Category: <span>General</span>

Pergolas

Do you even know what a pergola is? I didn’t until my wife said she wanted me to build one. She figured it would be a nice afternoon project. A month later and many hours of work later, it was done. It was done all in wood, but they also done in metal. Bel Air Stairs & Railings ( www.belairstairsrailings.com ) has made some nice ones.

A Green Roof

OK, so what is it. It is a rigid canopy to shade a deck or pool area (not over the pool). There is no roof over it per se. It has pillars and then a frame over the top. It can almost look like the joists supporting a floor or ceiling, although more decoratively done with the ends usually cut in a fancy way and routed to look pretty. Or it can be a lattice work of metal, either flat or curved.

Well, this doesn’t seem like a good way to create shade. But, you get green shade. Vines are planted around the posts that support the pergola and the vines grow up and cover the top so you not only have the shade from the leaves but the cooling effect of the plants instead of heat radiating down from some roofing material.

Weeds or Vines?

But here is where you have to be careful. Some vines can be more weeds than decorative plants. Trumpet vines can be very pretty but they are very intrusive. Their roots go deep and wide. When we first moved into our current house we discovered a plum tree buried under trumpet vine. Getting rid of the trumpet vine was a major struggle but we have  mostly succeeded. The plum tree is much happier.

Wisteria can be similarly problematic. In some ways more so because most vines if you cut the stalk will die out. Wisteria can be cut and sometimes keeps living up in the tree despite being cut off from its roots in the ground.

I went to a flower show at LaDew Gardens where nurseries from all over the East Coast came to sell plants. One booth had trumpet vines, wisteria and other vines I knew to be invasive. After all the trouble I had had with them I was a little miffed that he was selling them. I asked him why and his answer surprised me.

Not All Varieties Are Created Equal

He said that it depends on the variety. He knew that some were horribly invasive and he didn’t sell those varieties. He only sold varieties that were well behaved and stayed put and didn’t spread like crazy. Oddly he said that sometimes it was the native variety that was well behaved and with other species it was the non-native variety that was well behaved. You just needed to know which was which and plant the right thing. So if you are thinking about a pergola, give Bel Air Stairs and Railings a call and also check carefully about the plants / vines that you plant.…

Yew Tree Story

This isn’t about weeds. Just a funny story I thought you would like. One night around midnight my daughter and I heard a crash and a rumble. My wife and other daughter were asleep and didn’t budge. My daughter came in and said, “Did you hear that? What do you think it was?”

Since we had had an earthquake about a year before that was the first thing I thought of. We live not too far off a main street and the earthquake have felt like a parade of tractor trailers rumbling by. But it didn’t really seem like an earthquake or trucks rumbling by. So the two of us went outside to see if we could figure out what it was.

We looked around for a bit and didn’t see anything obvious. We had gone out the back door and looked around and up and down the alley. Just as we were about to go back in mystified, I looked out to the street in front of the house and realized something was funny. Why we hadn’t gone more to the front of the house I don’t know.

But, I noticed that there were two bright lights shining through a large yew bush/tree in the front left corner of our property. As we got closer, we realized that the lights were headlights shining out from the middles of the yew and that the car was on its side. Not your normal day to day occurence.

The driver climbed out of the window that was facing up and seemed to be OK. I watched the police give him a sobriety test and he passed with flying colors, so not drunk or stoned. I think he fell asleep at the wheel. He narrowly missed hitting a large tree. If he had hit that he might not have lived. It has made me more cautious about driving while I am tired.

According to the police the driver kept changing his story and it didn’t make much sense. He claimed that someone cut him off. Wrong. The road in front of the house is two lanes each way. He was in the lane towards the middle of the road. You could tell because of the skid marks which clearly went from that lane across the curb lane, up over the curb, across our neighbor’s yard and into our yew bush.

Not this was no ordinary yew bush. It had probably been planted in 1930 when the house was built. I was about 20 feet high and 20 to maybe 30 feet across. The trunk was at least a foot in diameter (diameter not circumference) at the base before it split into different branches which were also sizeable. The car had sheared it off at the base. Luckily for him, I think the large branches had acted as cushioning.

We were amused when we spoke to his insurance company and found out that he had neglected to mention to them that he had ended up on his side in a bush. He had apparently greatly minimized what had happened.

Although we miss the magnificent yew bush, it worked out allright. The insurance money from his company paid for removal of the mess and planting of arbor vitae as a new screen. Huge old azaleas that hadn’t seen much light in probably decades started to thrive again. This spring they were spectacular. One is probably 8 feet high and about the same across and was just covered in blossoms.…