Side Yard · The Manor · Litchfield County CT

The Border Garden

Plants picked. Crew booked. Our job is to be ready.
Plant brain High Line director, en route from nurseryInstall Garden crew confirmed for May 16Critical path Clear the bed in 13 days, poison ivy first
Plant selection Handled by friend, en route from nursery
Install labor Crew confirmed, working with friend on day
Our role Site direction, QA on placement, logistics
Critical path Clear the bed in 13 days, poison ivy first
Install date Saturday May 16
Window 13 days, May 3 to May 16
Location Side yard, house-to-neighbor seam
Dashboard area Side Yard
1 Why This Kickoff Is Different
Reframe

The standard kickoff exists to pull in expert plant selection and decide DIY vs pro. A High Line director is doing the plant brain. A garden crew is doing the labor. That removes the two largest unknowns from a normal garden install and exposes the one we actually own: making sure the bed and the day are ready when the truck arrives.

PLANT SELECTION Handled by friend, en route from nursery
INSTALL LABOR Crew confirmed, working with friend on day
OUR ROLE Site direction, QA on placement, logistics
CRITICAL PATH Clearing the bed in 13 days, poison ivy first
2 Do This Week, Regardless
Three Actions Before Next Weekend Time-sensitive

Call 811 (CBYD), Monday May 4. Connecticut's Call Before You Dig service. 811 or 1-800-922-4455, or cbyd.com. Required by state law for any dig deeper than 12 inches. Free. Minimum 2 business days between call and marking, so calling Monday gets you marked by Wednesday or Thursday. Marks valid for 30 days, perfect for the May 16 install. Before they arrive, mark the intended dig area with white spray paint or white flags. Tell them on the call: concern about a water line in a tree area. They will prioritize blue marking (water). Color codes: blue water, yellow gas, red electric, orange comms, green sewer.

Buy a 100 ft hose. 5/8 inch diameter. Flexzilla (around $70 at Tractor Supply, Torrington) or Continental Premium. Brass fittings only, no plastic. Add a quick-connect set (~$15) so you can swap between sprayer, soaker hose, and bucket-fill without rethreading. Confirm reach to the bed before delivery day.

Block one full weekend day for poison ivy clearing. Saturday May 9 or Sunday May 10. PPE staged in advance, contractor bags ready, Tecnu in the bathroom. Full protocol in Phase 01 below. Do not let this slip into the week of delivery.

3 13-Day Timeline
13-Day Timeline Install May 16
T MINUS 13 TO 7 May 3 to May 9, clear and treat the bed (critical)
T MINUS 6 TO 1 May 10 to May 15, soil, edging, staging
T MINUS 0 Saturday May 16, delivery and install
4 Phase 01 · Pre-Delivery Clearing
Poison Ivy First, Before Anything Else Highest risk task

Poison ivy is the only thing on the site that can put you in the ER. Treat it as a separate job with its own PPE, its own waste stream, and its own weekend. Do this before the friend ever sees the bed.

Removal protocol:

  • Identify all vines and ground growth before starting. Three leaves, glossy, often reddish edges. Roots can be ropey and hairy.
  • Cut at the base with loppers, then dig out the root crown with a spade. Do not pull vines off trees with bare hands or shake them.
  • Bag every piece into contractor bags, double bag, label as solid waste. Litchfield Transfer Station accepts as regular trash, not yard waste.
  • Do not burn. Do not compost. Urushiol stays active on dead plant material for years.
  • Tools get wiped with rubbing alcohol or strong dish soap before going back in the shed.
  • Strip clothes outside, wash separately on hot, shower with Tecnu within 4 hours.
NOTE Spray-and-wait with triclopyr or glyphosate is the easier path but takes 2 to 3 weeks to fully kill. The 13-day window does not support it. Manual removal is the right call here.
Norway Maple Saplings Invasive in CT

Acer platanoides. If you cut them flush they regenerate from the root crown within weeks. Two paths depending on stem diameter.

Under 1 inch diameter:

  • Soak the soil at the base the day before to soften it.
  • Pull with a weed wrench tool (Pullerbear, Uprooter) or grub out by hand with a transplant shovel. Get the entire root crown.
  • If a sapling snaps off at the surface, dig the remaining stub out completely.

