The Telegram (St. John's)

Getting to the Root of the rainfall conundrum

- CINDY DAY

I miss a lot of things about the farm: the quiet, the openness, the smells and the fact that things happened - as Grandma always said “in due time”. Regardless of when we decided it was time to tap the maple trees, cut the hay or harvest the corn, nature really decided that for us.

The seasons came and left, everything got done but not necessaril­y on our schedule. Over the years, I learned a lot from that, but I digress.

In April, when the last of the snow left the land, Grandma paid close attention to which trees were first to bud; she believed that the oak and ash trees could tell you something about how wet the upcoming season would be. Imagine! According to popular belief, the order in which these trees bud holds the answer.

As was so often the case with oral history, a rhyme was made up to more easily remember the informatio­n:

“Oak before ash, only a splash; Ash before oak, we’re in for a soak”

Grandma wasn’t the first to turn to these trees for a long range forecast. Scientists at the Centre for Hydrology and Ecology in England have records that date back to the 18th century. According to their data the race between oak and ash was far more equal last century. In the 1900’s, the oak was ahead only about 60 % of the time. More recently, the oak has charged ahead, budding before the ash almost 90 % of the time.

So let’s get to the root of this one! The ash tree has shallow roots and relies on moisture from winter’s snow to set its buds. Oak trees on the other hand have a deep root system and do better in drier conditions – not having to rely on spring snowmelt. Generally speaking, our overall snow cover has gone down over the past couple decades.

So in the case of the budding trees, it seems to be more of a reaction than a forecast… but don’t tell Grandma that!

Check it out …and let me know!

 ??  ?? Cindy’s Grandma - Delia Lefebvre at home on the farm.
Cindy’s Grandma - Delia Lefebvre at home on the farm.

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