On the bright side, I recently salvaged a piece of Baltic Brown granite from our kitchen island during a remodeling of the kitchen and I made it into a wind-proof garden bench which, despite its unprotected placement to the north side of the house, stood up well to the worst the storm threw at it. I think it provides a really nice formal touch to this area. The new bench also proves once again that gardening in Kansas is often a simple matter of over-engineering and weighty solutions. So now all I have to do is apply that knowledge and create a cement post for the 'American Pillar' rose, anchored down about forty feet into the bedrock. That shouldn't be too hard, should it? Though an old gardener, I am but a young blogger. The humor and added alliteration are free.
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Friday, October 10, 2014
Wee Bit O' Wind
On the bright side, I recently salvaged a piece of Baltic Brown granite from our kitchen island during a remodeling of the kitchen and I made it into a wind-proof garden bench which, despite its unprotected placement to the north side of the house, stood up well to the worst the storm threw at it. I think it provides a really nice formal touch to this area. The new bench also proves once again that gardening in Kansas is often a simple matter of over-engineering and weighty solutions. So now all I have to do is apply that knowledge and create a cement post for the 'American Pillar' rose, anchored down about forty feet into the bedrock. That shouldn't be too hard, should it? 
That sounds like a beast of a storm ! I hate that first venture into the garden to ascertain the damage - you never know what you will be faced with ! At least the house is still standing , and everything after that can be construed as a bonus ?
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