It was a beautiful Memorial Day weekend in Langley, with the most dramatic cloud formations, hot sunshine, and a devastating windstorm that whipped through town on Friday night.
The near-tornado was foreshadowed by a surprisingly warm and sultry afternoon. Even at the beach, the wind died down. Banks of threatening clouds, including a funnel shaped one, hung on the far horizon. Then around 7:30 the sky grew dark, and the wind whirled through town - no warning, without build up it hit full force and blew like crazy from no discernable direction. Then, eerily, all was still and quiet again, and the sun shone before it grew dark enough for a night sky full of stars.
I think (hope) that's the closest we'll ever see to a tornado here; in its wake it left a huge, old fir uprooted and fallen like a dead elephant across the lawn of the Edgecliff Restaurant. The tree must have been a hundred years old; think of the storms it had survived....here's a look at the impressive rootball...
It was a better weekend for the laburnum arch at Bayview Farm and Garden, which is in full and glorious bloom...you probably still have another week to make it to Bayview to walk through the double-arched fragrance of golden chain tree before the flowers fade...be sure and check out the fabulous assortment of lJapanese maples while you're there....also the great selection of herbs, vegetables, and annuals they grow themselves...
Nearly as romantic as the laburnum arbor is this newly trained yew arch over the gate at poet David Whyte's home in Langley....Don't you love the contrast of dark conifer arch with paler, leafy hornbeam hedge?

