If you’re just tuning into ‘this WONDERfilled life’ it’s important that you know that we live in the city…like we live IN the city, the city of Chicago…so going from growing up in Alaska to living in a very extremely urban setting has been hard. We miss our green space but we miss our privacy most (houses in general are not this close to each other where we grew up). When we bought our home there were TWO things that we needed and considered non-negotiable…a fire place (wood burning preferred) and a garage. Eddylow had neither… *sigh* We dealt with the no fireplace by buying an electric unit a few years after we moved in, it doesn’t have the sound or smell of a real fire but it gets the job of ambiance done fairly well. The garage was a bigger feat. The yard was ready for a garage (meaning it didn’t have one) but the yard was encompassed by a 3 foot chain link fence…that offered no privacy and quite honestly no security. We knew what we wanted to do but we also wanted to do it right and only once…so we waited…mostly patiently but there were
definite impatient days. We love to entertain, especially outside, and so for almost 8 years we smile and nodded as neighbors walked through our alley, talking to us, commenting on our yard as we enjoyed our yard and entertained our friends…but when random strangers began to comment on how big P was getting we decided it was time to get serious about the improvement. The thing is, projects are often like a real-life dominoes, you have to do them in the right order to do it right…and be cost effective. So while we needed a fence, it made no sense to build that to turn around and tear a third down when
we finally added our garage, and we desperately needed a new car, but we couldn’t buy that until we had a garage to park it in (we were not interested in parking a new car on the streets of Chicago). So… garage had to come before anything else. I won’t bore you with the details, but we designed our garage specifically for our needs, a one and half car garage, extra deep (we wanted work benches around the car for projects) and an extended length. We also had them add a 10 foot overhang (roof) and we built a large 14’ x 12’ deck for entertaining. That same summer (technically that same week we did the deck) we tore out the chain link fence and built a beautiful cedar privacy fence. It was such a game changer for us. We could be in our yard and not be on display. The linden tree we planted was growing leaps and bounds and the yard became our own little sanctuary…or OASIS as we lovingly refer to it. Every year we do little things to make it even more perfect and I joke that once we get it completed it will be time to move!
This year we had a few things on the agenda, I wanted to paint the garage’s concrete foundation, but since we didn’t have gutters on the garage we had a mini mud pit out back every time it rained…so we had to do that… with that done I decided that I was tired of worrying about the kids getting heat stroke playing with the sand box and got the brilliant idea to move the “kid” area out back under our linden tree. I’ve been working hard on making the back a safe, fun place for them that doesn’t require a ton of setting up every time we want to use it…just open the back door and go. I was about to move the sandbox against the back fence when I read on a neighborhood watch group how a mom caught a young man taking pictures of kids in a yard through the gaps in the fence pickets. This totally freaked me out so I went out back and looked through ours, pretending to be walking by and sure enough I could basically see everything….







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We decided to take a chance on the installation and used our brad nailer. It was perfect. Using 5/8″ nails got us through the board and the back fence picket but not all the way thru.

I wanted a wood frame around the boards so we grabbed 8 cedar fence pickets from Menards and mitered (cut them on a 45 degree angle). Mitering can get confusing so I made sure to draw the direction of the cut on each end as we marked them. Nothing is worse that cutting the ends of a board only to find out you cut one end the wrong direction! We also didn’t measure anything for this. It was much easier and more precise to hold the pickets up to the fence and mark where we needed to cut.


Considering we built the fence three years ago and parts have shifted so the “squares” are not all that “square” anymore, we were able to make the mitered corners work. I won’t lie, there was a little swearing, a pry bar and a “quick nail it” overheard during the process…but now that it’s done who’s keeping track?

With the boards done all I had to do was add two hooks I had left over from a project last year and hang my Target *dollar bin* metal buckets filled with sidewalk chalk and we were done…well until a week went by, then I could “season” the board…

Last but not least we had to “season” the board by rubbing a piece of chalk over both boards and then erase.



The best part was watching P, Bubba and their friends hover around the boards and drawing all sort of things during a recent playdate. Isn’t this the sweetest?
I’ll post more updates once we stain everything but gosh, this was a fun and relatively inexpensive project with such a great impact for our kiddos! Bonus, I don’t have chalk on my sidewalk or the kids’ clothes from laying on their artwork plus they have oodles more space than what our yard sidewalk offered them…all in a safe, secure and private area.













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