Christmas "snow(ice) event" week
By klahanie_
29 comments
This is not a happy Christmas story, unfortunately.
Last Sunday 20th of December was a beautiful cheerful day. As you can see on this chart it was 12 Deg.C. It was bright, relatively warm and above our average temperature at this time of the year
It was shocking that next morning was snowing. What was even more shocking, the temperature was around 6 deg C.
We thought that it will melt very quickly ….but the temperatures started to drop rapidly and within hours it was down to 3 deg and stay there for rest of the day.
This heavy wet snow started to accumulate, turning into icy blocks sticking to trees and shrubs.
This is my magnolia Susan when the snow started
…and this is couple of hours later
Icy snow
I started to worry because it was not the usual snowfall we get here occasionally .At this time we also lost electricity and shortly after cable.(Our internet is on cable). We were without these services for a couple of days.
These snowflakes were huge wet and heavy
At this point we had to wait till morning and hope for the best.
=
All the photos I showed so far were through our living room window. I knew that my magnolia “Susan” will have some damage just the question was , how much.
Next morning first priority was to clear the snow from the road
I noticed that the viburnum took beating from the heavy snow as well….. it uprooted.
Then Andy came in and said do not go out… there is some damage you will not like.
I was not prepared for this:
3 big leyland cedars down, uprooted. There is (was) a row of them along the road to the greenhouse which the original owner planted for privacy. That was approximately 50 years ago and he planted already sizable trees.( I found a price tag on one .)
They hit the area which I started to develop about 10-12 years ago. My hart stopped beating for a second and I knew that not everything will survive.
Observing the damage
Now, where to start?
===
What a mess
Somewhere there under this was my precious camellia “Elsie Jury.”
Can you find my camellia????
Search for the camellia began but sorry to say it is no more. Just a little 10 inch stump.
I planted it 10 years ago and it really started to develop into a beautiful little tree. It was blooming for last 2 years and I was trying to grow it as standard, tall enough to be out of reach of our hungry deer .
Because we live on the island it is quite difficult to source specific plants you like to have and this was one of them.
==
Power was restored and we managed to have have a nice quiet dinner but it rained all day long on Christmas Day.
Now it is time to start cutting.
and cleaning..
Andy managed to lift the viburnum and clamped few broken branches here and there. I have a little orchard in close by area and few trees were partially broken.
Viburnum pulled up.
So this is my little saga for 2020 year end. I am sure that I will discover much more incidents when we will be all done.
Such an anomaly. Big snow? What snow? Nice and warm today and raining. Everything is back to normal, except we will be cleaning the mess for a foreseeable future . Hope you all had better Holiday week than us and are ready to welcome 2021..
Happy New year to all.
- 27 Dec, 2020
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Comments
That is so dispiriting to lose favourite plants and trees under such freaky weather conditions. This is the weirdest year. At least you are all safe and sheltered, and hopefully some plants will regrow. Such a lot of work to sort it all - Andy looks a star!
Keep safe, Klahanie. The New Year is almost upon us. Who knows what that will throw at us! Hopefully the odd Good Thing..
28 Dec, 2020
Oh my friend, I’m so sorry to read your unhappy blog. How heavy that snow must be to bring down 50-year old Leland Cedars ... just heart-breaking for you. It is hard to bear when you see the loss of precious plants that you have nurtured so carefully, especially your beloved camellia.
Good to know that you have Andy’s sympathy and support, and together I’m sure that you will gradually come to grips with everything. When the warmer weather comes, hopefully you will be able to enjoy buying some beautiful new plants. Good luck, and a sympathetic hug. x
28 Dec, 2020
It sounds like an absolute nightmare for you, not just the hazard of bad weather but the loss of treasured trees and plants too. You both certainly had your work cut out having to physically move and tidy up everything that had taken a beating. Snow can look so beautiful, but, what you’ve endured over the festive season has been terrible, Klahanie.
It’s goog you didn’t have any property damage or personal injuries. It’s definitely a sad and miserable end to an awful year for you...roll on 2021 for you both. Surely, it will be so much better???
Keep safe and well. Best wishes x
28 Dec, 2020
I read this with more and more dismay. Perhaps the remains of the camellia will go on to survive. there should be some dormant buds.
I echo the comments re lack of damage to your home and person. It could have been so much worse.
Lets hope 2021 is better for all now that the vaccines are getting rolled out in lots of different countries.
all the best for 2021.
