Winter remains in the forefront of my mind and our landscape here at the IMA.

I am not a big fan of winter as those of you who are regular readers know. But I do appreciate it. I like snow for instance, when it is not on the roads. I wouldn’t mind it on the roads if there were fewer other drivers sharing those roads. And this winter hasn’t really been all that bad. Colder than normal but not bitter. Plenty of snow but not the 50 inches my friend Avonell got in one week in Maryland. Gray days but enough sunny ones in between that you don’t forget what that heat-making yellow orb in the sky is. Not bad.
The heavy wet snow of a couple weeks back did create some problems with our junipers in front of the Lilly House. The narrow Juniperus virginiana ‘Hillspire’ just couldn’t handle that much weight on them. Two of them went pretty much flat.


What do you do? Get the snow load off, push them back up, and tie them in place. Will they recover? Hopefully. But the root ball raised up pretty high on one.


They are near the end of their landscape lifetime having grown to the point they are near the eaves of the house. The plants are getting out of scale. We need a couple years ideally for their replacements growing in the nursery to reach their proper size. If the replacements are too short they look just as ridiculous as the originals being too tall.
Switch grass ( Panicum virgatum)is one of our best native grasses for the landscape. Most years they stay upright all winter even with snow, rain, and wind. Not so much this year. Here’s some of the ‘Dallas Blues’ along 38th street.

Calamagrostis x acutiflora ‘Karl Foerster’ ( feather reed grass) is one of the best landscape grasses period. I like its narrow upright form demonstrated by only a few of the plants in this bed inside the 38th street entrance.

But something interesting that happened in that same snow involved the hydrangeas, in particular H. paniculata and arborescens. I thought the dried flower heads would collect so much snow they would break off. Not true. Here is H. paniculata ‘Tardiva’ followed by H. arborescens ssp. radiata ‘Samantha’, both still holding their heads high.


Hardscapes look good in snow as a rule. Here the beautiful stonework of the Overlook is accented with a layer of soft white.

And these three containers on the Overlook patio make me think of store-bought cupcakes with a heavy layer of frosting or a collection of pies with a thick layer of fluffy meringue (everything goes back to food it seems).

This bright spot in the Northeast Border Garden is my favorite twig dogwood, Cornus sanguiniea ‘Midwinter Fire. I’m not bothered by winter at all when viewing something this beautiful.

So enjoy these winter days as best you can. They don’t actually last forever. We horticulturists and gardeners know spring will return and once again we will be flat out busy with our plants from dawn to dusk.
Filed under: Horticulture

February 21st, 2010 at 11:56 am
I enjoyed the lesson. Thanks!
Thom
February 22nd, 2010 at 9:20 am
Anytime Thom. Just glad to see some melt this week-end.
February 22nd, 2010 at 9:37 pm
dem pies look yummy!
February 23rd, 2010 at 8:31 am
And we know how difficult getting meringue just right can be.
March 2nd, 2010 at 1:11 pm
Wow, what beautiful house, even in the winter..
Regards,
Tom
March 3rd, 2010 at 3:51 pm
It is a beautiful house Tom – in all seasons.
September 13th, 2010 at 3:09 pm
Hi Irvin,
looks wonderfull and very beautifull winter-pix.
Best Regards from Germanys Uhren Checker
November 10th, 2011 at 5:04 am
Wirklich wunderschön – ein Traum von einem Haus. Ich beneide euch
November 11th, 2011 at 2:32 am
Wow … das wäre eine super Kulisse für jeden Weihnachtsfilm. Die Menschen lieben solche Häuser. Und dann noch der Schnee …. wunderschön!!!
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