| At one time, my front yard
was a skateboard-landing pad and decent pitcher’s mound and
infield. There was one particular strip of ground next to
the driveway where my-daughter-the-artist would use the
garden hose to clean the toxic chemicals off her
paintbrushes. Even chickweed didn’t grow there.
Call me paranoid, but I think my neighbors
turned their heads when they drove past my house, trying to
ignore the blight I was inflicting on the subdivision. My
yard consisted of dirt and just about every weed native to
Georgia, and a few that weren’t, but sprouted anyway.
I decided it was time to do something
about my yard. I started out with the best of intentions,
but no matter what I planted, it died. Snapdragons and
dianthus died in the spring. Roses and gardenias and
petunias died in the summer. Pansies croaked in the fall.
I was ready to throw in my trowel and have
my yard excavated. Then, one day I was sitting at a
stoplight and the lawn of a house next to the road caught my
attention. The house itself looked pretty ordinary, but the
yard, the yard was a bed of ivy -- beautiful, emerald,
verdant ivy -- with nary a weed in sight.
Immediately I knew I had my solution. I
stopped by the garden center at Home Depot and bought half
dozen one-inch black plastic pots, each with a tendril of
ivy poking up. The sign next to the ivy promised, “Hardy.
Sun and shade tolerant. Spreads quickly.” Just what my yard
needed!
I went home, unloaded my plants and
promptly forgot about them for the next two weeks. When I
finally remembered, I dug six holes in the front yard with a
bent serving spoon (I couldn’t find my garden trowel). I
plopped the little ivys into their holes, went inside to
answer the phone, and forgot about them again. A couple of
weeks later, I dumped fertilizer on the tiny sprouts.
You know what? Those cute little ivyettes
adored my yard and started to multiply. Didn’t matter what
the season was, my ivy spread. And spread. Without a doubt,
my yard was soon going to be the envy of the neighborhood.
Now my family has never been known for our
green thumbs except for my cousin Barb in Seattle, and now
me. When Barb called to say she would be in town for a few
days, I was ecstatic. I picked her up at the airport and
brought her out to my house. I was pulling her suitcase out
of the trunk of my car when I heard her gasp. “My gawd,
what’s this?” She was staring at my ivy like it was a worm
that just crawled out of her salad.
“I planted some Hedera helix. You know,
English ivy,” I said nonchalantly. “I have amazing luck with
it. If you like, I’ll cut some for you.”
Barb looked at me like I just suggested
hacking up a kitten. “Ivy is a noxious weed. You need to GET
RID OF IT IMMEDIATELY!!!.” She pointed to a pine tree with
cute little ivyettes making their way up the trunk. “Do you
know what could happen there?” I shrugged my shoulders
uneasily. “If you don’t get rid of that ivy, it will smother
those trees and they’ll DIE!!!! Ivy can turn into a
parachute in a strong windstorm and your trees will suck
right out of the ground. Like Dorothy and Toto in the
tornado.”
This was not the reaction I expected, but
Cousin Barb was on a roll. “In the Great Pacific Northwest,
people are banning together to eradicate ivy. Ivy is an
invasive plant. It transforms your yard into a monoculture,
which is bad for native plants and wildlife. It’s your duty
to pull it out.” She squared her shoulders and lifted her
chin. “Don’t worry, I’ll help you tackle this blight while
I’m here. We’ll pull it out together.”
“Oh. Good.”
One thing I discovered was this: ivy vines
are the strongest things on earth. Picture a pot of
spaghetti noodles globed together, but the noodles are made
of steel and go on for miles before they burrow into the
mess in the pot and you can’t just get rid of the main glob,
you have to figure out where the other end of each
individual strand of glob starts, or you’ll end up with even
more humungous globs. Of course this is impossible and it
would be better to just set off some dynamite, but Barb was
determined we handle the ivy removal properly.
Barb stayed with me for three days.
Instead of checking out antique stores and good restaurants,
we were on our hands and knees, toiling to eradicate all my
beautiful ivy from my yard. Barb was upset that she couldn’t
prolong her visit and before she left, she apologized
profusely that, after all of our work, there was still ivy
lurking in my yard. She made me promise to be “vigilant
until the ivy is completely gone” so it doesn’t return and
send my pine trees into orbit.
After Barb left, I surveyed my once again
barren yard and sighed. Now that I know better than to want
this stuff in my yard, I know my ivy will never totally go
away. But I have a plan to turn my fiasco into a
money-making venture. For starters, I’m going to offer my
services, based on first-hand experience, to the ivy-league
schools. Do they realize the potential environmental (and
financial) disaster that lays in wait? I foresee a lucrative
career. Ivy eradiation consultant? Ivy removal coach? Ivy
commando? The potential is as far-reaching as an ivy vine.
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