Author Archives: Jaime
Four ways to love fall gardening!
The rain is back and the sun is fleeting but, that’s why I love fall gardening.
I’ve discovered that even a drizzly fall day can be lovely in the garden. Here are five ways that you can make the most of fall while preparing your garden for an early spring:
1. Plant bulbs now.
Some of the earliest signs of spring are flowering bulbs and the best time for planting bulbs is right now, in the fall!
2. Tidy up.
Fall is also the best time to prune as plants begin to go dormant for the winter. Trim perennial flower heads and trees and shrubs that have grown unruly or a bit too big for their allotted space. Some tips though: don’t prune more than 25% of a tree or shrub and if you want it to look natural, don’t trim it into a perfect ball. Think like a hairdresser and go for layers, instead of buzz cut.
3. Plant cover crops.
Try something new this year for those bare winter parts of your yard like the vegetable garden, annual flower beds, or that spot that you’re just not ready to deal with. Clean it up now instead of trying to tackle aggressive spring weeds, then plant a cover crop. Cover crops help keep soil healthy by reducing erosion in winter rains. They aerate the soil so that it doesn’t compact, and they fix nitrogen into the soil. Crimson Clover is my favorite but you can also get some great mixes.
4. Get ready for spring garden projects.
Winter is the time to prepare your plans for garden improvements. Collect and repair your tools, and research and gather any needed materials. If you have a clear idea of what you are going to change in your garden and how you are going to change it, come spring you won’t have to waste entire weekends running back and forth to Home Depot.
It’s this end-of-season gardening that pulls me outside to enjoy the beauty of fall while planting sweet dreams for an early spring. Give it a try! You’ll love it, even in the rain!
Need help getting started? Check out our great fall gardening specials!
Multnomah Falls Lodge & Entrance Planting Plan
We are incredibly excited about our newest project: a planting design for the entry planters at Multnomah Falls Lodge!
The current planting beds in front of the lodge are in decline and require aggressive maintenance to keep views open to the lodge, maintenance that doesn’t leave the plants looking their best.
In the new planting plan we are including a beautiful collection of native flora that will frame the views to the lodge and offer beautiful colors and textures year round.
We’ve just about completed the design phase and are getting ready for planting this coming spring! Stay tuned for updates.
Oh, and don’t worry! The waterfall is staying right where it is.
Q&A with Kahoots: Owner & Lanscape Designer Jaime English
Want to know a little more about what makes our designers tick? Today’s Q&A is with our Owner and Landscape Designer Jaime English. Read on!
When do you feel most creative?
When I am laughing. That’s when I lose all fear of trying something new.
What inspires you as a landscape designer?
I love the beauty of our natural environment, yet it is the people that I design for and with that bring me the most inspiration.
What is your professional background?
I graduated from the University of Oregon in 2005 with a Bachelor of Landscape Architecture. I’ve studied the gardens of emperors and monks in Japan, and reveled in the public plazas, pedestrian-friendly cities, and palatial gardens of Europe. I interned with the Vancouver Clark Parks department in 2004 and began work at the award-winning environmental and landscape design firm GreenWorks, in Portland in 2005, where I worked on a variety of high-quality restoration, stormwater, and public park projects. Meanwhile I made a hobby of dreaming up adventures in foreign lands, and in 2008 I jumped at the opportunity to work for the Atelier Dreiseitl in Ueberlingen, Germany. I worked on international design projects while living in a quaint little German town community, and traveled throughout Europe whenever time allowed.
What brought you to Kahoots?
After working on several major international projects I became intensely aware of how such large-scale projects leave the artist disconnected from the communities their work is meant to serve. I learned that I am most passionate about design at the local level, working directly with the people and the landscape that will be impacted by my design choices. It was this revelation that started the planning process for Kahoots. I love collaborating with my colleagues and clients in a way that nurtures my creativity and passion for design.
What is one of your most memorable projects?
Working on the master plan for Sr. Crawford Memorial Park in Vancouver Washington, while at GreenWorks. Sr. Crawford was a beloved police officer who was killed in the line of duty. We collaborated with his family in the design process and presented them with three design alternatives that reflected the loving and playful spirit of the father, husband, and brother their community remembered. They were so touched to see that a landscape design could celebrate their loved one and shared with us how much it meant to them to see beauty and life born out of tragedy. It was then that I first realized what a powerful, personal impact my work could have. This project was more than simply designing for a client – it was a way to help a family and a community grieve, celebrate, and move forward.
Any landscape design pet peeves?
I can’t stand parking lot shrubs that have been clipped into balls when the design intent was obviously to create a massing of plants that grow and blend together. I talk a lot with clients about changing maintenance practices and giving plants enough room to grow in the first place. I like nature to look like nature!
Of course every design rule has its exception. I still drool over this image I took in Versaille.
Any hobbies?
Growing up I never cleaned my room, I rearranged! It was so much more interesting to go from a messy toy- and clothes-strewn room to one that was totally different from the last time I saw it clean. To this day, I rearrange my furniture whenever I need a change of perspective. I can find every possible arrangement for a space no matter how many mismatched furnishings I have to fit in it. The more constraints, the more surprisingly fabulous the result! Maybe that’s why I like building code so much…
Q&A with Kahoots: Landscape Designer Alyssa Jenkins
Want to know a little more about what makes our designers tick? Today’s Q&A is with our Landscape Designer Alyssa Jenkins. Read on!
When do you feel most creative?
First thing in the morning. After coffee.
