When you can haul your garden debris uphill or downhill for burning, which would you choose? All photos by John Denniston. |
It's a big dilemma with a property as steep as ours. Here's a view from the very top corner. |
A lot of weeds can grow in half an untended acre of Saltspring. Broom, English ivy, blackberries, holly, curious trees that seem innocuous until you realize they’re six feet tall and their thorns are glove-penetrating. Plus the non-weeds – periwinkle, rosa rugosa, St. John’s Wort – that you may have even planted yourself, but have begun gobbling the garden.
My first
solution for all the inevitable plant material that would have to be cut down,
dug up and disposed of, was to toss it all into a kind of dip in the lowest part
of our very hilly yard. A wild corner, I liked to think, a refuge where
rabbits, snakes, and mice could hide, snack, and burrow, happy companions to
the decomposing garden litter.
After a
few years, the dip in that part of the yard began to fill up. John did not
think this was good. It should be used for compost, he thought, and what wasn’t
compost should be burned. At first this was fine. He built a burn pile close to
the dip, and we had some fine fires. Composting didn’t go so well, as we don’t
have much soil and a hot dry climate doesn’t lend itself to compost.
Then the
trouble began. For reasons I’m still not clear on, John decided that composting
would go better if the litter was piled beside the garage, which was located
three-quarters of the way up the steep hill that is our
property. Later, when he tore the garage down, he decided that its level, bare-earth
floor was the perfect spot for a new burn pile.
These
decisions meant that instead of hauling litter down the hill, we would
always, always, be hauling it up. Gravity would no longer be my friend.
The
predictable conversations ensued, but John, whose West Vancouver background
prepared him for a lifetime of hill-climbing, prevailed. He didn’t mind hauling
stuff up the hill, he said, so mostly I left him to it.
Years
passed, and the annual burning of the summer’s litter on the old garage site
became routine. Until one day – the Day of the Terrifying Inferno – it wasn’t.
This time, the burn pile was unusually high
and the flames quickly began looking dangerously exuberant. As we watched them leap upwards, we realized
that nearby trees had grown a lot since the pile was established, and their
branches were now frighteningly close to the flames. The potential of setting
30-foot cedars ablaze was real.
Okay, no
panic. The required hose was right there. But when John turned it on, the
smallest little dribble we’d ever seen came out. The water pressure, as
sometimes happens on Saltspring, was virtually nil.
So then we
panicked. Frantic raking and smothering and shouting ensued, and we finally got
the fire out.
There were
more fires after that – not so big and never again without a good check of the
water pressure. But this February, as we hauled more dead branches and debris
up the hill to add to a stupendous pile, John began reconsidering.
Maybe, he
thought, there is a better place for the burn pile. Maybe down the hill, with
no high trees overhead. Maybe, in fact, at the old location. Near the dip in
the lowest part of the yard.
So he spent an afternoon hauling all the debris he’d trundled up the hill back down again. It made a fine blaze; the hose worked and no trees were in danger. But I couldn’t help thinking it was awfully close to where I’d started out. How long, I wonder, until I start rebuilding my wild corner refuge? The rabbits and snakes are waiting….
Way down at the bottom of the property is this little corner where I began tossing my branches, leaves and brambles many years ago. No uphill work required! |
Here's the opposite -- the location of the old garage nearly at the top of the property. The debris piles have begun! |
So neat and tidy, unlike my toss-'em-and-leave-'em handiwork. In the background, there I am, on a downward trek. |
A well-behaved fire at the top of the hill burns out. Unfortunately, we have no photos of the Terrifying Inferno. We were otherwise occupied. |
Me again. Up the hill! |
The debris pile back in the old burning location. |
John keeps a close watch, hose in hand. Hopefully, there is some water pressure if needed. |
Here I am, piling on more debris for the next big burn pile. There's always more to come. |
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