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Storm – Rosslyn Redux

Tag: Storm

  • Windy Winter Storm

    Windy Winter Storm

    This was not supposed to be today’s post. There were several others in the works. A timely update on progress inside the icehouse. And a meandering meditation on *reinvention*, specifically how it pertains to us — Susan, Rosslyn, and me — and why reinventing has become an enduring pillar for this project. But nature had other plans, so I offer you a compact photo essay about today’s windy winter storm instead.

    Winter Storm, March 14, 2023 (Photo: R.P. Murphy)
    Winter Storm, March 14, 2023 (Photo: R.P. Murphy)

    Let’s start with a cinematic snapshot that Pam took this afternoon. Lots. Of. Snow. Incredibly heavy, wet snow. When she took this photo, the wind was still not such a big concern. But, as you’ll see by the end of this post, that changed in the late afternoon and early evening.

    Winter Storm, March 14, 2023 (Photo: Geo Davis)
    Winter Storm, March 14, 2023 (Photo: Geo Davis)

    Although it snowed all day, it wasn’t until mid day that the snow really began to accumulate. Not sure how many inches we’ve gotten so far, but I would imagine it’s pretty close to 24 inches of the wettest, densest snow I’ve experienced in quite some time. I can only imagine how deep it would’ve been if the conditions were drier.

    Winter Storm, March 14, 2023 (Photo: Geo Davis)
    Winter Storm, March 14, 2023 (Photo: Geo Davis)

    Heavy snowfalls transform even the most familiar landscapes and lawn ornaments. In the snapshot above our tractor is dwarfed by the snow.

    Winter Storm Damage, March 14, 2023 (Photo: Geo Davis)
    Winter Storm Damage, March 14, 2023 (Photo: Geo Davis)

    While I was in the icehouse, inspecting the days work, I heard a monumental thud. It was far too loud and reverberating to be snow sliding off the standing seam roof, a soundtrack we’ve become accustomed to over the course of the day.

    Winter Storm Damage, March 14, 2023 (Photo: Geo Davis)
    Winter Storm Damage, March 14, 2023 (Photo: Geo Davis)

    When I came out to inspect, I discovered a massive ash tree split in half by the combined weight of snow and the pressure of wind building out of the north-northwest.

    Boom!

    Winter Storm Damage, March 14, 2023 (Photo: Geo Davis)
    Winter Storm Damage, March 14, 2023 (Photo: Geo Davis)

    Looking up the trunk from the base of the tree, it’s almost uncanny how precisely the falling tree targeted the icehouse. Fortunately, it wasn’t quite long enough to hit the building. But the proximity explains the reverberation I felt when the tree hit the ground.

    Winter Storm Damage, March 14, 2023 (Photo: Geo Davis)
    Winter Storm Damage, March 14, 2023 (Photo: Geo Davis)

    As you can see, years, even decades of rot had formed in the crotch of the two tree trunks. This week spot inevitably succumbed to the wind and snow load. I suspect we will need to fell the rest of the tree as well, but I’ve decided to postpone that melancholy consideration and decision for another day.

    Windy Winter Storm, March 14, 2023 (Credit: Apple Weather)
    Windy Winter Storm, March 14, 2023 (Credit: Apple Weather)

    Instead, I’ll push positive vibes out to the weather gods this evening. In the screen grab above you can see that the winds are still mounting (with gusts up to 45 mph overnight.) So there’s still cause for concern. That said, I suspect that worrying is unlikely to alter the forces of nature. Instead I think I’ll join my wife and nephew for a glass of wine and a delicious dinner to celebrate the cross-country ski outing from which we have just returned.

    https://www.instagram.com/reel/Cpz4XyOAHtB/?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y=
  • Tempest & Terroir

    Tempest & Terroir

    Tempest & Terroir (Photo: Hroth Ottosen)
    Tempest & Terroir (Photo: Hroth Ottosen)

    It’s time for a tumble into tempest and terroir. And so I return to storms and dirt. To dirt and storms. More specifically I revisit that sudden, destructive blast that crashed through the Adirondack Coast between Westport and Essex back on August 30, 2022. (See “Storm Damage” for the gory details.) And then I fast forward to our recent dirt work, sculpting and regrading a portion of the almost century old clay tennis court back closer to what it *might* have looked like two centuries ago. (See “The Art of Dirt Work” if you’re undaunted by dirt and clay and raw site work.)

    Tempest & Terroir

    A derecho, they said.
    A straight line blast, they said.
    A microburst, they said
    in the hours after.
    I'd watched at the front door
    forehead hard against
    sharp-edged muntins pressing
    elliptical tattoos
    into flesh above my brows.
    Moments later, panting,
    I stood in the screen porch
    looking west toward the barns,
    filming the angry minutes,
    prolonged, distorted minutes,
    while the sky blackened
    and rain blurred horizontal
    and leaves — at first, just leaves
    and then clusters of leaves
    and then whole branches —
    streaked horizontally,
    southeast to northwest,
    no gravity just a fierce force
    ripping through our lake life
    as crazed and decisive
    and mesmorizing and efficient
    as a runaway subway train.
    Later, still spongy earth
    gaped in the failing light
    like a mute maw anguished,
    roots unanchored, failing,
    drip-dripping muddy tears
    in a disinterred void.
    Silence now except for
    moisture's music drumming,
    a chorus of water
    drops and weeps and seeps,
    melancholy melody
    foretelling the dirt work
    now underway, today,
    two months after the storm.
    Excavator guided
    by imagination,
    plans, words, hasty field notes,
    and the dexterity
    of shrewd operators
    slicing precisely and
    scraping layers of sod,
    then soil, then clay away.
    Worry wells within for
    savage scars unsettle,
    whether microburst rought
    or man and machine made.
    But Rosslyn's fertile ground —
    robust, resilient, and
    memory of ages —
    will nourish and nurture,
    lifting lofty notions
    and simplest seedlings
    from rudiments and seeds
    to safe sanctuary
    and towering glories.

