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christopher_cnc

Is It Spring Yet?

3 years ago

I see crocus.



And Snowdrops from Bulbarella's kitchen window. She will be back next week.



The Witch Hazels are blooming. 'Arnold's Promise'



A nice warm rain made all the colors of the winter Under Garden pop. I love this picture of the garden. The lay of the land.



The big yellow pot is still frozen solid however. It should drain again in the spring.




Comments (32)

  • 3 years ago

    Pretty.


    My roses are just about done so I guess it's spring. :)

  • 3 years ago

    Lucky you. Love the pictures. Spring is still at least 4-6 weeks away for me:( But I did see an early sign of it today. No robins or crocuses, but the gas station had bags of mulch stacked up. lol

  • 3 years ago
    last modified: 3 years ago

    Some of our daffodil foliage is starting to poke out. I saw 2 single snow drops and that's it. We are also about 4 more weeks away from spring and we're due 8 inches of snow today.

    Great photos, where are you Christopher?

  • 3 years ago

    I am just outside Great Smoky Mountain National Park in western North Carolina, the crossroads of hot and cold where mood swings are common. Snow well into April was normal when I first moved here. Now?

  • 3 years ago
    last modified: 3 years ago

    Our climate has changed here too - moody, good word. [g] Not sure what is normal any more. It's pretty unpredictable but changes have been inconsistent, so, who knows. We've had a number of much drier summers, then last summer we had a ton of rain. I've had 60F degrees in January that never happened in the past. Definitely more snow in March and April.


    And I drove through th Great Smoky Mountain area once, really pretty. Wished I could have had a good visit. One of these days.

  • 3 years ago

    Love your pictures and sentiment!! Crocus are my favorite early bloomers, a sign of Spring. My daffodils started poking up their green shoots. I am in NJ and we had some snow and ice recently ( ugh).

  • 3 years ago

    The diagnosis is waffling a bit at this point, but I will not be surprised by a dash of snow on the back side of the current front passing through.

  • 3 years ago

    We are having a short flush of really cold weather for us - below freezing at night and a light dusting of snow here and there in the morning - but spring is definitely on its way! Sunny days have prompted crocus and lawn daisies to bloom, hellebores are in full flower and lots of new shoots evident. Trilliums are starting to emerge, buds on the clematis and hydrangeas are staring to pop and a neighbor has a clump of daffodils in full bloom!

    I'm ready :-) While we may not experience winter cold here like much of the country, it's too wet and chilly and gray to be very accommodating to wussy, fair weather gardeners like me. But the beginning of March usually signals the start of my gardening season and I have a list of projects that is growing by the day!!

  • 3 years ago

    The hellebores are blooming here too. My trilliums never show up until April. They know better.

    On a recent do nothing but look walk around the mountain, all I came back with was a list of projects. I best write them down. A full work schedule will be resuming shortly.

  • 3 years ago

    No.



  • 3 years ago
    last modified: 3 years ago

    It certainly is here. Snowdrops are nearly finished. Crocuses in full swing. Lots of daffodils. Hyacinths starting. I’m having trouble posting pix. I’ll try later.


    Ok. Fixed.... switched it off and switched it on again 😉


    One of our local parks


    One of my window boxes


  • 3 years ago
    last modified: 3 years ago

    The British certainly know how to let their bulbs run wild. A week of warm rain here has set the daffodils in motion. Crocus should appear in abundance next week. Not quite like your local park. Those are the Tommies I would think. We need more of that kind crocus.

  • 3 years ago

    Yes, those are Tommies.

  • 3 years ago

    What a beautiful spot you have, and yes I'd say it's early, early, early spring... maybe ;)

    Here in NE Pa it's still late winter, but the witch hazels are blooming and the earliest snowdrops are starting (in between snowstorms). When the sun is shining and the birds are singing you can feel it's close.

    I started a few more pots of seeds to put outside for sprouting and this weekend it's another round of cuttings indoors... just because I can, not because I need any more...

  • 3 years ago

    It's been very much Winter with a frozen surface most of February, except for two warm days this week, then back to cold. Some Galanthus "Snowdrops" blooms have popped up. Many Tulip leaf tops are just poking out of the soil, reddish tint from the cold like a succulent. Mini yellow Daffodils are just starting to poke out bright green. Some Alliums break the surface first in frozen conditions, some don't, I don't know why.


    Why do Galanthus bloom so early? I know they are not native, but why try to attract insects so early?

