Yesterday was Prairie Burn Day for my neighbors and I. We waited till very late to burn the prairie this year compared with previous years, all the better to suppress invasive sumacs and other brush plants which are now fully leafed out and more susceptible to fire. In fact, the burn went slowly because of a lack of wind and all the green grass underneath last winter's detritus. There were no casualties this year, not even to any of our electrical boxes or minor outbuildings. Most of my prairie is presently characterized by blackened earth punctuated by smoldering piles of donkey poo.
Burn Day's are communal and family events. My wife and daughter both participated, tolerating my constant direction about water stream and fire spreading technique as they complained incessantly about spider webs and the possibility of giant female-eating ticks. Burning Day also allows me to burn my garden debris piles in relative safety (surreptitiously photographed by my wife in the upper right picture) and they are a chance to burn out pack rat nests which accumulate in the woods around the pond.
This year, I took advantage of the occasion to check on the health of my son's Scotch Pine, shown here next to my daughter. It was a gift from some well-meaning foresters at his elementary school some 17 or 18 years ago, a tiny seeding that I planted near the pond in hopes that it would be isolated and escape the rampant Scotch Pine disease in the area. Its stands now almost 20 feet tall and healthy as an evergreen ox.
During every burn, I learn more about the prairie and my little portion of it. This year my daughter found and rescued this little turtle crawling in the grass about 50 feet from the pond and wanted to keep it. She was less excited when I told her it wasn't a box turtle but a snapping turtle searching for water. We left it down by the pond, safe from the prairie fire sweeping in its direction. I can't count all the rabbit and pack rat sightings of the week.
I rest now, content to let the passage of a few days clothe these burnt hills in emerald green. In the picture below, you can see the blackened prairie to the north of my house, and the green hills of K-States Beef Unit, burned three weeks ago, beyond. Soon the entire horizon will look like those hills, a sea of green grass ready once again for the summer passage of ghostly prairie schooners.
Though an old gardener, I am but a young blogger. The humor and added alliteration are free.
Showing posts with label Scotch pine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scotch pine. Show all posts
Sunday, May 4, 2014
Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Pineing Away
I saw Greggo's recent beautiful sunrise picture and post about the recent marriage and move of his son shortly before my bluebird trail cleansing Sunday and while browsing onto parts of my land I don't see routinely, I happened across a large reminder of my own son.
This Scotch Pine (Pinus sylvestris) was planted, as I recall, when my son was about a 4th grader, or about 14 years ago. He came home excited from school with the gift of a small seedling tree for his father, provided to him during a demonstration by some local foresters at school. When we planted it, down near the pond, it was approximately 4 inches tall and I protected it then, and still protect it, by mowing the tall grass around it every summer so that the lower branches don't catch fire during a Spring prairie burn. The pine overlooks a small fishing dock that we built together and from which I used to watch him fish the small bass in the farm pond. You could call this area and this pine my "memory bank" of my then young son.
Now towering over 10 feet tall, it is healthy as can be, either resistant to the pine wilt disease that has run rampant all over central Kansas in recent years, or more likely, just lucky. Certainly, the disease incidence seems tied to drought and high summer temperatures and we've had enough of those lately to stress this one to the limit. I knew about pine wilt even as I planted the tree with my enthusiastic son. You would have thought that the foresters knew better in the late-90's than to give a bunch of kids a susceptible tree to plant, but I guess they didn't. Most of the pines in Manhattan have died of the disease over the past decade, so perhaps the disease has passed my son's tree by and moved on without a reservoir of susceptible trees around. I had hopes that its isolation, about a mile from landscaped Scotch pines in town, would save it from pine wilt and the associated Sawyer beetles and nematodes, but I was discouraged recently to read that pine wilt disease usually only attacks trees that are more than 10 years old. So it is possible that I've protected this tree through childhood and young adulthood and I still might lose it soon. Just when I thought we were beyond the danger.
I was surprised recently to see that the tree has made it to puberty and now develops pine cones, as pictured at the left. I'm hoping that the development of pine cones is not a sign, since the tree and my son seem to have matured at the same rate, that Mrs. ProfessorRoush's dreams of grandchildren are to be fulfilled anytime soon. I'm happy to plant a few seemingly wilt-resistant Scotch pine offspring around, but this gardener is not ready for grandfatherhood. I'm not nearly that old or cantankerous yet.
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