Monday, March 26, 2012

Dear Cousin in BC

Dear cousin in Nanaimo, British Columbia (hardiness zone 7b),
I read your facebook update today about planting your strawberry patch. I applaud gardening of any variety, but the contrast between our garden conditions is hard to take at times. We may be having some beautiful sunshine, but let me show you a picture of my strawberry patch. Well, you'll have to believe that it actually is a strawberry patch, because it's covered in a foot of snow. I had to put on my knee-high heavy winter boots to plow through the snow on the trail to the garden patch. I wore mittens. As I took the picture below, no less than four snowmobiles roared past our house. Did you know that the lake will not thaw for another two months?
Vegetable and strawberry raised bed:

This is my sign of hope -- the beginnings of bare earth on a slope in the sunshine:

In the meanwhile, I will have to enjoy the plants with what is called "winter interest". This includes shrubs/trees/perennials with berries or fruit, interesting seed heads, or attractive bark. This is one my my Siberian dogwoods. I got this shrub particularly for the bright red stems, which look lovely against the snow. Take that, strawberry-planting cousin...

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Can't see Spring for the Snow

Adverse driving conditions for the Cozy Coupe:

My early spring bulbs could be poking up above the earth right now, but I'd never know. Snow has been falling from the sky much of the last three days. The ice scraper/snow brush is still very useful to brush off the car in the morning and the local hospital remains busy due to falls on ice. Oh, spring in the north, is this how it is going to be? To be fair though, I did see some pussy willows this week.

Gardening still remains limited to pondering seedlings and watching the houseplants. I love the succulent Echeveria, which I would like to own in every shape, color and size. The pot of them pictured below was an outdoor pot last summer. They did well indoors over the winter. They are very easy to propagate too. I just break off one of the fleshy leaves, let the leaf sit to dry for a day or two, and then stick it in some potting soil. It takes root and produces a new little plant in a few months. I never kept the name tags of the plants below, but there is a velvety silver-blue one on the bottom right, which contrasts so well with the other colors and smooth textures of the others. I just love these plants!

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Some Southern Sunshine - A Vacation

We just got back from a vacation to southern Arizona, where there was sun, sun and more sun. Rain is scarce there, which is evident from the cactus-dominant landscape. A little irrigation allows you to grow some pretty plants though, and I enjoyed examining the variety of great stuff that grows down there.
Iceplant in Arizona:

There are several species of plants that are called iceplants and they come in lively colors and several make nice groundcovers. I have grown a similar plant here that occasionally is hardy over the winter. It is a species called Delosperma (known as the hardy ice plant), and has succulent everygreen leaves and similar bright flowers. It is well worth finding and growing. Wrightman alpines is selling the yellow-flowered D. nubigenum. I've grown that one here and it is quite nice.