Gracious, ProfessorRoush is tired of winter. All these poor plants, struggling towards spring, but fighting instead for just enough sun and warmth to stay alive. Will they make it? Can they make it to see June? The real test may have been Friday night, April 6-7th, when we had record lows here. Record lows for this date of 19ºF, to be exact.
The 'Matrona' sedum pictured above from the snow of April 1st is pretty tough, and I actually loved the foliage color against the twinkling snow. I think the sedum was actually laughing at the icy hands of winter. The Scilla siberica in the upper left of the picture was not quite as happy to be shivering outdoors, however. Every time I look at this picture, I feel sorry for it.
I suppose, as well, that the Paeonia tenuifolia here, delicate though it appears, will be able to withstand the brief cold spells. Given that they are several weeks behind their normal appearance, however, I'm going to hazard a guess that they are global warming deniers. They don't suffer from having political opinions interfere with their logic, they simply recognize that this spring is a quite a bit later than the last few. And I'm sure they miss the company of the redbud trees and the forsythia, neither of which has bloomed here yet. The lilacs, frozen in time, have had buds at the ends of those fleshy branches for weeks, yet they won't advance. And the magnolias are half open, dark purple buds showing on "Ann", with no hope of showing us more yet.
And somewhere in the basement windows, are the four potted Rugosa roses that arrived from Heirloom Roses ready to plant on April 2nd. With luck, they'll survive the dry house and decreased sunlight long enough for the weather to turn. The same day they arrived, I also received three bare root roses from Edmund's. Those poor stiff green souls are already in the garden, each planted, buried under a mound of soil, and then covered with a blanket of double burlap for insulation. Another few days in the darkness, with the promise of temperatures in the 80's mid-week, and I'll begin to uncover them bit by bit. Teens to 80's in one week is an unkind blow by any measure.
Though an old gardener, I am but a young blogger. The humor and added alliteration are free.
I'm with you on this one. It's been snowing off and on all day here. I'm ready for it to be over. It'll be in the 70s this week...only to go back down to a low of 25 by next weekend. I have some snapdragons and stock that need to go out soon. I hope last frost stays around the same, I have several plants that are already getting large under lights and I've already had to pinch out. We need the moisture, but I'd prefer it as rain over snow any day!
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