Yesterday I spent two hours at the pollinator habitat with a young friend, engaged in the ongoing attempt to keep bindweed, hairy crabgrass, and poison ivy at bay. The two hours resulted in areas that actually contained only plants we wanted,
like Rudbeckia and hardy ageratum |
or heliopsis and aster |
but as any gardener knows, a weeder's work is never done. Even though some of my aging muscles were reminding me that they are not fond of working on hills, this weekend is taking me out of town, so this morning found me back at the habitat, with more bags to fill with unwanted vegetation.
The work went well. Bindweed ripped out easily, crabgrass gave up its grip on the soil, excess zinnias got deadheaded. But as I progressed along the top of the slope, I noticed that a number of large, unfamiliar plants had infiltrated the site and were in some cases taller than I am. Given the propensity of large plants to shade out young things that we actually planted, and given that these invaders looked ready to go to seed, Something Had to Be Done.
Having left my digging fork further up the bank, the ground being soft from an earlier rain, and being somewhat of the lazy persuasion, I opted to give one of the invaders a good yank to see if it would come up on its own. This was not one of my more brilliant ideas.
I had stepped out of the mulched area and onto the top of the slope itself. The ground being soft, yours truly being no longer young, and my stance being undoubtedly less than balanced, my attempt to uproot the plant found various body parts making contact with the (fortunately soft) ground, further cushioned by vegetation (fortunately, none of it poison ivy or stinging nettle). I managed not to slide too far down the hill, and no glasses or human body parts were broken. Alas, the same could not be said of the aster and echinacea on which I landed, though at least the Polygonum was one of the invasive types.
Casualties of the weed war |
Already on the ground and partway down the slope, I took advantage of the position to remove more bindweed, crabgrass, and Asiatic dayflower. After achieving verticality (a most ungraceful process, which fortunately had no human witnesses), I got revenge on the invaders by removing all I could safely reach, bringing up the entire root systems. However, what I had thought was the wild lettuce on Ohio's list of noxious weeds turned out to be Erechtites hieraciifolius, our native fireweed and an enthusiastic colonizer of disturbed sites. Since it has very little pollinator value, I was not terribly troubled by its demise--and am sure it will be back.
But I did find myself thinking--why exactly do I do this?
3 comments:
That's a question we could probably ask about any of our actions in life. There were no good answers when we were young, and there are still no good answers now that we're not so young.
Your hard work (at risk of life and limb) are benefitting pollinators and other wildlife. Your hobby has benefits way beyond your own satisfaction and enjoyment. The community—and I mean beyond just humans—is better because of your leisure activities, and those who “get it”are grateful to you. That’s why!
Glad you landed softly! I, on the other hand, was not so fortunate last week. I was on a real tear on stilt grass, had to move a small log- and tripped into a skunk hole! 5 feet down a little hill, head over heels, landed smack on my rib cage. Still HLH!
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