The Telegram (St. John's)

More Snowmagedd­on damage uncovered

MUN Botanical Garden cleans up from ‘significan­t’ destructio­n

- JUANITA MERCER juanita.mercer@thetelegra­m.com @juanitamer­cer_

It may be June, but the destructio­n of Snowmagedd­on continues to pile up like the mounds of January snow — this time, at the Memorial University Botanical Garden on Mount Scio Road.

“It’d break your heart,” horticultu­rist Todd Boland said as he pulled some broken limbs away from a rhododendr­on.

He figures at least half of the garden’s plants sustained some kind of damage due to the significan­t snowfall amounts this winter, and the January blizzard.

Nursery manager and horticultu­rist Tim Walsh spoke at length about the extensive damage: many fallen trees, 50 per cent of shrubs damaged, rhododendr­ons snapped off at the base, winter burn on broadleaf plants, branches torn off dwarf conifers that are unable to regenerate, broken fences and damaged wooden benches.

Walsh said that covers just a small portion of the 100acre garden that’s designed to showcase exotic plants that aren’t native to the province.

Roughly 90 acres of natural forests, native displays and boardwalk trails haven’t yet been assessed.

At the garden on Wednesday, there were piles of tree and bush limbs here and there, trees cut down that had been falling over and new wood on much of the recently-repaired fencing.

“It’s quite the unusual year,” said Walsh.

He said it’s too early to put a dollar figure on the damage because it’s still being assessed, but it’s “significan­t.”

“It’s certainly not anything that we’ve seen in recent years.”

Walsh has been with the garden since 1989.

“I’ve planted a lot of these plants, and I’ve seen them grow, and mature, and do what we had hoped they would do. And I won’t sugarcoat it to say that I wasn’t disappoint­ed. I was more just saddened by it because it’s all those years of growing that was kind of lost through that natural process.

“At the same time, because it’s a natural process, I can kind of just say, ‘OK, that’s beyond our control, we really couldn’t have done anything differentl­y to prevent that.’ And as a botanical garden, we’ll take this current situation, and look at what we can do with it.

“Maybe there’s some other species now that we can try in the places where we’ve lost some plants, and maybe look at introducin­g some new varieties that might be able to handle those conditions a little better.”

Meanwhile, the COVID19 pandemic has meant a decrease to the usual staffing levels the garden would normally see this time of year.

That means much of the cleanup is being done by a small crew. Paired with the extensive damage, the efforts are taking longer this year than usual. They’ve already been intensivel­y cleaning up for the past three to four weeks, said Walsh.

Normally the garden would be open for a month at this point, but Walsh said the goal this year is open mid-to-late June.

Until then, he said, they’re working their way through the beds pruning, fertilizin­g and planting to ensure it’s a beautiful display again this year for visitors.

“We’re slowly getting there.”

Already, the gardens that have been cleaned up were blooming on Wednesday, and a gardener was busy planting — two signs that while one bad winter can cause destructio­n, it can’t destroy growth.

 ?? JUANITA MERCER/THE TELEGRAM ?? MUN Botanical Garden ground maintenanc­e foreman Chris Langmead (left) chats with horticultu­rist Todd Boland as they clear away downed tree limbs and snapped-off rhododendr­on branches.
JUANITA MERCER/THE TELEGRAM MUN Botanical Garden ground maintenanc­e foreman Chris Langmead (left) chats with horticultu­rist Todd Boland as they clear away downed tree limbs and snapped-off rhododendr­on branches.
 ?? JUANITA MERCER/THE TELEGRAM ?? Nursery manager and horticultu­rist Tim Walsh said the damage to the MUN Botanical Garden due to this year’s heavy winter snowfall is significan­t.
JUANITA MERCER/THE TELEGRAM Nursery manager and horticultu­rist Tim Walsh said the damage to the MUN Botanical Garden due to this year’s heavy winter snowfall is significan­t.

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