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Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Gardens in Snow

It’s rare for snow to fall in Sussex, UK, and even rarer for it to settle, especially on the twinned city of Brighton and Hove, but this week has been that rarity and it’s fascinating to see how snow changes the shape and contours of a garden – no doubt Scandinavian and North American readers are wondering what all the fuss is about, as they spend several weeks or even months looking at snowy vistas every year, but me this is a quite unusual perspective.

One flower that literally stood out was the winter jasmine. I’ve raved about it before, and will do again, but this was the first year that I actually got to see the flowers against a blanket of snow: in previous years, although snow has fallen, it’s never stayed around for more than a couple of hours, so observing how the blossoms coped with sub-zero temperatures and then with the thaw, was very instructive. In fact the flowers never browned at all, which surprised me, as I’d thought that on the day the snow melted they might develop brown edges. And the plant coped well with the weight of snow, being trained up a trellis and (relatively) well-pruned. I did notice some local winter jasmine that were growing over low walls that did seem to be getting a little pressed down under the snow, but today they all look fine again.

So winter jasmine is an excellent performer in snow, and I’m glad to have finally had the chance to find this out!

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The All Seasons Gardener at 5:32 AM

2 Comments:

At December 22, 2009 7:56 AM , Blogger jro said...

Plus it flowers well on a north-facing wall - I have had them before, I must get one for this garden. You have reminded me of how much I like them.

 
At December 31, 2009 3:33 AM , Blogger The All Seasons Gardener said...

jro - yes you must, not only do they flower on a north wall, they are virtually indistructable, easy to prune and have no strange requirements for flowering (unlike, say, wisteria) so it's absolutely a good investment.

 

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