Saturday, September 29, 2012

$20 Dollars



  Edward and I had just a long discussion about whether or not to put any more minutes on the TracFone that we had gotten his father in May and then took when he passed away at the end of that month.  Edward doesn't use it, ever.  OK, except at DragonCon for texting me and our other friends. We decided to go ahead and put another $20 worth of minutes on it, and decide again in Jan (when the new set of minutes would/will) expire.

  We went out to Sweetbay and picked up a few other things we can only get there, plus the minutes, and headed home.  As I was pulling away from the stop sign on 119th, some movement caught my eye to the right and I saw the elderly woman who lives in the house next to the stop sign fall.  I stopped short.  Edward is like, what?  "She just fell" and I pointed.  I rolled down the window and Edward called out, are you OK. 

 "I don't think I can get up".  

  I put the car in reverse, backed up, then pull into her driveway.  We both got out and as we walked up. I asked if she was hurt?  "I don't think so, I don't know until I get up."  So we helped her up, and yes, she was OK.

  Her name is Ruth, and she's lived there for 40 yrs.  We used to see her husband, and remembered that he used an electric chair.  We hadn't seen him in 10 years, as that was when he passed away.   We do see her son, and I'd thought he lived there now.  I guess he just visits.

  Since her front door faced west, she would have been sitting there for a long time, or at least until the gentleman across the street noticed her.  She said he keeps an eye out for her, but today he was probably watching football.  Thing is, it's September, in Florida.  Did I say her porch faced west?  She could have been out there a while and it was pretty hot on that porch, even for just the few minutes we were standing there.  

  "God must be watching out for me" she said, "thank you."  I guess so.  I'm really glad I saw her fall and we were able to help.  Even more so she was OK.  

  I'm also glad we decided to get the phone minutes, because that was the driver for us going out to Sweetbay in the first place.  And that is going to turn out to be the best and most worthwhile $20 we've spent in a long time.

  Nothing beats being in the right place at right time.

Thursday, September 13, 2012

End of the Ficus, Part III


  Looking back through all the pictures of the house that I've taken, I realized that I never got a picture of the ficus in all its full sized glory, except as a bare-branched shadow of its former self after the first freeze.  I have pictures of the back yard, where you can see the ficus, but none do it justice.  It just soared over the yard.  The canopy was so thick, we had trouble growing grass beneath it.  We even selected plants that required shade to plant against the porch because they received no direct sun.  

  Teresa started the second day about the same time as the first.  Unlike the first day, the second day was clear and sunny.  And while there was the barest of hints that summer was thinking about ending, it was going to be brutally hot before they were finished.  The majority of the shade in the back yard used come from the ficus, and that was still lying on the ground waiting to be hauled away.  

 This time she brought help, muscle in the form of a 24-year old kid named Sean.  He was bright, intelligent and really hard working.  He went right to work without being told what to do, while Teresa went back to work trying to figure out how to bring down the last two limbs.  The problem was they were too weak to bear any weight.  She couldn't safely put up her ladder to cut the limb in half and bring it down in pieces.   So they decided to pull them down.

  Ficus wood, when dry, is not very heavy, or very strong.   They looped a line over the limb and picked a direction. The lightest of tugs on the line made the brach wobble and dance. Then they pulled, hard.  I think that was when my heart stopped.  Edward caught his breath. There was nothing to do but watch.

  The limb snapped and started toward the house... and missed by no more then six inches!  It clipped the bougainvillea under the back window, scraping the bark, but doing no real damage to the bush.  That's how I know it was that close.  I think the house gods were looking out for us, both Sunday and Wednesday.  I'm thankful.  Once again, the house escaped damage.  The limb that posed the most danger to the house was down.  

  One more to go.  This limb leaned over the chainlink fence.  They had to do the same thing, pull it down, but at least it was being pulled away from the house, this time.  They looped the rope over the last limb, tightened it up and pulled from the park side of the fence.  It snapped, sooner then expected.  And while I only saw it from the corner of my eye, there was an "oh, s**t" moment as Sean turned an ran from the oncoming branch.  It bounced off the fence and shattered into five or more pieces. 

  And that was it.  The threat to the house was over.  The last of the tall limbs were down.  The rest was clean up.

