263. Winter is not over until the Summer . . .
A tricky few days here. After the promise of snowdrops and the first daffodil and growing buds, the snow came back . . .
. . . after my excited blog (219) at the sight of so much snow, the white stuff just kept coming. We had almost 2 feet in 12 hours. Very wet snow as the temp was about 2C. There are a few things I should have done; like knocking the snow off the fruit cage roof and the veg cages.
But I didn't.
And when I went out in the afternoon I found this:-
As well as the damage to the fruit cage, the brassica cage was destryoyed and the kale cage (our greens for the Spring gap) also suffered a lot of damage. Plants were shredded as their stalks popped up through the netting and the netting squashed down to the floor removing all the leaves. Armfuls of kale are now in the kitchen.
On top of that the next morning we found another victim. Flash (our rooster), clearly so upset by the damage to the fruit and veg cages, fell off his perch.
. . . after my excited blog (219) at the sight of so much snow, the white stuff just kept coming. We had almost 2 feet in 12 hours. Very wet snow as the temp was about 2C. There are a few things I should have done; like knocking the snow off the fruit cage roof and the veg cages.
But I didn't.
And when I went out in the afternoon I found this:-
I knocked off all the snow to reveal this:-
As well as the damage to the fruit cage, the brassica cage was destryoyed and the kale cage (our greens for the Spring gap) also suffered a lot of damage. Plants were shredded as their stalks popped up through the netting and the netting squashed down to the floor removing all the leaves. Armfuls of kale are now in the kitchen.
On top of that the next morning we found another victim. Flash (our rooster), clearly so upset by the damage to the fruit and veg cages, fell off his perch.
Spring's a myth.
Comments
Post a Comment