Posts Tagged ‘nativeplants’

What the Hemlocks Told Me

Sunday, August 22nd, 2010

My favorite tree in all the world died many years ago. She stood in the depths of The Jefferson National Forest. It was an Eastern Hemlock giant, double-trunked and probably 100 feet tall. At her feet a spring bubbled into the world of light and thirst.  I drank the water many times.

The tree seemed female, and she was a comfort on many trips into the woods before and after I made my homecoming to pagan practices and venerating the Good Earth.  Then, from parts unknown, or at least from parts unknown in Asia, a tiny parasite called the Wooly Adelgid began to slay all of Virginia’s hemlocks. A recent estimate I saw notes that 80% of the trees are now gone.

These trees, a lynchpin to the entire forest ecosystem, then began to die in other parts of the eastern mountains.  The hemlock had long been a source of tannin for settlers, and the cool shade they cast in deep coves provides habitat for trout in mountain streams.

When the devastation of these amazing trees began, speculation focused on the role of acid rain in weakening the trees’ resistance, but even with welcome news about reduced Sulphur-Dioxide from Midwestern power plants in recent years, the death of our hemlocks continued.  Some successes have occurred with the introduction of a small beetle that preys on the Wooly Adelgid in its native habitat. This may stem the destruction in the Smokies. In Virginia, simple back-yard solutions I use on my plants, such as spraying horticultural soap, have been applied at a much larger scale to save some specimen trees and thus their DNA for breeding pest-resistant varieties.

May the hemlocks return. In my eight-mile loop I did note survivor trees, none too large. A few showed some infestation, but it was minor.

That’s a think thread to hang a future upon. I know purists who say that 95% native is not native. These same fellow environmentalists dislike the idea of re-introducing the newly developed hybrids of the American Chestnut into nature.

As the reader might guess, I disagree. As a colleague in the sciences put it to me decades ago, by way of his personal friend Bill McKibben, the entire world has felt the hand of man. There is no longer any untouched nature, and thus our natural areas are, in effect, gardens. The wilderness I hiked the other day was once the site of Manganese and Iron mines.  And the Eastern forest has returned, despite batterings by Gypsy Moths coming south, Southern Pine-Bark Borers moving north as climate change works its evil magic. The canopy there looked as healthy, minus the hemlocks of course, as it has since I discovered its wonders nearly 30 years ago.

We gardeners cannot make nature do our bidding. We can, however, help shape what happens in nature. We can seed, prune, treat, and guard our plantings. We can press for good laws or press back against laws that do evil, to undo some of the stupidity of our fellow homo sapiens.

In 1900, the Blue Ridge Mountains were cleared completely. The trees were all gone, replaced by farms. Only a few stands in remote coves remained to reseed the world.  And if our technological society collapses, as I often fear it may when global oil supplies become scarce, some type of forest will outlast us until, in a distant era, the world again cools and the ice comes marching south.

Just a few days ago, in a place of unparalleled beauty, the surviving hemlocks whispered all this to me. Now I share it here.

Incidentally, I saved a piece of bark from my favorite tree, and it’s one of the most sacred things I own. I place it on my Samhain altar each year. I plan to have it go into my grave with my body. Perhaps the remains of my tree and me will nurture the roots of a healthier forest in a saner world.

May it be so.

Beauty Has Its Price

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

I would never have chosen to plant a Magnolia Grandiflora so near my house. Southern Magnolias are magnificent trees, when I see them on someone else’s property.  And besides, I’m not fond of the hokey reverence for the Old South, where one thinks of belles in hoop skirts and dashing gentlemen mixing juleps, not people bought and sold like livestock.

But I also cannot bear to cut down Blanche DuBois, as I have come to call this tree.  She’s a messy beauty, never picking up after herself, clogging downspouts, and casting a shadow over everything so dense as to exclude other lesser plants.

Thus Blanche is a Southern Belle with issues, like her namesake.  When the illusion of control for gardeners is most complete, in early Spring, she begins shedding leaves. And shedding leaves. And shedding leaves.

By early June, Blanche is done with her little pity-party and she explodes into blossom. Then we are back to enjoying her for another nine months.

My paganism keeps me from firing up the chainsaw, so here are a few tips if you too have to deal with your own Drama Queen of a tree, some advice:

  • Rake up the leaves weekly and mow them when you cut grass. The leathery leaves are very slow to decompose otherwise. When chopped, however, they make a decent mulch.
  • Lift up her skirt!  Blanche was not that modest, despite her pretensions. Just don’t be a Stanley Kowalski about it. Approach the Magnolia gently and remove the lowest limbs that droop down so you get some light under the tree. I tend to make this a mulch island using the chopped leaves.
  • Enjoy the other nine months, because Magnolia blossoms floated in a bowl of water are lovely and fragrant, and the sprays of green are handsome in deep winter. I cut a few and bring them inside in the dark half of the year.
  • Learn what Magnolia Grandiflora teaches us about how some trees develop; she looks like a deciduous tree yet sheds like a pine. Her behavior, all about herself and not about we tidy humans, puts us in our place because it shows us how temporary the order of a garden can be.

Mix a julep and go enjoy her company this summer.  Burdock’s Julep Recipe (per drunkard):

  • 1/4 cup simple syrup, chilled
  • 2 oz Bourbon, chilled
  • 2 big sprigs of mint, bruised by rubbing in your palms

Combine syrup and whiskey in a glass and mix. Add mint springs to Julep cup and add crushed ice. Pour syrup-Bourbon mixture over ice and mint, stir, and enjoy.

Hint: I don’t use my single-barrels for this. I employ a common Bourbon that Stanley would belt down during poker night.

That Scamp, English Ivy

Saturday, September 26th, 2009

It’s hard to believe how a plant that is so quaint, in one setting, becomes a nightmare in another.

This little garden faerie, so demure and coy, was molested by English Ivy. Today I pushed the marauder back further, given the blessings of recent and long-overdue rain.  Strand by strand, I uncovered native Columbine and parts of my struggling Rosemary plant from the dark green creepers.

In England, ivy is a rather frowzy gentleman, lending his charm to old buildings with a result as cozy as a Harris Tweed, a briar pipe full of bright and burley, and a “hot cuppa” on a chilly and damp afternoon.

Yet bring the English gent to the New World, and he becomes a lager-lout, sprawling, intruding, wrecking.

One principle of my garden-practice involves what I call “necessary cruelty,” where one simply has to intervene when Nature gets out of balance. I planted those first sprigs of ivy in an attempt to control erosion at the edge of our property. Now, it’s a carpet, joining another from my deceased neighbor’s garden (where poison ivy joins the party in the vegetable mosh-pit).

Now that two young fellows have bought that house, I’m actually pleased that they’ll do some judicious spraying of Roundup (the only toxin I own, with a quart of concentrate lasting me many years). The new neighbors promise to be very careful of my garden. I’ll go over to assist with my heavy-duty weed-whacker and sprayer on The Day of Doom.

My own organic methods of pulling and trimming work for me. Readers seeking to reduce another pest, Bermuda or “Wire” Grass, might want to look back at an old piece I did for Whole News (follow this link to all of my old columns). By there’s a lesson in the ivy beyond necessary cruelty: knowing the land and not planting foolishly.

Blessed Mabon and may your gardens go to sleep peacefully during the Dark Half of the year.

As a belated PS, I want to thank anyone who recalls my old monthly column of this name in the long-defunct free publication, Whole News.  It appeared in an era before blogs got popular, and I hope this blog will interest my fellow UUs, neo-pagans, and open-minded souls walking any spiritual path who seek ways to bring a bit of mindfulness and sustainable practice into their gardens.