What inspires you as a landscape designer?
My favorite part of the design process is the development of a basic design – like the visioning plan – into the detailed nuts and bolts of something that can be constructed. Even a simple design is made up of hundreds of little details: the material of a path, the way it connects to a patio, even how each piece of wood connects on a trellis. To me a great deal of design is in the little details. Each element can be executed in a multitude of ways; the art is in choosing the route which will best enrich the entire experience. A beautiful landscape takes the concepts of the base plan and carries them all the way through into the construction of each item, creating a space that feels natural and unique.
What is your professional background?
I graduated from University of Oregon back in 2005, with a Bachelors in Landscape Architecture. I went from there to work for two years in Dublin, Ireland at Tiros Resources, a firm specializing in planning and landscape architecture. I got a lot of experience there on the design and development of urban projects, particularly landscapes on structure like green roofs, roof terraces, and landscaping over parking garages. I moved back to Oregon in 2007 and spent three years with Lango Hansen Landscape Architects in Portland. There I continued to develop my detail design with work on residential, college campus, and park projects.
What brought you to Kahoots?
Jaime and I met back in college when we were both pursuing our landscape degrees. We worked on quite a few school projects together and it was clear from the start that our working styles and strengths were compatible. We even used to joke about working together one day!
It’s fitting, really, because Kahoots is inherently about cooperation and that’s what we’ve always been good at.
{Jaime’s note: I was never joking!}
What is one of your most memorable projects?
While at Lango Hansen, I worked on a park in Sherwood, Oregon, called Sherwood Cannery Square. It was an exciting project because, while relatively small, it is a highly-programmed space with multiple event spaces and an interactive water feature. Working on the details for the construction documents was challenging yet enjoyable!
Any hobbies?
I love making things – especially knitting and sewing. There is something soothing about working each stitch of a garment, watching the piece slowly develop from what is essentially nothing. Two seemingly opposing forces are combined: the technicality of construction -turning all those flat pieces into something three dimensional – and the freedom of creativity – making something which is utterly unique. It is not unlike landscape design really . . . picking a pattern, selecting a material, and then carrying that design down into the details of each little stitch.
Doodle Practice: Draw a Stick Man!
What a fabulous little web site helping people be creative every day. If you have 4 extra minutes today spend 2 of them on this site! Its so fun!
Demistifying the Doodle
A doodle is the very first step in turning an idea into a design.
We sketch and doodle all the time as we develop designs here at Kahoots. But I’ll never forget the intimidation factor that drawing used to have for me. I was so sure there was a right and a wrong way to do it. For some people, the idea of drawing can be just as scary as public speaking.
I’ve believed for a while now that we all come by drawing naturally, and not just designers and artists, everybody. I’m not talking about drawing like Michelangelo, that takes years of training of course! What I am talking about is the kind of sketching or doodling that allows us to express the ideas in our head and then change and evolve them.
In design classes that I’ve taught I’ve seen sixth graders learn to use drawing as a tool for critical thinking at the same level that first year college design students do. The kind of drawing that you might do in a class or in a meeting or that my mom does when she is chatting on the phone. I remember being mesmerized by her repeating swirls and dots that filled the note pad by our phone in the kitchen. According to Sunni Brown, that phone doodling meant that my Mom was giving her fullest attention to the dear friend on the other end of the line.
Do you find yourself intimidated by the thought of drawing, of putting your ideas on paper? I love the research that Sunni Brown presents in this Ted talk proving that even you are a natural born Doodler!
Crane Residence
A brand new landscape for a brand new house!
Below are before and afters for Phase One. More plantings to come next year in Phase Two.
Photo by Rhett Jackson
Photo by Rhett Jackson
Photo by Rhett Jackson
Photo by Rhett Jackson
A Thank You Note!
A lot of work went into this website site upgrade and we are very grateful for all the help we received. An especially big thank you to:
- Vicky Knox Lieder our web designer at Shimna design I loved working with Vicky. We just clicked!
- Claire Willett our copy editor, Claire will tell you exactly how it is and then fix it.
- Rhett Jackson our photographer. He sees the world through some of the most beautiful eyes around.
- Kaya Singer of Awakening Business Solutions (http://www.awakeningbusiness.com/) without her coaching this site would likely have been left half done for years to come.
Many of you helped us too, with references, feedback and moral support!
To all of you, again, Thank You!
The Grand Tour
Welcome to our new Kahoots Website and Blog!
We are delighted to share our new site with its Google friendly features and new
interactive content. Please allow me to give you a little tour!
- Check out Built Work, for a showcase of our newly built projects.
- Look under the new Services page to read an introduction to the different steps of our design process.
- Like, Follow, or Tweet with us whenever you like!
- Meet the growing Kahoots Design Team including our newest team member
Alyssa Jenkins!
The completion of kahootsdesign.com site is a pretty big deal for us here at Kahoots.
We’d like to Celebrate with you by sharing one our easy DIY design ideas: The 8 Minute
Fort!
Idyllwild Pines Summer Camp & Retreat Center Master Plan
There is plenty of opportunity here at Idyllwild Pines Camp; an 87 year old retreat Center in Idyllwild California. Over the last year we’ve had a fabulous time uncovering all that potential while working on the new Centennial Master Plan. Its already a beautiful setting for a camp with many natural assets. It just needs a little site organization here, a few facilities improvements there to create a natural retreat setting ready for the next generation of campers. Here’s a peek at the site as it is now. Site Improvements are coming soon!