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It hurts to see that damage. I'm sure the hostas and other perennials will recover, but those tomatoes are heartbreaking.
We've seen similar amounts of tree leaves and branches down. I'm grateful that our tomatoes weren't as hard hit. I suppose that the house must have offered some protection.
My damage wasn't nearly as bad as Howard's, and it's rather inconsistent. In one fairly sheltered bed, the variegated hosta shown below got slightly shredded, while others of the same species were undamaged. The Japanese maple, rosa rugosas, ferns, oregano, and irises had no noticeable damage. Some daylilies had leaves torn down the middle, while others were fine.
The leaves on my pole beans had more damage than any other species, but it doesn't seem to have slowed the plants down. The beans have grown noticeably since Thursday night (last photo), and I'm harvesting beans today. :)
Thanks, sympathy helps. The worst is a shade garden area in front of the building (not pictured) that didn't have tree cover; I t was full of Hosta (including a few Ventricosa that were precious to me, as only one made it to maturity from all the seedlings I started in '03 and I just split it into 3 this year)-- there's just bare dirt, for the most part.
Will a Hosta come back if -all- its foliage is removed in early summer? Guess I'll know in about 8 months.
Guess I'll have to bite the bullet and try to find a flat of impatiens so that area's not just an eyesore.
I had just bought 2/3 of those pots this year-- out of 20, I counted 3 that weren't ruined.
Kind of hard to be mad at nature, though . . .it'll be interesting to see how and what comes back over the next few weeks. The tomatoes may look the worst but almost all of them are already sending out new sprouts.
Rebuild . . .
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