Tag Archives: winter
this winter in photos
I am pleased to offer my next book available through Blurb. It is basically nature through my camera lens this winter. There is a book preview for your convenience. Blurb books make unique one of a kind gifts or a pretty treat for yourself, especially if you love photography.
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buddha says relax
Out in the middle of the wreckage of tree limbs in the back of our garden sits the garden Buddha my sister gave me. So far, somehow, he survived. It’s a nice bright spot.
Today our adjuster came out. Soon clean up will begin. I also had a conversation with one of the nice staff members from State Senator Andy Dinniman’s office. We spoke of the storm and what it was like for my neighbors and myself. They are taking account of the storm and how constituents fared in various municipalities. It was nice to speak to them.
We also spoke about the fact that after every big storm, hurricane, or natural disaster the opportunistic come out of the woodwork. Contractors, grifters, tree services all prices inflated generously post storm event.
I already experienced storm pricing sticker shock when I asked a tree company doing work near by for an estimate for the heck of it since they were around. I used to live near a Main Line arborist and well, even they would have balked at the quote. Perfectly nice man, but no thank you.
As you look to do repairs or just clean up, take your time finding people. Check multiple references and make sure they have the right licenses if they need one.
And then there are the other storm opportunists – the petty thieves who seem to be robbing people who still have no power and had to leave their homes temporarily.
One of the people robbed in Radnor was a friend of mine. Today a television station which shall remain nameless (and one I don’t know reporters at) essentially went door to door where they live until they found out where they lived. Seems to me that is almost victimizing victims twice: first they get their cold, dark house ransacked and then a television station they did not exactly contact goes door to door. The reporters I know don’t do things like that.
I am sure the public adjusters are making their rounds. Does anyone remember the public adjuster from the Main Line arrested in December for stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from the very people he was supposed to be advocating for?
To me that is the ultimate cautionary tale. If you have good insurance you will get a regular adjuster, and quite frankly from a practical perspective why give someone part of your insurance settlement? Because that is what public adjusters do: they take a percentage and as some of my friends have told me then can slow down the whole insurance and repair process .
I hear we are to get more snow this week. I don’t know about you all but I am ready for spring!
Here’s to spring! (Or…we can dream of it)
post ice-storm: now we know how “sandy” victims felt
I know I am not alone. I know and accept there are hundreds of thousands of people just like me experiencing hell in Pennsylvania right now after this horrific ice storm.
I now understand completely how victims of hurricane Sandy felt.
And yet, when it happens to you, you feel all alone. I know that sounds ridiculous and babyish, and I am grateful to God in the heavens above that the damage to our home wasn’t worse than it is.
Yet still, might I just admit that I am so terribly sick of this right now? I’m trying not to be a big baby, but part of this is just really hard. I love my home and it feels like mother nature violated it.
My neighbors and I are without power still and we feel like we are living an episode of Little House on the Prairie or re-enacting O’Pioneer. On the other hand, I am grateful I have such awesome neighbors.
One of my neighbors had a tree go through the roof.
Another neighbor had to pay a tree company to get a gigantic limb from a multi hundred foot tree removed on an emergency basis yesterday, because if it dropped (and it was hanging by a thread as it was), it would have gone right through their house in the center like a giant spear.
Those of us with storm damage are already gearing up for what we know will be ahead: contractors and service providers jacking up prices after a storm event like this where a state had declared a state of emergency. It is despicable, but is the unfortunate nature of mankind and commerce meets an emergency.
PECO had our power on for a few minutes then it went out again. What we didn’t know until we found out by accident, was that every time your power goes on and then off you have to keep reporting the outages. Which is frustrating to try to do when you have limited cell phone battery and no phone service. And after sitting on hold and suffering through multiple prompts, getting a live person at the electric company who is sitting in a warm office telling you they know “exactly how you feel” is a little hard to swallow even though they are trying to be helpful.
People are are having a hard time with the electric company’s automated outage reporting system because a lot of people found that there outages weren’t reported even though they followed all the prompts and phoned it in.
Township the municipalities and counties are overwhelmed by the sheer volume of what they are dealing with. There are trees down everywhere and even the Borough of Malvern was mostly dark yesterday.
This storm for sure will be one for the record books. I hear President Obama has declared Pennsylvania a state of emergency. I hope that helps get things put right faster. Stay warm and safe. I am also hearing reports now of people who are finding that their homes are getting burglarized when they have had to leave to seek shelter and warmth .
This storm is one that will also teach you a lot about human nature. I am grateful for my friends, family, and neighbors. I am grateful I still have a roof to put over my head where so many no longer do.
But I feel so disconnected from everyone after a multi-day power outage, it is almost a surreal feeling. When I sleep I still hear the ice crashing down on my roof and the sound of tree branches and trees falling everywhere around me. Also when I sleep I dream of hot showers and the every day pleasure of watching TV.
Hope all of you out there are doing well, and I hope that this is over soon.
If you have a power outage you have not reported, or a subsequent power outage please report it. That way the electric companies have a more accurate count of who has power and who doesn’t.
I had many friends in New Jersey and that went through weeks of horrible stuff post hurricane Sandy. In some cases, months. I now totally get what they meant when they said until you have experienced something crazy like this personally, you really don’t get it.
I hope everyone has a good day and thank you for listening.
not so winter wonderland
My reality is like hundreds of thousands of others today: ice, ice, and more ice.
No power. House has sustained tree damage but we are better off than some of our neighbors, one of whom has their roof smashed in.
Basically I think a lot of Chester County and beyond is a hot mess cloaked in ice.
No signs of PECO or even township snow plows. It’s eerily quiet as opposed to the normal quiet.
We consider ourselves blessed, it could be much worse.
Hope everyone is warm and safe and dry.
And to the weather people out there: the weather is not improving, but getting more icy and frozen.
Over and out.
garden in snow
Image
the woodpecker and the starling
hello february
winter gardening
Ahhh, I know all of you, you were hoping for a winter gardening post. Hoping that in the midst of all this I may have discovered something amazing outside this morning.
Nope.
Just a little winter gardening humor from a friend. After all, it is like the freaking Tundra out there…. so there is no winter gardening. Only a fervent wish for all my plants to survive and thrive in the spring. Once spring gets here, that is.
Inside is not much better. My rosemary plant has given up the ghost and so has my beautiful bay leaf tree and the Mandevilla vine I inherited from the previous homeowner is not faring much better.
My inner gardener is VERY frustrated with this winter. And I say that knowing that a very cold winter is actually not the worst thing for the garden. Except right now is the ugly phase of the winter garden. Everything is ice, snow, frozen mud and cold. And it is too early for the snow drops to emerge. I hope all my hostas make it through the winter, but only spring will tell me that for sure.
So I think I will pick out my virtual herb garden for the spring today. I tuck herbs in everywhere I can – in pots, in beds, along paths. I love Colonial Creek Farm for the things I cannot source locally. And I might look for one more rose…..a climber for the side of the house….David Austin of course.
It is time to begin the plant wish list for spring.
I go to my favorite nursery sites and I choose what I want and print out the order list. I am not ordering today, but I want a list of what cultivars intrigue me. I know, I know I am creating plant wish lists….but it makes dealing with the Tundra temperatures so much easier that way!
After that I will peruse my copy of Suzy Bales’ The Garden in Winter. It was one of the books she sent to me and I think today is a day where I have to find my love of my winter garden again.
Grumblingly yours,
The Frustrated Gardener in Winter