    Goût de Terroir

    Let’s chock this post up to poetic license. Sometimes poems (and sometimes stories) are more effective than nonfiction prose, I find. Hopefully some of you will grasp what I’m grappling with, the tenuous connections I’m making, the profound faith in this healing property that has, since 2006, guided us through transition after transition.

    Why poetic license? Well, for one thing the French idea of “terroir” (literally soil or earth) is usually used in reference to wine, specifically the aroma and flavor profile as derived from the environment within which the grapes have been grown and, more loosely, the wine produced. So the idea as used by those of us who enjoy wine usually encompasses the geographic location and characteristics such as soil composition, climate, and topographical siting. I think it’s fair to extrapolate from this usage a broader albeit agricultural application of the term, but I’m trying to amplify the idea a bit further. Needless to say, this poem is still a work in progress…

  • Storm Damage

    Storm Damage

    Storm Damage, August 30, 2022 (Source: Geo Davis)
    Storm Damage, August 30, 2022 (Source: Geo Davis)

    With the last sands of August slipping through the hourglass, the winds of September have already arrived in full force. And this afternoon, following an alarm on my phone by only a very few minutes — enough for me to rush around the house battening down windows and doors, and enough to quickly hustle Carley out for a pre-downpour potty break — the sky darkened dramatically and an end-of-summer weather burst blasted through Essex. Although the entire dramatic affair last only minutes, the storm damage was significant.

    The photograph above and the next one below capture the startling aftermath of a large, old maple tree growing just west of the old tennis court. I was aware that fairly significant rot had begun to compromise the tree, but I grossly underestimated how little unrotten trunk the grand old tree was relying upon to stay upright. 

    Storm Damage, August 30, 2022 (Source: Geo Davis)
    Storm Damage, August 30, 2022 (Source: Geo Davis)

    Pushing my fingers into the spongy interior I was struck by what a miracle nature has been performing maintaining this towering maple, and I now know how fortunate we’ve been. And how fortunate we were this afternoon. I’ve included the second photograph from the perspective of the hammock huddle because it shows that a similar storm arriving from the northwest would have likely crushed the icehouse. Spared by fate!

    Storm Damage, August 30, 2022 (Source: Geo Davis)
    Storm Damage, August 30, 2022 (Source: Geo Davis)

    The vengeful blast also snapped this large ash tree, slamming it so suddenly that it lifted part of the root system right out of the ground.

    Storm Damage, August 30, 2022 (Source: Geo Davis)
    Storm Damage, August 30, 2022 (Source: Geo Davis)

    This immense stem from the ornamental maple in our front yard was unceremoniously trimmed from her high perch as were countless branches and limbs from many of the trees on our lawns. Tomorrow we’ll venture into the back meadows and forests to see how they fared.

    Storm Damage, August 30, 2022 (Source: Geo Davis)
    Storm Damage, August 30, 2022 (Source: Geo Davis)

    Adding a dose of drama to the storm damage, another large ash (I’ll confirm variety tomorrow after the power lines have been addressed) came down, this one across the power lines, and indeed partially across NYS Route 22. It’s difficult to see in the photo, but the tree caught fire, several times flaring up quite fiercely. Then a series of small explosions, starting at the hung tree and then popping down toward the ferry dock in a dramatic series of bangs appear to have deactivated the wire. No more fire. Just smoke.

    Fortunately we received virtually damage to buildings. And — the consolation prize, I suppose — it looks like we will have a whole lot of firewood soon!

     

  • Root Wrangling

    Root Wrangling

    Root Wrangling (Photo: R.P. Murphy)
    Root Wrangling (Photo: R.P. Murphy)

    FYI, it’s not ALL fun and games at Rosslyn. Sometimes there’s tough work to do! Like root wrangling, for example… But there’s no reason work shouldn’t also be fun, right?

    Do you remember that whopper of a storm this summer, the microburst that blasted Rosslyn, snapping limbs and uprooting trees? At last we’ve de-stumped and extracted the root balls.

    How did it go? You decide.

    An excavator muscled the massive root systems out of the earth. And, in the case of the video above, extraction involved breaking the stump and root ball into smaller, more manageable debris.

    But the towering sugar maple that was destroyed by the microburst didn’t yield to mechanical muscle quite as readily. And so Bob (driving the tractor) and Hroth (root wrangling) applied the rodeo treatment!

    https://www.instagram.com/reel/Ck8Vq3rAvY6/?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y=

    Hard work, for sure. But at least a little bit fun too!