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| This is a place to post photos, and to discuss, what is in your garden. This is the thread for February 2013. All garden photos are welcome. Since we are in the dead of Winter, we expect to see more photos of foliage, berries, visual interest, hardscape and snow. Though all hopes and glimpses of Spring are more than welcome! If it is a photo taken in your garden or your yard, it is fair game to post it here. Here is the link for the February 2012 thread (incorrectly labeled Feb 2011) For previous 2013 threads: To see all of the 2012 threads, please click on the December 2012 link. The first post will have links to all previous months. I am in process of moving all the 2011 threads over to the |
Follow-Up Postings:
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| The first, tentative, appearance of snowdrops! They haven't changed since it turned cold again, but it's nice to see them anyway, all three of them. I need to pull away some of the leaves in another spot - maybe there are more! Claire |
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| This was the river today from near the water level. The rain broke up the ice and washed it downstream, but I am not sure why so much ice ended up piled up on this stretch of river as it's not noticeably shallower or narrower or slower here. |
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| nhbabs: Is the river higher than usual or is it just that the ice has piled up around the trees? I can't imagine the trees tolerating that level for long. It looks like the river is bending, as rivers do, in the distance. Maybe the current is just moving to the outside of the bend and driving the ice to your shore. River (and ocean) currents are fascinating. I just googled Oxbow lakes to see how the river meanders and meanders until suddenly it pinches off a lake. It's a bit far from the garden landscape discussion, but hey, it's winter. Claire |
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| nhbabs - good winter pictures! That field picture with hay fork is a calendar star. And, for those of us with water envy (river, brook, pond, ocean,stream, bay - any trickle will do)please keep snapping and posting. Thanks, Jane |
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| Claire - The river has about a 10 foot rise and fall over the course of the year. Right now it's probably up about 3 feet above what is normal at this time of year. The Merrimack gets water from the Pemigewasset River which has no dams and so no control over flooding, but also from the Winnipesaukee River which drains Lake Winnipesaukee which the powers-that-be try to keep a bit lower in winter to reduce damage to docks, etc. So during spring melt and after winter rains, the river can come up fairly quickly and sometimes quite a lot more than this. The silver maples that are what mostly line the bank near river level are quite tolerant of wet feet for even a couple of weeks at a time, but eventually the river erodes too much soil from under their roots and they tip over during wind storms. In the photo, the river goes from being totally ice free just upriver from the house to being solid ice chunks all the way across for as far as I could see downriver. I'll have to look down by DH's shop when I walk down that way this afternoon to see if it stretches that far downriver, about 1/4 mile. I was fascinated by the irregularity of the blocks of ice. At times in the past in really cold stretches, there have been deer and coyote tracks crossing the ice, but not in recent years. I don't go any where near the ice since the currents make it really unpredictable. Jane - I love how the light looked that morning. The hay rake dates from when this was a working farm. We found it it the woods with a small white pine growing up through it and liberated it. Lots of folks around here put picturesque old farm equipment in their yards or gardens so we did it sort of tongue in cheek, but also as a reference to the history of the house. I still have a hay cutter to move from the same wooded area and perhaps grow a clematis on it. |
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| Here's the big bed at DH's shop yesterday. Mostly I am pleased with how it's looking, but I can already tell that the voles have been noshing on the Dianthus/pinks at the base of the nearer gold arborvitae. (Any plants I add in this bed now are surrounded by hardware cloth cages.) With the relatively mild winter, I've cut down most of the perennials that I left for their decorative value through the fall but have since been mushed down by snow and ice, so it's pretty much ready for spring. |
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| In milder winters like this one, the rhodies really add to the color in the landscape. For me, the real value of these PJMs (left side) are their cold weather foliage - the screaming magenta flowers in the spring are a bit much, but I tolerate them because the plants are rock hardy, require no fussing, and provide 6 months of this rich maroon-mahogany foliage, though often during the middle of winter it's too buried to be readily visible. I was interested to see the differences in leaf curl between the PJM and the Olga Mezitt (lower right), both developed by Weston's nursery and I think having similar genetic background. I guess the variation is similar to the flower and foliage color variation. |
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| nhbabs: It's startling to see your landscape completely without snow. I think I remember a photo a few years ago showing the bed at the shop with much smaller shrubs and trees surrounded by snow. They've certainly grown since then and look quite happy. Do you think you'll have much winter damage due to the lack of snow cover? I realize you won't know until the Spring growing season starts. Limited snow cover is always a concern here on the coast even though it's much warmer than your zone. The rhodie leaf curl difference is really dramatic. Have you seen any variation in winter survival with the two? Claire |
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| It's true that a lack of snow cover can be hard, especially if there's a great deal of wind. As I sit here typing, tomorrow is the day for the big storm Nemo --- we'll see if he lives up to the hype. The photos on this Feb. thread could look much different in a few days. So today I went out into the garden looking for "reds" and found a few. Of course, many of these do look much nicer surrounded by white snow. I love the red buds on my Pieris 'Dorothy Wycoff' We bought this Cornus alba 'Bailhalo' Ivory Halo for its winter color and for holiday decorations My Hellebores 'Pine Knot' are starting to show their reddish buds Molie |
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| Nice, Pixie and Molie. I am sure all of our landscapes will be taking on a different character today. Here is a current look at the field behind our house. The snow in most places is probably a bit deeper than around the hay rake since it's on the septic mound several feet above the rest of the fields and the wind is scouring the snow off most of the higher surfaces. |
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- Posted by spedigrees z4VT (spedigre@sover.net) on Mon, Feb 11, 13 at 14:29
| Oh Claire, how sad is that!? Your poor green house! Hope you are staying warm. |
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| I went out snowshoeing yesterday and enjoyed the sculpting the wind had done on both flat surfaces and along the top edge of the river bank where extra snow blowing upriver was deposited. |
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| spedigrees: The house is nice and warm today. I did laundry and took enormous pleasure from the armload of warm clothes just out of the dryer. I didn't really want to put it down. nhbabs: All that lovely sugary looking snow! Here it's been raining and the snow is morphing into slush. The forecast insists that it will stay just above freezing tonight so I'm leaving it to melt with the warmer temps tomorrow. If it's not gone by tomorrow afternoon I'll scrape it off the paths before it freezes. Claire |
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| Wow, you all have such large yards and such wonderful views! When I do dishes, I look out at the cars in my driveway and beyond that, my neighbor's house, lol! We may complain about the snow, but it sure can be beautiful! Thanks for sharing! Dee |
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- Posted by timhensley 5VT (My Page) on Wed, Feb 13, 13 at 21:16
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| When I left this morning to drive my daughter to school, I jokingly told my husband that our tree was smoking. The tree was definitely steaming. By the time I got home, most of the steam was gone, but I tried to capture it a bit. |
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Yes, thank goodness, March 1st! Red ball is a nice touch in the winter garden, Claire. Very nice. No smoking trees here (I like the photos, PL) but the swamp maples are preparing their April flowers: and the catkins on the Japanese willow have swelled, maybe doubled, since I saw them in January: Despite Mother Nature still coming through with some strong right punches, it appears things are pretty much on schedule. I still like the 6 months WITH leaves better than the 6 months without them. |
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| claire - thank you for pointing out to me that it is February 28th. It was the gentle little reminder I needed to get the March thread up. Especially since we are leaving on vacation a weeks vacation tomorrow! |
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