28 Dec, 2020
Ok Klahanie I'm so sorry it's going to be a mammoth job clearing it up and saving whatever you can , it reminded me of the dreadful storm we had in the early hours of the morning when we were about to move home the trees came down across the drive we had to use chainsaws to cut them up before the removal lorries could reach us fencing panels had blown down leaving huge open gaps to the surrounding fields the worst of it was we couldn't repair or put any of it right before the new owners took over they were due to move in the same day .. I hope you can salvage something from the mess ,it's utterly heart breaking 😟
28 Dec, 2020
Oh dear, reading this it just kept on going from bad to worse. It looks absolutely heart breaking - it was good to hear that Andy is working away at clearing it all up. Had to smile at you "dragging" Andy round to see everything - I sometimes drag David round too though it doesn't take nearly as long to get round our plot...
Don't lose heart, you'll get there eventually. I do hope the Camellia survives.
28 Dec, 2020
Klahanie - I forbid you to plant anymore Leyland Cypress trees. :). They are my least favorite trees of all for this very reason. They are notoriously weak trees and can't handle high winds or the snow load, never mind ice. They look super ugly with broken & missing branches and usually come crashing down causing a lot of collateral damage along the way. I'm glad the damage was minimal - your roof is still intact and your car isn't flattened. There are many better trees to plant.
I'm glad you are OK and the power is back. Happy New Year.
29 Dec, 2020
Then your husband is exactly like me Klahanie, because I don't mind rain either ... in fact I quite enjoy it :)
29 Dec, 2020
I have only just read your blog and it has really shocked and saddened me. To realise the extent of damage that snow can cause is really alarming and I am so sorry that you have lost some very treasured plants. The clearing up job is massive in itself.
Hope that in time, the site will be cleared and you can replace the damaged plants with new ones to treasure.
It sounds as if you and Andy make a very strong team and are tackling this together. Very best wishes to both of you and I hope the snow goes away and the humming birds remain. xx
29 Dec, 2020
Sorry to hear this klahanie, but don’t despair your Camellia will come back, it will be painfully slow but us gardeners do have patience, this year I have hard pruned a Camellia that was flowering in the clouds, thirty odd foot cut down in first week of May, first signs of emerging buds, mid July bud break, early August, first leaves early September, like I say it’s slow but worth the wait particularly if it means a lot to you, nature can be destructive at times, but sometimes like what has happened to you it can bring fresh ideas, just trying to make you feel better, a good tip I have found over the years is to have a long cane to knock off the accumulating slow on the plants to stop them bending and snapping especially if the snow freezes, I do this with my Bamboos, hope things improve.
29 Dec, 2020
Oh Khalanie, what devastation, I feel for you, and you plants. I can't imagine Humming birds and snow.
29 Dec, 2020
Hi Klahanie thanks for asking. I seem to have got off very lightly, thankfully.
I am still coughing a little bit but I feel well and don't seem to have any other side effects except that coffee tastes odd. Same stuff that I was enjoying before I got the virus :o(
Hope the weather is being a bit kinder to you now.
29 Dec, 2020
I hope the camelia & magnolia can be salvaged. We do get some nasty storms don't we? I remember in June, 1975 a storm took down a jet liner as it approached JFK. Most did not survive. It was Eastern Air Lines flight 66.
30 Dec, 2020
Thanks Klahanie. Happy New Year. Those big storms can be scary not knowing how it will end. I was just pointing out how devastating and unpredictable they can be.
31 Dec, 2020
I know it must be difficult to see the Camellia completely damaged to a stump but it can be nurtured back to its former glory given time, happy new year to you.
31 Dec, 2020
Oh Dear you will get through the trauma ! and the weather will I am sure be kind too you, to help you restore things you know us gardeners ever the optimist 🙂
31 Dec, 2020
horrible to have damage like that to your garden, it can be quite soul destroying, but least nobody was hurt and hopefully you get to salvage some of your damaged plants. We have just had perpetual rain in the south west uk, a few storms to go with it and come easter will probably need another four fence panels, but on a brighter note i hope that the new year brings us a bit more hope and normality than the one we have just had.
31 Dec, 2020
I'm late as usual Klahanie, I felt your pain, its heartbreaking to lose a treasured shrub/tree that one has nurtured and spent years admiring its beauty but agree that it could have been so much worse for you and your property, nature has a way of righting things, it just takes time and patience....Sadly our new year has not started well but we have to be optimistic and keep our hopes up for good health and normality to return to all of us....
6 Jan, 2021
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What a disastrous end to a disastrous year :( You will have a lot of work on your hands for a while. I hope your plants will recover in time.
I hate snow. Most people seem to think it looks pretty but to me it is depressing miserable and dangerous.
I'm glad your power came back on. It's very inconvenient without it, not to mention cold.
I hope you (and we all) have a better year to come !
28 Dec, 2020