Over 1 inch diameter:

  • Cut to 4 inches above grade with a hand saw.
  • Within 5 minutes of cutting, paint the freshly cut stump with concentrated glyphosate (Roundup Concentrate Plus 50%). Use a small brush, not a sprayer.
  • Mark the stump with a flag so the crew avoids planting directly on top of it.
CHECK Worth checking how many saplings are over 1 inch before delivery. If more than five or six, the bed may need to be reshaped to route plantings around dead stumps that cannot be fully removed in time.
General Weed and Brush Clearing
  • After poison ivy is bagged out, mow or string-trim the rest of the bed to ground level.
  • Pull or grub remaining woody debris and tap roots. Bag separately from poison ivy waste, this can go in regular yard waste.
  • Rake clean and walk the bed. Mark any drainage low spots, rocks larger than a softball, or anywhere a tap root broke off and may need to come out before planting.
  • Take photos of the cleared bed from three angles. These go in the project log so we have a baseline.
5 Poison Ivy PPE Staging

Stage all of this before the clearing weekend. Do not skip any line, urushiol exposure is the highest-consequence risk on this project.

Nitrile gloves under leather work gloves 2 pairs each
Still Needed
Long sleeve disposable Tyvek or old shirt to throw out 1
Still Needed
Safety glasses, N95 mask 1 each
Still Needed
Tecnu skin cleanser (post-job wash) 1 bottle · ~$10 at CVS
$10 Buy
Heavy contractor bags, 3 mil 5 to 10
Still Needed
Rubbing alcohol for tool wipedown 1 bottle
Still Needed
6 Phase 02 · Pre-Delivery Prep

Materials and staging to have on site before Saturday May 16. Some lines wait on the friend's plant list, flagged below.

Screened compost, delivered 3 to 4 cubic yards · Mountain Top Tree, Litchfield · ~$45-55/yd plus delivery
$135-220 Still Needed
Soil test sample to UConn Soil Lab $12 · results in 5 to 7 business days · establishes a baseline and tells us what to amend going into Year 2
$12 Still Needed
Bone meal and slow-release fertilizer Hold until friend confirms the plant list · some shrubs prefer lean soil
Awaiting plant list
Shredded hardwood mulch 2 to 3 in across the bed · ~1.5 to 2 cubic yards · Mountain Top Tree (Litchfield) or O&G Industries (Torrington) · delivered Friday May 15, dumped on tarp in driveway
Still Needed
100 ft Flexzilla hose, installed and tested 5/8 in · brass fittings only · confirm reach to furthest bed corner with 10 ft of slack by Friday May 15
~$70 Buy
Quick-connect set On faucet, sprayer, and soaker hose so swaps happen in seconds during planting
~$15 Buy
Marking paint or garden hose for bed perimeter Lay the bed in its final shape, then spade-cut a clean vertical edge along the lawn side, 4 to 6 in deep, angled out
Still Needed
Tool pile staged at the mulch Tarp, two flat shovels, two transplant shovels, two D-handle round-points, two pairs of pruners, a digging bar, a wheelbarrow
Owned
5-gallon bucket for root soaking Filled with water on delivery day
Owned
Confirm garden faucet on and not leaking Winterized last fall · confirm 811 marks still visible, re-flag any washed out before crew arrives
Still Needed
Soil, Edging, and Hold-For-Later

Soil and amendments: until the friend confirms the plant list we cannot finalize amendments, but we can de-risk by getting the basics ready. Generic compost may be wrong for part of the list, so hold bone meal and slow-release fertilizer until the species are known.

Edging and bed definition: the crew will work faster if the bed is edged and visually defined before they show up. Mark the perimeter, spade-cut a clean vertical edge along the lawn side, and hold off on steel or stone edging until after Year 1. Let the plants establish before locking the shape in.

Mulch timing: mulch goes down after planting, not before, but it needs to be on site Saturday morning. Have a tarp, two flat shovels, and a wheelbarrow staged with the mulch pile.

7 Phase 03 · Delivery Day Playbook
Saturday May 16, Your Role Is Direction and QA Hands clean, eyes on

You are not planting. You are walking placement with the friend before holes get dug, checking depth and spacing as the crew works, and keeping the operation running. Logistics and quality, not labor.