  • 3 years ago

    Galanthus do not require pollination. They reproduce primarily by bulb division. But they will be visited by any bees, flies or other pollinators that may happen by on a warmish winter day.

  • 3 years ago
    last modified: 3 years ago

    A lot of bugs come out early looking for food. The cupboards are bare. Early blooming plants are good food sources for them when they need it. I actually see bugs at my porch light all winter long, even tiny gnat like things that hover above the Niwaki Gold Mop on sunny winter afternoons.

  • 3 years ago

    We're probably still 6 weeks away from full on break up. This year it's been so snowy, doubt if we'll even see the ground much before May! I envy ya'll starting to see some color!

  • 3 years ago

    Crocuses are history. You can’t move for daffodils in the local parks now.



  • 3 years ago
    last modified: 3 years ago

    So pretty to have parks full of daffodils. I don't think I've seen parks here that have them.

    Finally all our snow disappeared over the weekend with a little warm weather. I see a few snowdrops starting to pop out and Hellbores showing beginning growth. And the snowplow dug a foot deep into our lawn along the edge, that's going to have to be repaired pretty quickly.

    I also found an ANT in the kitchen....so it must be spring - they are out and about again! lol

  • 3 years ago

    You guys have got it all wrong. Summer is just finishing now, and we're moving into autumn ("Fall"!) Time to consign dead/dying vege plants to the compost heap and start sowing brassicas and broad-beans. ("Favas").

  • 3 years ago
    last modified: 3 years ago

    Still mostly in crocus mode here. The first daffodils are opening. Next door, Bulbarella's ridge top garden has achieved UK park like quantities of spring bulbs. She has returned to the mountain. Let the stinze begin. I'm not far behind.



  • 3 years ago
    last modified: 3 years ago

    shaxhome - All the way over the other side of the world. [g] Opposite world. lol Well, I hope you enjoyed summer and are ready for Fall. I know I was here in the Fall. Now I can't wait for spring after months of being cooped up!

    Sooo pretty, Christopher! You have such a natural setting there.

  • 3 years ago

    Yes it is Spring in New Jersey! The tree pillens are circulating and I had to start my allergy eye drops.

  • 3 years ago

    Very cold windy wintry day today, well below freezing for over 24 hours. These non native "bulb" plants seem to shrug off all of the undependable weather. A little snow might offer some protection to some, but how low can new growth handle before damage?

  • 3 years ago
    last modified: 3 years ago

    March is the month that is bipolar. Yesterday I was in a hoodie putting the spring decorations on the mailbox. Today I was in a winter coat shoveling 7 inches of snow.

  • 3 years ago

    but how low can new growth (of bulbs) handle before damage?

    I am about to find out. Daffodils can and do freeze when the weather goes wrong. The number of variables involved to achieve freeze damage is complex and interactive. What is the stage of growth, wind speed, snow cover, low temperature and duration below freezing? I'd put the low twenties in the danger zone at the wrong stage of growth and bloom. Wind is just evil.

    Last night it was 52, This morning 20. Most of the day 14. Currently 11. Five inches of snow is shrinking on formerly warm ground. I did get a picture of perfect daffodils about to burst into bloom in the garden of Bulbarella Stinze before the storm.





  • 3 years ago

    As long as my daffodils don't bloom they are fine with the winter elements.

  • 3 years ago
    last modified: 3 years ago

    I'll find out what is left of the daffodils when the snow melts. Already back to 31 degrees. It was a 36 hour Polar Vortex. &%(**&#

    I am going to go sprinkle some red poppy seeds on top of the snow that I saved. Now is the time for that.

  • 3 years ago

    For all practical purposes the bulk of the daffodil show for this year has been obliterated. The good news is the foliage did not suffer major freeze damage for the most part. The bulbs won't be starved for the year as well. This being the garden of Bulbarella Stinze, there are plenty backups in late blooming daffodils. The minor bulbs of puschkinia, chionodoxa, scilla, etc. were not up yet. The anemones are fine. And of course, we will have the Spanish Bluebells in their time. The garden grows on.



  • 3 years ago

    So sorry to hear that! I'm hoping we don't have the same, but every year we come pretty close at least. Some times I've run around with every cover that I can put over them. I've changed the bulbs I buy so that I've stopped buying any really early bulbs. All the daffodils I buy now are mid to late blooming. Glad you have a lot of other bulbs still to come.