To be honest, this really was one of the easiest winters I've experienced since moving to the coast 16 years ago. I can remember only a handful of mornings in the last three months when I looked out the window and saw frost on the ground and on the roofs of nearby houses. I have been easily jogging outside all winter, without once having to deal with snow, slush, or ice.
That does not mean, however, that the first signs of spring in the backyard aren't just as uplifting as in previous years.
As usual, the star of the show at this time of year is the Witchhazel, Hamamellis x intermedia. I grow 'Pallida' in my garden, which has yellow pom-pom flowers for about six weeks starting mid-late January. I love this yellow for its unrelenting cheerfulness. Perfect at this time of year. If I had a larger garden I would also include the cultivars 'Jelena' (bright orange flow
A good underplanting for the witchaz
Another perfect pairing for the snowdrop and the Witchhazel is the Christmas Rose, or Lenten Rose, Helleborus. These clumping evergreen perennials sit quietly for most of the year when the other plants in the garden are strutting their stuff, but then at the end of winter, and sometimes even earlier, they begin to flower. And oh, what a show. There are many different cultivars and a few different Hellebore species, and they come in creams, whites, pink, purples, reds, and even a mix of a few different colours on the same flower. Pictured here is a single white flowering Helleborus orientalis, but there are many more. Another personal favourite of mine is Helleborus
Another quirky little plant in my garden is the wasabi plant, Wasabia japonica. This is the plant that you're thinking; its rhizome is what traditionally makes up the spicy green paste that comes on the side of your sushi dish. This plant likes to be constantly moist, has interesti
We are really lucky here on the coast for all kinds of reasons, not the least of which is the incredible array of flowers we have in January and early February, long before the traditional harbinger of spring, the Forsythia, begins its happy show.
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