch, since my dog isn’t out front alone and no one brings their dog to my front door anyway–it smells so much better, and I can actually open my windows without wanting to toss my cookies (instead it smells like cookies).
Filling my pots with green and purple foliage and purple, blue and white flowers of various types. Fun to do something different.
YoungHouseLove says
Wow, sounds beautiful Ronica. Love the idea of cocoa shell mulch too!
-John
Linda says
Cocoa mulch does smell great, and we were considering it for our condo association, but we’re a pet friendly association – and just a little too much concern about possible toxic effects on pets, especially dogs, for us. But, obviously, we have more than one dog to watch out for, and possible liability issues, so we’re hyper-conservative.
http://www.snopes.com/critters/crusader/cocoamulch.asp
Nancy says
We have a completely natural, forested backyard that gets very little sun. I have no skills when it comes to gardening so I added a few hosta around the trees back there last month. I hope you are right about them being hard to kill! Also, I know someone mentioned that deer love hosta. Before we even managed to get ours in the ground, the deer ate the leaves of half of them. We have since spread blood meal around them at the recommendation of the people at Lowe’s and so far the rest have not been touched. So you might want to try that if you have deer in the neighborhood.
YoungHouseLove says
Great tip Nancy!
xo,
s
jennT says
so surprised you haven’t ORB’ed the mailbox!
YoungHouseLove says
Well, we actually did ORB the box and the house numbers. So far the post has been spared our ORBing wrath – but we may paint or stain it one day! Here’s the post on that – https://www.younghouselove.com/2011/08/yup-were-those-neighbors-agai/
-John
jennT says
ooh goodness!! I musta missed it! :)
YoungHouseLove says
Haha, no worries!
xo,
s
Zoe Feast says
I am all into transplanting and making the most of what you have. I split up a patch of peonies last year and now have them all over my garden and also used a overwintering technique to preserve all my geraniums.
Check out the details here
http://www.creativeinchicago.com/2012/05/make-you-geranuims-last-forever-and.html
also if you are having a problem with deer here is homemade deer spray that cost just pennies and really does work
http://www.creativeinchicago.com/2011/05/homemade-deer-repellant-spray.html
YoungHouseLove says
Love the pics and the tip!
xo,
s
Stacy says
I thought I was one of a few that loved hostas. Apparently all the hosta fans have been hang out here. LOL
I have them everywhere in just about every type of micro-enviroment in our yard.
The ones that get full sun are watered more often to keep them from wiliting. The rest get partial sun. Some of them in the shadier areas get morning sun, others get filtered afternoon sun.
We have deer and they’ve never bothered with ours. They’re more interested in our neighbors vegetable gardens. I do have issues with slugs though and there are a few ways to dealing with them if you spot them.
A ring of crushed up eggshells around the plants. The sharp edges of the shells slice the skins of the slugs which kills them.
Garden centers carry copper rings. I’m not sure what it is about copper that slugs don’t like, but they don’t, so that’s another plan of attack.
Or you can use Epsom salt. Again, create a ring around the plant(s). The the salt will dry the slugs up and kill them.
If you do end up having a slug problem and choose either the eggshell remedy or the Epsom salt, neither will harm the plants or the soil. The copper ring doesn’t do any harm either.
Despite the slug problem, the hostas are still one of my favorite plants in our yard. The bigger and heftier they are, the more I enjoy them. Toads like them for shelter from other animals and rain as well.
YoungHouseLove says
Such interesting slug tips!
-John
christel says
My family owns a store that sells mulch and I will tell you bulk mulch is higher quality and much cheaper. It is fresh and not stuffed in a bag months and months ago forcing compost to already begin. So your mulch lasts longer, zero packaging and buying whole sale is always cheaper. Either have it delivered or get a trailer to take into a store to save on a delivery fee.
YoungHouseLove says
We’d definitely love to do that next spring when we have more beds done (and a better idea of the amount we need!)
xo,
s
Linda Bradshaw says
Your hostas certainly make the place look much prettier! I’m curious why you chose the dark mulch. The dark mulch is my hubby’s favorite, but I think that it smells terrible. And someone told me that the red cedar mulch helps to repel snakes and spiders, whereas the dark mulch attracts them. Of course that could be a lot of hooey, but that is what I heard. And of course I LOVE LOVE LOVE the smell of cedar!
YoungHouseLove says
We just randomly grabbed it on sale at HD (it usually fades in the sun to be a nice medium brown – and we haven’t had any pest issues). Cedar does smell awesome though!
xo,
s
Jeff Patterson says
Nice job on the mailbox. The hostas look great with the flowers. We also have hostas all over and they make for fantastic groundcover. I wish we had more :)
Asia @ Cape Cod Dreams says
What a difference. Looks so much better! Great Job!
Colleen P. says
If your hosta were already in full sun they should do fine, some varieties seem to tolerate it just fine so long as they get water. They may not grow much this year or next because sometimes that happens when they’re transplanted, though the third year they should really start attaining size and width. Cut them back when they’re done, in the fall, with scissors dipped in a mild bleach solution between each cutting (to avoid spreading any disease if they have it). Last spring we divided all the hosta in our front flowerbed-we started with 50 and had more than 200. Not all of them survived, but enough that they’ll fill in nicely in the next couple of years.
Peonies are a plant that allegedly loves full sun, but the ones that came with my yard don’t seem to like it one bit! LOL! You just never know until you try, I put some of mine in full sun and they won’t grow or bloom, but the ones I transplanted to another area of the yard that got a similar amount of shade are lush and beautiful, and peonies allegedly don’t like to be transplanted either. There almost always seems to be other factors involved and plants sometimes inexplicably thrive someplace where “by the book” they shouldn’t.
