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Tuesday
Feb162021

Blooming Plants that Tolerate the Cold and Other Features in My Winter Garden

Hellebores may be my all-time favorite winter-blooming plant.Their flowers persist for months, sometimes beginning as early as December, and frost barely bothers them.While a winter storm created icy conditions and dumped snow onto a good portion of the South the past few days, we were enjoying cold rain—until yesterday. I woke up to temperatures 16 degrees below freezing and giant, fluffy snowflakes falling from the sky. Helena, Alabama's winter has been relatively mild this year, and gnats and other bugs have been hanging around. So I was grateful for the freezing temps that will help kill the pests, especially because I know the frigid weather will be short-lived. Within a few weeks spring will be waking up our world. Meanwhile, I wanted to see how my garden was responding to our shot of winter. So I bundled myself into heavy winter clothing and ventured into the garden.

I was happy to see a variety of hardy winter blooms that survived the freeze. Hellebores were hunkering down under the cold, but their blooms looked good. I am confident they will rapidly recover as soon as the weather improves.The yellow Edgeworthia flowers below were not completly open. They remained beautiful, although they were covered by a film of ice. There are many buds on the shrub. Prolonged hard frost will damage them, but they tolerate brief dips below freezing.Small photos above, clockwise from top left: Camellia bloom that has fallen to ground, beautiful to the end; Another camellia flower is not very happy with the frost, but hundreds of buds on the same shrub are undamaged; Daphne odoro 'Aureomarginata' produces late winter, waxy blooms.These buds were unharmed by the hard frost; Flowering quince produces blooms for several months from late January into spring. Open blooms will be injured by severe frost, but unopened buds are very tolerant of the icy temps.One camelia with unusually frost-tolerant blooms is Camellia japonica 'Crimson Candles.'  The temperature was about 20 degrees F when I took these photos:

If daffodils are in full bloom. their flowers are likely to be killed by frost. But if their buds have not opened, they can survive frigid weather.

As I walked around in the snow yesterday, I noted other features that added interest to my winter garden. I depend upon foliage to provide the backbone to my garden, especially evergreens that look great when many other plants are dormant:Clockwise from upper left:Hardy Japanese Holly Fern (Cyrtomium fortunei); Vaccinium corymbosum is a compact, native evergreen blueberry bush. The reddish foliage will become glaucous blue as warmer weather arrives; Variegated false holly (Osmanthus heterophyllus 'Goshiki'); Loropetalum 'Purple Pixie' is a truly dwarf loropetalum.

Pleopeltis polypodioides, also known as the resurrection fern, is an intersting evergreen plant. In dry weather it shrivels up to a grayish clump and looks dead, but as soon as it receives water it rapidly recovers and looks healthy and green again. It is native to the southeastern US, but can be found as far north as New York. This one is growing out of a crack in a large rock:

The fairies inside my Wheelbarrow Fairy Garden have taken themselves and all of their belongings inside for the winter, but their warm weather habitat inside the wheelbarrow is doing well:

Here are a couple of scenes from inside the woodland garden, taken from opposite ends of the main path that runs through the area:

Finally, here are some more features I noted inside the woodland garden:Clockwise from top left: A dried hydrangea bloom, leftover from last year; A stepping stone, decorated by nature; A shivering rhododendron that will perk up as soon as the temp rises. The curled leaves help protect the plant from very cold weather; Turkey-tail fungus and moss growing on an old stump.

By now I was freezing! It was time to head inside for something hot to drink and to curl up by the fire with a good book. Happy winter!

 

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Reader Comments (14)

Your flowers and shrubs are beautiful! I would love to have camellia bushes like your Crimson Candles. I'll have to look into some of those for spring planting.

February 18, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterTammie

Hi thanks for your post - I needed to get some positive thoughts going about my garden. I've been worried about how cold it's been here but so far everything seems to be holding up in my Zone 7b garden. I need to get an edgeworthia!

February 18, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterAnne Dee

Your Hellebores and other blooms are so lovely and bring life to the winter landscape. I too am a huge advocate of having interest in the garden all year long, and your have accomplished that beautifully!

Cold daunts me, but your garden looks so appealing for well wrapped up walk.

February 18, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterDiana Studer

Hellebores are a winner in our garden. Completely buried in snow at the moment.

February 18, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterJason

I'm glad you're able to see the bright side of your winter weather, Deb, and I hope the new storms (and tornadoes!) I've heard about on the news won't present any new problems. Your hellebores are lovely!
I'm very impressed by 'Crimson Candles' too. By comparison, my poor 'Taylor's Perfection' seems to be overly sensitive to weather fluctuations.

February 18, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterKris P

We had similar weather last week. When I look out the window and see the rhododendron leaves all curled up, I know it's too cold for me to venture outside :-) Thank yopu for braving the cold and showing us your winter wonderland.

February 19, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterDenise

What a stunningly beautiful post, Deb! Your garden is a bit warmer than mine, so your Hellebores and Daffodils bloom earlier than mine. And I'm terribly envious of your Camellias. OMG, I absolutely love Camellias. Thanks for sharing. Happy late winter!

February 19, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterBeth@PlantPostings

Your garden still looks so green and beautiful even with the layer of snow. Roll on spring!

February 22, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterMark and Gaz

Your hellebores and camellias are beautiful, I hope the snow soon vanished! We saw the weather you were having on our news and I thought of you and hoped your plants were surviving!

February 23, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterPauline

Winter has been awfully nasty to you there in the south, I’m sorry. Here, our winter was mostly mild, except for the first three weeks of February. Now , suddenly, spring is trying to arrive. I have crocus, and it all starts from those!

March 2, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterRobin Ruff Leja

Those Edgeworthia flowers are really special... even encased in ice!

As others have wrote, your camellias look lovely. I'm a bit jealous. I have just one spring-blooming camellia in a sheltered spot by my front porch that looks ready to start blooming any day.

When do your winter-blooming (C. japonica?) camellias start blooming? And how long does the bloom season last?

March 11, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterAaron

Hope all is well. Miss your posts.

September 5, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterDiana Studer
It's getting colder in this part of northern Georgia...I remembered this post and loved revisiting your winter pictures. Miss your updates and hope all is well.
October 22, 2022 | Unregistered CommenterAlphaJD

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