and devastation.
Last weekend, there was a storm in cottage country. The recent stretch of warm weather was just about to end. It rained during the day, but as the temperature dropped, it changed to wet heavy snow and it just kept coming down - 23 inches of it.
The electicity went off on Saturday evening and was not restored until Wednesday, because there were innumerable line breaks from trees falling.
A cottage neighbour (who lives there full-time, and had the joy of dealing with that lengthy black-out) alerted us that there was damage. So we went to the cottage this weekend to assess.
Our cottage lot is small - 170 by 100 feet. And we have lost at least 20 trees. There is no way to know yet how many, as some are bent so far over that they may not survive. The electricity line that leads to the cottage is under two downed trees. Some of them are literally uprooted; some of them are snapped; a couple have shattered boles and some are 'merely' bent over to the ground.
This is a place with no soil cover. There is bedrock, then about 8 inches of old morraine rubble and a bit of soil mixed into it. Trees take roughly forever to mature. One tree that my husband's grandfather planted a good sixty years ago is all of 20 feet tall. So the lost trees are old.
It is hard to show this in photographs, because I cannot give background adequately to explain what you 'should' or 'should not' be seeing.
For example, you 'should' be able to see from the road to the water, along the side of the cottage. When you stand at the poplar stump, looking toward the back of the cottage, you 'should not' be able to see the cottage at all, due to the number of trees that 'should' be in between.
The 'invisible' lilac is 15 feet high, but it is under another downed tree right now. Birch trees should not look like weeping willows in outline. Cedar trees do stand upright.
The bottom line is: we don't yet know the bottom line. We cannot do anything until at least another month has gone by, and the intervening weather could make the damage much worse.
I do know this for sure: the shade gardens that I have painstakingly been building for the past few years are no longer in shady locations.
But the snow sure looks purty on the trees....
Photographs / slideshow available here:
http://ca.pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/shadow1.../my_photos
Last weekend, there was a storm in cottage country. The recent stretch of warm weather was just about to end. It rained during the day, but as the temperature dropped, it changed to wet heavy snow and it just kept coming down - 23 inches of it.
The electicity went off on Saturday evening and was not restored until Wednesday, because there were innumerable line breaks from trees falling.
A cottage neighbour (who lives there full-time, and had the joy of dealing with that lengthy black-out) alerted us that there was damage. So we went to the cottage this weekend to assess.
Our cottage lot is small - 170 by 100 feet. And we have lost at least 20 trees. There is no way to know yet how many, as some are bent so far over that they may not survive. The electricity line that leads to the cottage is under two downed trees. Some of them are literally uprooted; some of them are snapped; a couple have shattered boles and some are 'merely' bent over to the ground.
This is a place with no soil cover. There is bedrock, then about 8 inches of old morraine rubble and a bit of soil mixed into it. Trees take roughly forever to mature. One tree that my husband's grandfather planted a good sixty years ago is all of 20 feet tall. So the lost trees are old.
It is hard to show this in photographs, because I cannot give background adequately to explain what you 'should' or 'should not' be seeing.
For example, you 'should' be able to see from the road to the water, along the side of the cottage. When you stand at the poplar stump, looking toward the back of the cottage, you 'should not' be able to see the cottage at all, due to the number of trees that 'should' be in between.
The 'invisible' lilac is 15 feet high, but it is under another downed tree right now. Birch trees should not look like weeping willows in outline. Cedar trees do stand upright.
The bottom line is: we don't yet know the bottom line. We cannot do anything until at least another month has gone by, and the intervening weather could make the damage much worse.
I do know this for sure: the shade gardens that I have painstakingly been building for the past few years are no longer in shady locations.
But the snow sure looks purty on the trees....
Photographs / slideshow available here:
http://ca.pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/shadow1.../my_photos