Waiting for Hellebores

Winter has gone on long enough for most of us, and I am thankful that daylight is now making its tentative return. Right now the remains of the last snowstorm have kept many of my slumbering plants under a white blanket. Despite that, I am starting to feel the seasonal urge to get out and … Read more

Solstice Signs

The winter solstice has happened, which means that as each day passes, the western hemisphere gains about one minute of daylight. Of course it will take some time before those daily gains make a difference in daily life. In January and February, storms often obscure the increased daylight, making it harder to pluck hope from … Read more

First Rituals

There is an old Christian hymn that starts, “Lo, how a rose ere blooming, forth from a tender stem.”   The lyrics continue, describing a rose that blooms “amid the cold of winter.” Despite the fact that a winter-blooming rose is a seasonal impossibility in this climate, I persist in looking for one.  In fact, that … Read more

Hellebores Uup

It is hard to get down on your stomach in the garden at any time of year, but especially so when the ground is cold or damp.  Clearly flowering plants don’t care about your comfort, because the best way to see some of them is from underneath.  Snowdrops, with their drooping, winged flowers are one.  … Read more

First Things First

I have always envied gardeners who boast that they have something in bloom outdoors 365 days a year.  In a cold winter climate that is just about impossible, unless you count the final fall flower remnants that somehow cling to blackened stems into January.  I call that cheating and I won’t do it.  At least … Read more