  Teresa took the stump down in pieces.  The first cut revealed the true nature of the ficus.  That it was, in fact, many trees all grown together.  When I planted it, it had been a house plant with many tiny saplings all in one pot.  Over the years they had grown into one massive trunk.  The freezes, it turned out, had killed 90% of those trunks, leaving only a thin sheath of live wood that wrapped just under half way around the base.  When it fell, that living wood flexed but didn't break.  In the wild, Edward and I figure it would have re-rooted, and started over, growing from where it had come to rest.   Before Teresa started cutting it up, the leaves had not even started to wilt.  It was still alive at that point, and that makes me sad.

    It took another hour to load the wood from the ficus onto the trailer they'd brought.  I saved a few logs, some long dead and dry, one from the living wood.  I'll give them time to fully cure.  Maybe one day I'll make something out of them, like the box I made from from Sandy's log.  I'd like to do that.  It will be something to remind me of that once glorious tree.  

    On that low, lonely stump in the back yard, the sap is still running from the live wood.  We're not going to get the stump ground, not yet anyway.  There is a small chance it will put out a shoot, and some part of it will survive.  A small chance that we'll get some part of our ficus back.  Maybe this time, we'll manage it better, and not let it get so big.

  End of the Ficus, Part I

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

End of the Ficus, Part I


  When we bought the house, we planted a number of trees and, in one case, two house plants, in the yard.  Those houseplants were ficus trees.  A tropical plant better suited for indoors, even in central Florida, where occasional freezes can kill them.  So when we had a hard freeze in February a few years after we moved in, one of the ficus survived, the other didn't.

  The one that did survive grew into a monster.  It was more than 20 feet high, and more than 30 feet in spread of its canopy.  It hung over the porch as well as the ditch and provided a deep, cool shade for the back of the house.  It had a lovely green canopy and long stringers that hung below the trucks.  I loved that tree.

  Three winters ago we had another hard freeze.  There was nothing we could do but watch.  The ficus was simply too big to protect.  In the days following the freeze it dropped all it's leaves.  It wasn't until the next May that we saw signs of life, with green shoots poking out from the trunk.  We called a tree service and had it trimmed back, hopeful that it would survive.  Chances looked good at that point that it could recover.  

  Two winters ago, we had another hard freeze.  All the new growth from the previous summer was gone.  It proved to be too much.  Only a small portion of the tree survived this time.  As spring warmed to summer, new leaves appeared, but only on the side towards the house.  The rest of the tree was dead.

  Two woodpeckers took up residence in the dead trunks.  One, a red-bellied woodpecker, never did find a mate to share his work.  A second, a downy, carved a hole and raised at least one chick.  

  This summer has been the wettest ever recorded in Florida.  Two tropical storms dumped 9 inches of rain more then the average. When Tropical Storm Debby hung out for three days, one of the dead limbs came down, water logged and heavy.  It fell towards the park, causing no damage.  Tropical Storm, soon to become Hurricane, Isaac also dumped a large amount of rain on the area.  All that dry and rotting wood no doubt soaked it all in.

 That must have finally been too much for the ficus.  As we were starting dinner on Sunday, we both heard and saw it land.  All of the living wood from the tree crashed into the back yard leaving only the dead wood standing.  Incredibly, it fell in the only place if could have fallen in the yard and not done any damage.  It missed the porch by three feet, missed the birdbath by two.  It missed the guy-wires for the power pole in the back yard.  It even missed Jasmine's statue.  It did land on the juniper bush, but I think that will survive.

  We had a tree company out the next day and she gave us a reasonable estimate.  She'll take the whole thing down, but not grind the stump.  Most of the dead roots are already rotted and soft.  It won't take Mother Nature long to claim back the spot.  We'll have to decide if we want to put anything in it's place.   We're going to get a lot more sun on the porch and through the sliding glass.  It would be nice to have a little shade back there.  We'll see.

  And in the mean time, we can watch the sky and the thunderstorm and the rain again.  That's something we haven't been able to do since the ficus grew large enough to shade the house.  And who knows, if there is still some life left in the stump perhaps it will send out new shoots.  Perhaps, like a phoenix it will grow from its own "ashes", consume it's old stump and rise again.  Perhaps we'll see shade from it again.  And if not, it was meant to be.  Mother Nature takes care of her own.  She gave us a magnificent tree, and in the end brought her down safely.  For that, I will be forever thankful.  




End of the Ficus, Part II