Do you believe wisteria, rose of sharon and mulberry are basically weeds?

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Berclair School, Bee County, Texas. In an open field in front of the Berclair Mansion sits an abandoned schoolhouse, filled with faded and broken memories of decades past.

If there is one thing I have learned about Texas, it’s that Texas is filled with abandoned schoolhouses. I’ve run across all sorts of schools all over south Texas – from one-room shanties in the hills of Payton’s Colony or the desert plains of Comstock; to boarded up structures in Gillett and Quihi; to huge half-destroyed high schools in Asherton and Catarina. So it was no surprise to run across an abandoned school in Berclair.

The town of Berclair sprang up in the 1890’s when the railroad was built across the Coastal Bend. While it did serve the local ranchers, Berclair never really exploded, topping out at just 350 residents at its largest. Then the Great Depression hit, and like many small Texas towns, it never really recovered – dropping down to sixty to seventy residents until recently.

I have no idea of exactly when this little schoolhouse closed its doors, but it looks like it must have been at least a few decades ago. Inside, I did find a reunion sign for the Class of 1948. Now the building is filled with some junk scattered around the floor, plus it looks like has been used for storage for various community organizations at one time or another.

The front door opens up into a single central hallway that leads to another door at the rear. The entire left side of the building is one large room, which could be divided into two classrooms, and a raised section towards the rear that can serve as a stage. Off to the right, two smaller rooms filled with trash. A stairway heads to the rafters and attic, doubling as a storage area. In back, separated from the main building are the restrooms.

Unfortunately, I couldn’t find any information at all about this school online. Although the schoolhouse was open to the elements with trash and some graffiti, it appears it has been cleaned up in the past (for class reunions, for example), and will no doubt be fixed up again in the future. Pictures taken March 7, 2009.

Question by Leo Lion: Do you believe wisteria, rose of sharon and mulberry are basically weeds?
I have had to dig these up whenever I see signs of them in my lawn, and usually near the border. Once I had to chop down a mulberry tree which I allowed to grow near my border with my neighbor. What a chore!

Each of these are beautiful, and I found out you can eat mulberies and even rose of sharon flowers.

I have only one rose of sharon, and it makes little seedlings every year that I could reroot and take to New York City and sell them on the corner for a few bucks.

People up there buy anything…all I need to do is set up shop near them guys with sqeegees who wipe your windshields.

They think wisteria is precious, and if you see one near somebody’s brick attached home, people go “OOH and AAH”!

While being raised there, we had a rose of sharon in front of the house…attracted bees all summer long, but was beautiful.

I found out it’s really a type of hibiscus.

What do you think?
Deezer, you’re going to get the ten points. I worked and slaved up there most of my life, and all I see succeeding up there are drug dealers. Giuliani got rid of the mob, and now the drug dealers rule the place.

Honest people don’t make it anymore.

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5 Responses to Do you believe wisteria, rose of sharon and mulberry are basically weeds?

  1. There’s no such thing a ‘weed’ there are just unwanted plants if you want to keep them enjoy the taste of the fruit and flowers then keep. As for stuff growing on your neighbours boarder maybe he should cut it down – or maybe you could move it away.

    Alison G
    June 2, 2012 at 5:41 am
    Reply

  2. Since a weed is just a wild plant that some consider a nuisance, then, for you, the answer is yes. I happen to like these but, on the other hand, I don’t have any of them. Maybe, I would change my mind if wisteria was eating my house.

    Samantha
    June 2, 2012 at 6:26 am
    Reply

  3. I think you don’t like New Yorkers!

    Deezer
    June 2, 2012 at 7:07 am
    Reply

  4. I guess if you don’t want a plant, it’s a weed.. to me, all of the aforementioned plants are good, ornamental plants. Mulberries are nice trees, but the birds eat the fruit and inevitably bomb my car.. but the tree itself has a nice form and is a source of food for wildlife.

    in summation.. my answer is no.. they’re not..

    Dandelions and pigweed.. yes. rose of sharon, no.

    Julie
    June 2, 2012 at 8:04 am
    Reply

  5. You don’t have to go to New York to buy weeds. They are for sale everywhere I look. Almost every weed in my yard is for sale locally. I haven’t seen golden rod yet but it will probably be for sale soon. Some of the plants others call weeds that grow in my yard look very nice & I would not try to get rid of them but might even try to start in other places.

    Wisteria Sales for $ 100 here. I like it & would like to have it but I’m not paying $ 100 for it. If you like you can send me a start of it while your weeding.

    My new neighbor from NJ just bought a vine of Honey Suckle for $ 35 & it is a weed that grows all over his & my property. I told him this right before spring kicked in but not knowing what it looked like he went & bought it. When I showed him where it was already growing he used a weed eater on it.

    People never stop amazing me.

    Most people think a female Asparagus is a weed but I would like it so it can reseed itself & I don’t have to buy crowns that are normally rotted when I get them.

    kingmt01
    June 2, 2012 at 8:53 am
    Reply

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