Three weeks ago, I wrote about the first rite of winter – putting out the driveway markers. I wrote that they wouldn’t prove their worth for the first few snows, but gave myself some wiggle room by adding, "unless it’s a nor’easter".
Well, the great blizzard of December 26 and 27 is winding down as this is written. Medfield was one of the ‘jackpot’ communities with roughly 18 inches of snow on level ground. Of course, with 50-knot winds blowing almost continuously, undisturbed snow has been quite hard to find today. But the eighteen inches seems to be a reasonable guess.
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Planning for snow removal is part of
planning for a New England garden |
This weather report is part of a garden blog because snow is a reality in New England and where to put snow is a continuing problem for any serious gardener in this region. Our particular issues are twofold: first, where the town puts the snow from the street and, second, where we put the snow from our driveway.
We are at the end of a cul-de-sac with a broad turning circle as part of our streetscape. The upside is that this gives us a very dramatic arc around which to design a garden. The downside is that the town plows have to put the snow from the other end of the street somewhere, and that ‘somewhere’ includes the buffer zone between our sidewalk and the street. And, because the town lays down chemicals to keep the street passable prior to plowing, the snow that ends up on that buffer zone (variously called an ‘easement’ or a ‘hell strip’) is laden with salts that render the strip inhospitable to grass.
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This xeric bed - shown in its
summer glory - was under
several feet of chemical-
laden snow today |
We’ve adapted the strip – some 960 square feet – into a xeric garden that is planted with perennials that tolerate the chemical soup. That garden planting scheme was detailed in
this blog entry. This afternoon, there is a seven-foot-high mound of snow on part of that xeric garden.
The second issue is where we put the snow from our own driveway. We are set back 220 feet from the street on a meandering driveway and, at the head of the driveway, the asphalt widens out to 35 feet to feed a three-car garage, plus provide an additional backing-out area for cars. The home’s architect was apparently from some southern clime because the driveway dead-ends into the garage. As such, there is no ‘simple’ place to put snow. The problem grows geometrically with the depth of the snow and new snowfalls follow ones already on the ground.
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Removing 18 inches of snow - carefully |
We’ve adapted the gardens along the driveway to this reality. (Double-ckick on the plot plan at the top of this post to get a more detailed view of the descriptions that follow.) Along the main stretch of access, there is a grass strip roughly eight to ten feet wide, the sole purpose of which is to provide a landing spot for the snow from the driveway. The driveway is never treated, so the snow simply provides moisture for the spring growing season.
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This burlap skirt for
Thuja occidentalis was
added in November |
The gardens in front of the house adjacent to the wide part of the driveway are, with a few exceptions, spring and summer perennials. A
thuja occidentalis has a protective burlap skirt to deflect snow and we carefully direct our snowblower away from a now-four-year-old
oxydendrum that occupies the center of that bed. After this blizzard, the perennials in the bed are under a blanket of up to three feet of snow. Absent a prolonged thaw, this area may not be bare until mid-March.
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The wisteria bed was planned to
support heavy snow cover
in winter |
This year, we created a new garden at a critical area for snow removal. The "wisteria" garden,
about which I wrote in August, is roughly 200 square feet and is anchored by six woody shrubs – three
ilex and three miniature
kalmia. The balance of the bed is spring- and summer-blooming perennials that can take heavy snow cover. After the blizzard, the depth of snow thrown in this area is up to five feet and is heavily compacted. We made every effort to direct snow around the tender
kalmias. We’ll know next spring if we succeeded.
The back of the turnaround area has long been planted with
Kirengeshoma (Japanese wax bells) and
Hakonechola macra ‘Aureola’ (Golden Japanese forest grass), with miscellaneous rhododendron behind them. These perennials die back to the ground in late September; the several feet of snow that cover the area all winter seems to make the plants thrive in the growing season.
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