I'm also sure a few of you are wondering what this has to do with ProfessorRoush's garden? There seemed, on the surface, to be little damage from the 70-80mph sustained winds both here at home and in Manhattan, primarily lots of small limbs down and lots of broken pieces of roof shingles laying around here and there. But, when it warmed up a few days after the storm, when I got out and actually wandered around the garden, I saw that it had taken down my long-standing wisteria trellis. I know this thing was old, but breaking off 4 six-inch treated posts that were cemented in the ground was not a trivial piece of damage. Thankfully, I had already taken down the Purple Martin houses earlier this fall or they would have been in Missouri, or the Atlantic ocean.
I took this damage casually with a shrug of my shoulders, but already lamenting what will surely be an abbreviated wisteria showing this spring. To disentangle this maze of vines will be impossible, so I'll be forced to merely chop the wisteria vines wherever they enter the trellis. I'll undoubtedly end up with a 5-foot tall pair of wisteria's, and I'll have to decide about building another trellis. This one was placed to be a "gateway" into or out of the back area of the garden and I've gotten used to its presence so I'll probably do something there. And also the wisteria have to have something to grow on. Normally, I'd put the cleanup off until spring, but since it is sunny and supposed to reach 65ºF this Christmas Eve afternoon, I can already hear it calling me.Here is a picture of the trellis in its better days, already old in this 2019 blog post it came from, but certainly functional and beautiful in a light-lavender sort of way. I thought the frame was unbreakable, but clearly I was flat-wind wrong. The lattice-work was decaying when this picture was taken and I think I replaced it that year, but the posts, in cement, should not have broken down. Or so I believed.ProfessorRoush will have to up his engineering game for the next trellis. I'm thinking maybe steel I-beams extending down into the bedrock might actually have a chance at standing longer than a decade?
Token poinsettia picture to wish everyone holiday cheer! |
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to everyone!