Today’s episode is brought to you by the letter ‘T’.
This is not Sesame Street.
Nor is this freshly painted concrete ‘T’ a monogram that designates the garden as mine. Even I am not ‘that’ vain.
It is part of a sign at the train depot. There happen to be enough of the right letters for my last name. I suppose that with a pry bar and a shovel, I could be ‘that’ vain.
There is no ‘Y’, so my first name would not work, particularly in conjunction with my last name, which would take the only ‘T’ and ‘O’ available. Am I really vain enough to be putting this much thought into this? Oh my!
For right now, I should only be concerned with keeping the vegetation clear of the sign. The amaryllis foliage above barely flops into it. The overgrown photinia hedge behind the amaryllis was just removed. The arborvitaes that will be installed to replace the photinia hedge will not likely get wide enough to ever reach the sign. They will be set several feet back. We are still trying to decide what to install between the arborvitaes, which will be far enough from each other so that they will not become a continuous hedge like the photinia were.
You would not believe how many bay trees and valley oak trees were trying to grow amongst the photinia! They ranged in size from fresh seedlings all the way up to a nearly six inch wide coppiced stump of a valley tree that was cut down a few years ago. There are still a few small oaks that must be removed nearby. We want to remove them while we are working on the site, and before they get big enough to displace the concrete letters with their roots.
Well, I got my roses pruned this afternoon, carefully remembering some of your lovely instructions from the blog. Unfortunately, I forgot my camera, so don’t have before and after pic’s.
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So you were carefully aggressive with them? I must prune some apple and pear trees pretty soon. They have been pruned so well that I can not get aggressive with them.
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There are some roses at my church that have been carefully tended and pruned, but now need pruning again and we have lost our rose tender. I was thinking I should step in, but like your apple and pear trees, they won’t need much. My roses hadn’t been appropriately pruned for a couple years, so I was, indeed carefully aggressive. We’ll see if that’s good come warmer weather.
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So much to ponder over…🤔
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Nope; I am over it, and on to other vegetation management.
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Reblogged this on Tony Tomeo and commented:
Hey, two of the valley oak seedlings that I recently canned came from here!
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