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Putting Your Garden on a Pedestal
Australia

071008aus-jenny02.jpgAdding some art deco style to your garden couldn't be made any easier than recycling an old enamelled pedestal sink - and what’s more it’s the only bathroom related renovation that won't cripple you with call out fees from your friendly plumber! Above is a birdbath involving little more than an old sink (bought at a yard sale), a plug, pebbles and water. But please don’t underestimate the importance of the pebbles, you wouldn’t want a feathered friend slipping on the soap and drowning...

 
 

071008aus-jenny01.jpgHere's a slightly more horticultural take, filled with potting mix and planted with ornamental strawberries - come spring this wash stand will be draped with new foliage and brimming with bright red berries. This version doesn’t even require a plug!

Post and photos by Jenny

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Look!, garden, sink, Australia, Jenny

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Comments (27)

That is so hot. I'm so doing that, cant decide if i'm going to use strawberries or pansies - maybe i'll have to buy 2 sinks.

posted by Bob Fossil on July 10th 2008 at 1:32pm
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The pictures are flip-flopped.

posted by ashy on July 10th 2008 at 1:54pm
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AT just jumped the shark

posted by hdtex on July 10th 2008 at 3:01pm
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I hate old plumbing out in the yard like this. Sinks and tubs and especially toilets really don't look that cool outside as you think they do, just because they're vintage, probably cracked, and essentially useless in the conventional renovations. And, the one with the pebbles looks like someone threw up creamed corn in it. Birds might actually rather you had.

posted by K T G on July 10th 2008 at 3:09pm
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Yep....

Y'all jumped.

posted by ohjodi on July 10th 2008 at 4:53pm
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This must be from the New Book "Double Wide Design." Terrible.

posted by Volvoguy on July 10th 2008 at 6:42pm
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Wow KTG, maybe AT could spot you some coins for the therapy you need regarding that. Those sinks look pretty cool in the photo's, are you saying in real life they probably look like vomit? Darn lying cameras!

posted by pinky speedway on July 10th 2008 at 6:44pm
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They might look neat, but these can be prime mosquito breeding sources if you're not careful and don't regularly clean them and change the water. It only takes water standing for a few days for mosquitoes to move in to breed. And with diseases like West Nile virus, do you really want to take a chance?

posted by glassesgirl on July 10th 2008 at 8:39pm
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I'm from Australia, where I think this post is from - and whilst I get how this might not be everyones cup-of-tea so to speak, we dont have the West Nile virus glassesgirl - not that i know of anyway. But the good thing about birdbaths is birds eat the bugs that live in the water, so its not really a problem.
I've never been to the USA, it sounds like you dont have birdbaths at all for fear of these deadly mosquitoes - is this true?

posted by Bob Fossil on July 10th 2008 at 9:20pm
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I love the first image. I think a fountain in that sink would look great.

posted by Kerith on July 10th 2008 at 10:57pm
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I don't know... it kind of reminds me of the time a next-door neighbor remodeled and left an old sink and toilet in the front yard for weeks.

posted by ElleBee on July 11th 2008 at 2:04am
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Sorry, but I have to agree with KTG...The first thing that came to my mind when I saw the first picture was someone throw up inside that sink...Plus, this is a real mosquito breeder. Not cool.

posted by erika_ees on July 11th 2008 at 2:56am
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I second KTGs opinion...usually I am very open minded, but this is horrible!

posted by yelena on July 11th 2008 at 3:11am
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Not a fan. And even in Australia there are mosquito-borne diseases.

posted by cal on July 11th 2008 at 3:20am
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i have to admit, the first things i thought about were also vomit in the sink and mosquito breeding ground.

posted by hikatie on July 11th 2008 at 3:56am
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Don't care. Love it. Except the color of the pebbles in that sink.

posted by whytephoenix on July 11th 2008 at 4:56am
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My first thought was MY GOD SOMEONE THREW UP IN THAT SINK!

posted by elvedon on July 11th 2008 at 5:17am
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Love it! BUt would use bigger rocks in the sink.

posted by steph.h on July 11th 2008 at 5:18am
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Yeah, turquoise pebbles or large river stones could be really beautiful but it doesn't look nice the way it is.

posted by Monkeyme on July 11th 2008 at 5:20am
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I thought the first photo looked like beans soaking. I think birdbaths and fountains in gardens are really nice (and they're not uncommon, Bob Fossil) but I think there's something a little wormwood about these sinks.

posted by Sarah122 on July 11th 2008 at 6:57am
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uh... neat idea perhaps? I think I dig seeing a sink vs a toilet-

but the birdbath idea? Like most, I thought someone had thrown up in it and it looks like a definite mosquito breeding ground lol.

Maybe if they used the old-school glass pebbles you'd use in an aquarium set up-

posted by dunklekatze on July 11th 2008 at 7:30am
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Yeah, that's ugly, sorry AT.

I'd so much rather see a whiskey barrel (which has been done a million times) cut in half with plants or a water garden in it. That just looks like you have a plumbing problem.

posted by inertia on July 11th 2008 at 8:54am
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While I don't love this, a simple pump would make the mosquito breeding less of a problem. But old junk in the yard just doesn't really seem all that creative and interesting.
Mirrors in the garden, on the other hand, are wonderful.

posted by Palmetto on July 11th 2008 at 10:01am
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This is a great, creative way to offer your guests a beautiful place to puke in the yard. Now that is luxurious living!

posted by little ribbons on July 11th 2008 at 2:11pm
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Garden Junque makes it to AT. Wow. I didn't see that coming.

Does this mean Bathtub Madonna's are going to be the next hot must-have? I'm actually hoping it's the flower-tire planters...I have one that a previous owner left and I just want to be cutting edge for ONCE in my life.

For those of you who don't have a spare pedestal sink lying around (perhaps you did The Cure and didn't realize that old sink's awesome potential), you can always glue pennies or mirror shards to a bowling ball and make yourself a garden junque gazing ball.

Just be sure to send in a pic to AT.

posted by typicalguineapig on July 11th 2008 at 11:54pm
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bob fossil:

australian mosquito borne infections:

http://medent.usyd.edu.au/fact/mosquitoes.htm#mosq
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg15721230.300-plagues-progress--a-deadly-mosquitoborne-disease-is-poised-to-enter-australia.html

mosquito biology:

http://www.entomology.cornell.edu/MedEnt/MosquitoFS/MosquitoFS.html

please note, birds do not seem to be on the predator / control list.

of course people still have bird baths in the US....and they either change the water regularly, get rid of rocks and crevices for larvae to hide in, install pumps, or ignorantly put their neighbors at seasonal risk.

having seen dengue, several types of encaphalitis, malaria, yellow fever, and west nile professionally, the birdbath would have to be much nicer then this for me to even imagine the risk:reward argument. and with global warming and international travel it is only going to worsen.

sorry to steal / kill some of the joy from your water features.

posted by healthyhome on July 12th 2008 at 3:48pm
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Done correctly, this look can work. When I say correctly, I mean:
#1: Setting: A ramshackle bungalow or craftsman style house with a bohemian vibe and garden to match can definately accomidate the sink as planter if

#2: Plants: various tall and medium plants are planted around the base to provide a bit of a disguise so you are not confrented by a sink upon entering the garden, but rather an unusually staggered grouping of flora and fauna.

I agree w/ Palmetto and the others that if a sink is going to be used as a water feature, make it an asthetically appealing one. Add a water pump and for the love of god, pick some rocks that look like they came from nature, not the pit of your stomach.

posted by Seaside on July 13th 2008 at 2:26pm
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