The Rural Voice, 1994-04, Page 50Workshop
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46 THE RURAL VOICE
Gardening
Garden problem
gnaws at you
by Rhea Hamilton -Seeger
I don't know about you, but I was
truly delighted with the snow that
swirled around our yard this winter
and finally settled in great heaps on
the garden. In the past, I have
worried about my perennials being
exposed to the intensely freezing
winds that dry everything out and kill
what is left. Sometimes I let myself
become so concerned that I shovel
the piddling bit of snow from the
yard onto the gardens. I was so
grateful for the snow cover this year
that I truly forgot about the negative
side of deep snow in the garden.
As the drifts melted away this
spring the evidence of a much greater
threat was uncovered. The first items
to lose their snow cover were my
struggling flowering almond shrub
and a spreading juniper. Rodents had
been feasting, under cover, on the
bark, nibbling it down to the quick.
Lord knows what will be left of my
new roses when the snow melts away
from their unprotected stems. In the
shadow of the east side of the house
there is a ridge of grass and dirt
where something has burrowed along
the brick border. There is still snow
in the garden itself and I can only
imagine whatthe foxglove will look
like after something has been grazing
on it all winter.
You could almost. say I invite this
kind of damage. I leave all my plants
untrimmed to face the winter. The
tall, dried stems catch the snow and
keep it on the flower beds. The seed
heads feed the great flocks of birds
that entertain us all year. Is it any
wonder that the smaller, less cute
members of this environment seek
out this garden to live in? There is
lots to eat and plenty of cozy spots to
curl up in.
What to do. Well the most com-
mon sense approach is to prepare for
this type of occurrence by taking pre-
cautions in the fall. Avoid mulching
with straw until the ground is frozen.
Mice nest in the straw and feast on
the tender shoots, bark, and roots
easily dug up in the unfrozen ground.