Not warm

On advice from my wife who is never warm in winter, I refer to winter temperatures as mild rather than warm. Today is mild, at least above our winter average so that ice is melting on the garden’s ponds and perhaps it will be gone before the next spell of cold comes around. Two periods…

From start to finish

As the new year approaches and spring seems so distant I am comforted reflecting on the garden’s successes, and look forward to more in the coming year. Certainly, there were bumps along the way, but I am pleased that none haunt me as plans are made for spring.

Brrr…

Today, temperatures will rise slightly above the freezing mark after two chilly days with nights falling to six and seven degrees (Fahrenheit). Most of the garden’s plants will shrug without a worry, but the cold will test ones marginally cold hardy that have intentionally been left unprotected. Why take the chance that schefflera (Schefflera delavayi,…

A long way off

Already, I count the days until spring, or at least the time when multitudes of hellebores and snowdrops paint the garden. There is small consolation that the earliest hellebores have begun flowering. One is visible through the front window as I descend the steps from our bedroom (below), and soon others will be coloring the…

Clean up?

I wonder if old foliage covering the trunks of two yuccas (Yucca rostrata ‘Sapphire Skies’, below) should be removed. This is not a plant health question, but an aesthetic one. There’s no right or wrong. I’m certain the preference is completely personal. My thinking is that keeping the browned leaves doesn’t look bad, and in…

A new doghobble

Over the weekend I planted a soon to be released introduction, a doghobble (Leucothoe axillaris ‘SR2020’, Bohemian Beauty, below) despite overnight temperatures expected to drop into the low twenties and the plant’s recent home in a nursery just outside Mobile, Alabama. I admit to never calling leucothoe by its common name, doghobble, except to entertain…

To cut or not

Should I remove foliage of hellebores and epimediums in December, or not? I understand the recommendation to remove leaves so that late winter flowers are not obscured, but there are multiple considerations that dictate waiting until later in winter. First, though I am out into the garden daily, my motivation is lacking. There are numerous…

December flowers

Despite recent weeks with nighttime temperatures falling into the low twenties (Fahrenheit) and colder, splendid blooms continue. Periods of mild temperatures shortened the flowering of a handful of native, common witch hazels (Hamamelis virginiana, below) from months to weeks, but mahonias and camellias will flower through much of December and often into the new year….

Berries

The Winterberry hollies (Ilex verticillata, below, several weeks ago) are bare, typical for this early week in December. I’m uncertain if birds consume the majority, or if they just fall to the ground. Berries are never so abundant that I would see accumulations in the ground clutter, but I’ll presume these do some good by…

Dreadful

Following a chilly mid-November with nighttime temperatures falling a time or two into the upper teens (Fahrenheit), the paperbushes (Edgeworthia chrysantha, below) look dreadful. Yellowing leaves have turned a ragged brown, and thankfully the large flower buds stand above to give assurance they remain alive. I’m anxious for the leaves to fall, which should follow…