Los Angeles Times

From ho-hum lawn to humming hangout

- By Steve Carney home@latimes.com

Steve and Anita Widmayer wanted to update the landscapin­g of their Tustin home, likely unchanged since it was built in the 1970s — a patchy lawn thirsty for water, a bland sidewalk leading from the driveway, ho-hum hedges.

“You pull into the driveway, get into the house, you never see anybody,” Steve Widmayer said of their home of 24 years. “We wanted to make it more inviting.”

At first they considered an English garden — lots of flowers, a picket fence. But soon they realized how much water and work that would take to maintain. They began exploring water-wise gardening by doing research, attending home and garden tours in that style and visiting native-plant nurseries.

They knew they didn’t want California natives that looked great in the spring but went dormant in the dry summer.

The couple realized they needed the help of a landscape architect and scrutinize­d bids. (One reject had only the barest descriptio­n — “demo, install plants, install lighting, patio cover + irrigation.” But Widmayer, a civil engineer, knew that having a detailed contract and a deeply itemized plan would avoid problems mid-project. “You’re not going to get what you want if you just have an open checkbook,” he said.)

They ultimately enlisted Laurie Martz, an Orange County-based registered landscape architect, to help them find the right placement and mix of evergreens, flowering natives and other specimens to best balance water and maintenanc­e needs with year-round aesthetics.

Their main goal was to turn the yard into living space. They created a new front patio and arbor, where they can sip morning coffee or entertain friends in the evening, greet passersby, or simply watch the garden and its seasonal changes. “It’s just a pleasure to be out there and watch the birds do their little things,” Widmayer said.

They swapped the turf for feather grass and sedge, and added lavender, yarrow, cranesbill geranium, Pacific coast iris, and numerous varieties of sage and succulents.

The yard is anchored by trees — a California live oak in the center, along with a Meyer lemon tree, a Golden Nugget tangerine and a pomegranat­e he said has “done gangbuster­s.”

The fruit trees add to the new garden’s bonhomie, as the Widmayers share the harvest with neighbors.

Widmayer estimates the total project cost to be about $45,000, including $2,000 to remove the driveway, walkway and existing plants, $10,000 for new plants, $4,000 for irrigation, $8,000 for concrete work and $6,000 for a patio cover, for which they requested extra-large timbers to convey heft. They installed landscape lighting, all-new drip irrigation and deeproot watering for the trees. They also added raised beds for herbs and seasonal vegetables.

“It was a long time coming to this point,” Widmayer said — about eight months, including reviewing bids, scheduling and the actual work. “But we’re very satisfied, and we’re glad we did it.

“We’ve had people who have never been on the street before, and they knock on the door — ‘How did you do this?’ That’s been really, really nice,” he said. “If you’ve got a neighborho­od that hasn’t changed much and you do something exotic you can be kind of a pioneer.”

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 ?? Photograph­s by Steve Widmayer ?? IN TUSTIN, the patchy, thirsty lawn at Steve and Anita Widmayer‘s home, left, has been replaced with evergreen and flowering natives. Laurie Martz designed.
Photograph­s by Steve Widmayer IN TUSTIN, the patchy, thirsty lawn at Steve and Anita Widmayer‘s home, left, has been replaced with evergreen and flowering natives. Laurie Martz designed.

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