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Chad Erpelding


Most mornings I tuck my pants into my socks and walk to the back of our small acreage to the canal. The banks have been taken over by hemlock from a few years of neglect, but this year I’ve felt an overwhelming need to reclaim them. So with my pants in my socks to avoid ticks, I take the spade and start digging up one plant at a time.

The similarities are not lost on me. I’m trying to eradicate a dangerous thing that quickly spreads and has the potential to kill. If the plants go to seed the growth is exponential, so there’s true urgency. Since they have already spread the full length of the canal, it’s a daunting task. Oftentimes the coverage is so total that once I’ve removed the plants, large stretches of ground are completely bare. Other times the banks are so steep and loose that I’m convinced I’ll fall into the canal and scare away the ducklings. Their chirping is one of my favorite things.

The “pop” sound when the hemlock root gives way is remarkably satisfying. I don’t always get the whole root and assume that a broken one will soon become another plant. But when I hear that pop and know that it’s the whole root, I feel a small victory. It feels like I have some amount of control. That I can beat this thing.

And then I see my neighbor’s huge hemlock patch.

So yeah, I’m ok, I guess.

1 commentaire


Nicole Walker
Nicole Walker
10 mai 2020

Dear Chad,

I remember reading about Hemlock in The Wilderness Society's "100 Year's of Ancient Forests" and being surprised to find that Hemlocks, a tree I'd never heard of, were the mature trees in a Pacific North Western succession forest . That did not comport with my understanding of the Hemlock Socrates ate/drank to kill himself rather than let reactionary Greeks take his life or his liberty.

Greece and the Northwest are both far away right now. I'm not sure what Arizonan Hemlock might be. Thanks to you, I'll go find out.

J'aime
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