Step 01 Morning, Before Truck Arrives
1.
Walk the bed one final time. Confirm cleared, edged, no surprises.
2.
Stage the watering bucket, hose, mulch tarp, and tool pile in a single area.
3.
Coffee, water, and a snack table set up. The crew will work harder when they are taken care of.
4.
Print or pull up the planting placement notes from the friend on phone.
5.
Brief the neighbors on the south side that there will be activity for a few hours.
Step 02 When the Truck Arrives
1.
Direct the truck to the closest possible drop point. Do not let plants get unloaded onto the lawn, driveway or a tarp only.
2.
Do a quick visual inventory against the friend's plant list. Note anything missing, damaged, or substituted.
3.
Stage plants in shade if install will not start within 30 minutes. Water any pots that look dry.
Step 03 During Placement (Your QA Window)
1.
Walk the bed with the friend. Place every pot in its final spot before any digging starts. This is the most expensive minute to skip.
2.
Step back and look from the street, the porch, and the kitchen window. Adjust before holes are dug.
3.
Once placement is locked, photograph the layout from above (drone or upstairs window) for the planting map.
Step 04 During Digging and Planting (Spot Check)
1.
Spot check that holes are roughly twice the width of the root ball, not deeper than the root flare.
2.
Confirm root balls are scored or teased, not planted as a solid pot-shaped plug.
3.
Confirm soil is being amended into backfill at the rate the friend specified, not piled on top.
4.
Watch the first plant get installed end-to-end. Once you trust the rhythm, you can step back.
Step 05 After Install
1.
Mulch goes down 2 to 3 inches deep, kept off stems and trunk flares (no volcanoes).
2.
Deep water every plant immediately after planting. Slow soak, not a spray.
3.
Save every plant tag in a labeled bag. These go into the project log.
4.
Settle up with the crew. Tip generous if the work was good.
08 Phase 04 · Documentation
Make This Worth Finding in 2030

The friend will not always be the gardener. The plant tags will fade. In three years you will not remember which shrub is which. Capture this on Saturday, not later.

  • Overhead photo of final placement, before mulch goes down. This becomes the planting map.
  • One photo of each plant with its tag visible, named in the file.
  • A typed list: species, common name, quantity, position on the map, mature size, sun and water requirements.
  • The receipts and the friend's source notes from the nursery.
  • One video walking the bed with the friend explaining design intent. 90 seconds is enough.
FILE UNDER Manor knowledge base · Side Yard · Border Garden · Year 1 Install
09 Phase 05 · First 14 Days Post-Install
First 14 Days

Watering: deep soak every 2 to 3 days for the first 14 days, then taper. New plantings die from underwatering more than anything else in Year 1.

Monitoring: walk the bed daily. Wilting, yellowing, or signs of transplant shock get photographed and sent to the friend within 24 hours.

Protect: stake anything tall enough to lean. Flag the bed perimeter so it does not get mowed or stepped on by anyone working on the property.

10 Open Questions for the Friend
Open Questions for the Friend

What is on the plant list, with mature heights and spreads? Drives bed depth requirements, spacing, and whether the current bed footprint is large enough. Needed before May 10 so we can lock edging and confirm soil volume.

Any special soil amendments per species? Some shrubs want lean, some want rich, some want acidic. Generic compost may be wrong for part of the list. Affects what we order from Mountain Top and whether we add bone meal or sulfur.

Is the crew confirmed for Saturday May 16, and what time? Locks in delivery window, neighbor notice, and whether the friend or crew leads on placement. Need 48 hours notice if we have to install ourselves instead.

Cost structure, what is being gifted, comped at cost, or invoiced? Determines budget envelope for everything else (mulch, soil, tools, crew tip). Comfortable asking directly. Better to know now than to scramble Saturday.

Any plants arriving B and B (balled and burlapped) vs container? B and B plants need different handling, deeper holes, and burlap removal protocol. Changes tool list and crew time estimate.

First-year fertilizer plan? Some installs use root starter at planting, some skip it entirely. The friend will have a strong opinion. Add to materials list if needed before delivery.

The Work Serves the Life

This bed is the visual seam between the side of the house and the neighbor's property. Done well, it is privacy you can sit with for thirty years. Done in a hurry, it is a row of plants that did not make it to fall. The clearing weekend is the one that matters most. Block it now.

The Manor · Side Yard · Border Garden Kickoff May 2026 · install Saturday May 16 · confirm plant list before ordering soil and amendments