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first winter protection

Posted by worthwhile1 z5 OH (My Page) on
Mon, Jan 17, 05 at 23:25

I have several erica darlyensis that I planted in early spring and they did quite nicely until the temperature dropped to 5 degrees. The top 2-3 inches of foliage and beginning bloom were lost. I came across this wonderful forum and learned about covering unestablished plants with Christmas tree boughs. I have done this, just in time for the return of close to zero temperatures. My question is - will it be ok to leave them on all winter or will that hurt the plants going that long without substantial sunlight? I would really appreciate input.


Follow-Up Postings:

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RE: first winter protection

Hi Worthwhile,

I'm no expert, but I'll tell you what I've learned from my experience. Don't worry about covering them. I've done it every year (8 years now). Mine have never suffered from being completely covered up. It's colder where I live though, and mine aren't protected enough with just winter protection (they suffer - die - without snow cover and frigid temps).
Good luck,
Cassiope


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RE: first winter protection

If you're in a part of Ohio where you get reliable snow cover through most of winter, that is good. But covering Erica and Calluna with evergreens, as you did, is good practice. Not so much for protection from frigid temps, but as a screen. Once the ground freezes, it becomes difficult for roots to take up water, and plants are subject to dessication from sun and wind. This is why Erica and Calluna, in harsh climates such as yours (and mine), can show a lot of brown come Spring. (Last year was bad all over the east, even in milder Cape Cod, z7). I keep mine covered until early-mid April. If I happen to shear earlier, I recover them, because only the roots are in active growth once the ground thaws; foliage growth, for me, does not begin until mid-late May.

A greater problem for you might be the species you planted. E. darleyensis is rated hardy only to zone 7 (maybe zone 6 with protection). However, E. carnea, which also blooms late winter-early spring, is hardy in zone 5.


 
 

 

 


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