Pamela: Its a cedar roof so it should have many more years. :-)
Pat: I don't think the moss is actually growing in the cedar. In this case it is a low-sloping roof in the shade. So moss tends to grow in the cracks between shakes.
Tikkis: We get moss in the cracks of our cobble-stone sidewalk but so far I haven't see it in the lawn. And you are right about getting it off the roof...I scraped it off last year but it grows back fairly quickly. :-)
From "The Haiku Anthology" I became interested in Haiku and I have since written numerous haiku, senyru, and tanka. "Masago", my haiku pen-name, means "grain(s) of sand" in Japanese. I have recently started learning Esperanto and Japanese. A few years ago I developed a new eastern verse form which we now call 'Renhai'.
8 comments:
the beginning of the end... of that roof
in three short lines
Roots always grow best in what is old, dead, or rotting (hopefully not your roof). Very good!!
i can feel the cold... nice!
Pamela: Its a cedar roof so it should have many more years. :-)
Pat: I don't think the moss is actually growing in the cedar. In this case it is a low-sloping roof in the shade. So moss tends to grow in the cracks between shakes.
Polona: Thank you!
Aurora: I agree with you. Thanks.
I like the moss in the lawn!
Many do not, and they are even poisoning their lawn against the moss. Why! From the roof it is easy to wipe away?
I like this one a lot.
Tikkis: We get moss in the cracks of our cobble-stone sidewalk but so far I haven't see it in the lawn. And you are right about getting it off the roof...I scraped it off last year but it grows back fairly quickly. :-)
Borut: Thank you, my friend!
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