Mulch by the yard is much cheaper, but then you have to move mulch. By hand. In buckets and wheel barrows. For hours. And if it rains it turns into really heavy sludgy stuff.
YoungHouseLove says
Great tips all around!
xo,
s
Kathy says
Wow…I cannot believe how many comments this post generated. Just so you know…I’ll not read them all so delete this if someone has already told you, but…the first couple of years the plants are in the ground snip the flowers and let all the energy go into the plant and they get bigger faster.
They are a shade loving plant, but they’re pretty hardy. Some of mine get full sun (I never let them flower) and they are doing fine.
YoungHouseLove says
Great tip about cutting off the flowers!
xo,
s
Brittany says
Ok, so this is super weird, but you should try eating the hostas!!! They’re edible and taste sort of like salty asparagus. Unintentional veggie garden?
YoungHouseLove says
No way! Never knew that!
xo,
s
Jill says
Just saw Burger and Clara on people .com! Congrats! Can I expect to see Clara at Cannes anytime soon? What will she be wearing?
Jill
YoungHouseLove says
Haha isn’t that funny?! They asked to use it last year and must just be rerunning it this year! She’s looks so young!
xo,
s
Jessica says
I love mixing hostas with coleus and ferns. Great shade combo.
erin says
love the hostas and the mulch! it’s amazing how much mulch brings a “cleanliness” to beds. we really need to mulch our beds, but have been so busy we haven’t been able to get out and get any mulch.
on another note, we finally got our new toilet. the same one that you two just put in. unfortunately it wasn’t the simplest task for us. we got the old one off to find we have an old cast iron toilet flange with permanent bolts. after doing some research on replacing it with a new one, we just decided to keep it as is, meaning we’d have to use the bolts that were there. when we finally get around to remodeling the bathroom, we’ll replace it then. anyways, we got the bowl attached to the floor (after much cursing by my hubby due to having to deal with the stupid bolts and things not fitting right because of it). well, when it came time to put the tank on we ran into another problem! the rubber gasket that was listed in the parts in the instruction manual was not in the box so i had to run to our local hardware store to find one. did your toilet come with one? the box was open when i purchased it and the guy at HD that helped me said that it looked like everything was in it. oops on his part! thankfully we put it in on saturday and not tomorrow when all the stores are closed!
we love our new toilet! our old toilet was seriously 5 gallons per flush and took forever to fill up and just recently the float broke so we would have to turn the water valve on and off every time we wanted to flush the toilet. we are amazed at how little water this toilet uses and how well it flushes with such little water! so happy and we haven’t even been using it for a full day yet!
YoungHouseLove says
Oh no! I hate when projects go like that. Ours came with the rubber gasket so must’ve just been a bad box. Glad it worked out in the end!
-John
mp says
What beautiful work! I love hostas and wish I could plant some, but my house sits in the middle of a field, so most of it is a full-sun environment not hospitable to hostas.
Just my opinion, but I think the little patch around the mailbox looks great. I wouldn’t make it bigger. But that’s just me, who hates to dig!
YoungHouseLove says
Haha- thanks MP! You’re sweet!
xo,
s
Jasanna says
I don’t think I’ve ever seen hostas but I like them! And the mulch tan line is hilarious! I don’t think I’ve ever bought mulch…gulp! :)
http://munchtalk.blogspot.com/
Milly says
OMG!!! I was looking through People.com (please don’t judge me) and who is on the front page in the top corner? Clara and Burger!! Dressed as food:-) I think it is official, you guys are superstars!
YoungHouseLove says
Haha- isn’t that so funny? They ran that picture last year and must have picked it up again. Clara looks so tiny! Haha.
xo,
s
Karen says
I am obviously late to this post but just wanted to add that I adore a nice hosta. When we lived in North Carolina, they were my go-to plant for filling an empty space of mulch. Unfortunately, now that we’re stationed in southwest Oklahoma, the temperature is just too hot for the not-so-little suckers. Hosta la vista, indeed.
YoungHouseLove says
Aw, that’s sad! Maybe they’ll come up with some variety that can even withstand the Oklahoma heat someday!
xo,
s
Anna says
So these aren’t exactly outdoor-related, but have you seen these planters?
http://www.etsy.com/shop/fruitflypie
Enjoy :)
YoungHouseLove says
So cute!
xo,
s
Jen says
So I just popped over to People.com for my daily celebrity gossip, and Clara and Burger are on the front page! Crazy!
YoungHouseLove says
Isn’t that funny? That’s a pic they ran last year- must have picked it up this year again!
xo,
s
laura says
Hey guys! I love what you’ve done with the yard, but wanted to give you a little heads up that hostas are toxic to dogs, so if the Burgs is plant-curious, you might want to keep an extra eye on him! I’m not sure how toxic, but I use the aspca poison control plant list for reference in our yard, and hostas are on there. Can’t wait to see your next adventure! <3
YoungHouseLove says
Thanks so much! He doesn’t eat plants but my childhood dog did, so I always watch him just in case! So far no interest (he’s a food snob, so plants don’t do it for him, haha).
xo,
s
Laura says
Hey John and Sherry!!!!
Random comment in this post, but you would not imagine my delight and surprise as I am checking out people.com and saw Clara and Burger looking all sorts of cute on the people pets page! The photo caught my eye, and I said to myself, “that looks like Clara and Burger”! Kinda funny that I recognized them right away :) How fun! Congrats!
YoungHouseLove says
Isn’t that so funny? They randomly ran it again this year after sharing it last year!
xo,
s
Maria @ Vestir de blanco says
Guys, I think you mean “Hasta la vista” (see you soon).
YoungHouseLove says
Haha, it was a plant pun- so since they’re spelled that way, we did that as a joke!
xo,
s