Snowdropping ’23

It’s a shameful fact that for as much as I talk up the year’s snowdropping adventure, I also drag my feet in getting the post up.  It’s been a week.  A week and a little, and I need to stop going through the pictures again and again, reliving the day, and just get them out there with as little babbling as possible.  Fortunately the morning is cold so maybe for a few minutes I can be productive while the flowers here soak in the sun before standing back up… and again completely distract me.

naturalized snowdrops

Naturalized snowdrops (Galanthus nivalis), winter aconite (Eranthis hiemalis) and spring snowflakes (Leucojum vernus) in a Pennsylvania park. 

 

I started the morning on my own, wandering through a Philly area park admiring the century old blanket of snowdrops and other spring bulbs which carpet the now neglected former estate.  There used to be a dream that I’d stumble upon some priceless new variation in white here, but over the years I’ve become satisfied with just seeing them greet the spring each year and carry on unbothered.  Between my crawling through the underbrush and bending over backwards to admire trees it’s a miracle I haven’t yet left the park on crutches after tumbling down a rocky embankment, but so far so good.

triple tulip poplar

When planting trees always remember proper spacing and mature height.

I survived, and so off to meet Paula at her garden.  It’s been a few years since I’ve had a full-sun, comfortably warm visit there, and this year we made it a priority.

naturalized snowdrops

The patches of snowdrops are becoming sheets!

I always get stupidly excited to see all the bulbs in bloom, but this year to see it all in full sun with the blooms wide open I may have let out a naughty word as I got out of the car.  That’s a lot of &*^@g snowdrops was my eloquent first impression.

naturalized snowdrops

I always love the mossy bed surrounding this ugly old ‘Kwanzan’ cherry tree.  There’s so much character in the tree and even though it’s a pain fighting the roots and keeping it in shape I hope it stays for a number of years.

It’s hard taking it all in yet finding the time to focus on all the different forms.  She has quite a few and there’s a story behind nearly every last one.  Fortunately Paula knows me well enough to not get offended when we’re talking about one clump and suddenly I turn to take a picture of something else or jump over to a new plant!

galanthus rodmarton regulus

A big clump of a big drop, ‘Rodmarton Regulus’.

My wish list always grows during these garden visits.

galanthus green mile

One of the greenest of the greens, galanthus ‘Green Mile’.

galanthus amy doncaster

A growing clump of ‘Amy Doncaster’

hamamelis princeton gold

The witch hazel Hamamelis x ‘Princeton Gold’ 

There was something other than snowdrops which really caught my eye (besides the hellebores and witch hazels), and that was the pink viburnum (Viburnum x bodnantense ‘Pink Dawn’) in full bloom.  It actually caught my nose, and I followed the scent over to where the shrub was tucked into the shrubby edge of the garden.  Of course I’ve already looked for a source 😉

Viburnum x bodnantense 'Pink Dawn'

The fragrant pink blooms of Viburnum x bodnantense ‘Pink Dawn’

With all the distractions, this visit was running into our typical behind-schedule run-mode, but because we sometimes know our limits we made sure to pencil only one more garden into the day.

naturalized snowdrops

White snowdrops, blue reticulated iris, and a bunch of other things spread around the driveway slope of Paula’s garden.

It’s almost time for the Galanthus Gala, and Paula’s got a bunch of stuff dug and potted for the day, but that doesn’t mean there’s not more planning and preparation needed.  I knew she was headed over to David Culp’s Brandywine Cottage to meet with David that afternoon and discuss, so of course I invited myself along.

david culp brandywine cottage

The fenced in vegetable garden feels like the heart of the gardens at Brandywine Cottage, and even in the middle of February there’s a jewelbox bed of floral treasures outside the gate.

The gardens were at a snowdrop peak and I don’t even know why I’m bothering to post since books have been written and photos taken which are far superior, but it was an exciting visit and David was nice enough to say ‘post what you want, I enjoy reading your blog’…. um, did you catch that?  David Culp said he knows I have a blog and says he might have read it?  Honestly I’ll probably try and work that into nearly every conversation I have from this snowdrop season beyond, and I hope it’s not too embarrassing when he finds out.

david culp brandywine cottage

Yellow on yellow with winter aconite and a nice yellow hellebore with just a faint blush of speckling.

Oh and also these pictures.  David’s last two books, ‘The Layered Garden’ and ‘A Year at Brandywine Cottage’ were photographed by Rob Cardillo, so I hope I don’t embarrass myself on that level as well since all my photos rely on luck rather than skill.

david culp brandywine cottage

Plantings along the driveway.  There was actually an apology that we missed the lavender sheet of crocus which had mostly ended.   

david culp brandywine cottage

Not the fanciest view of the cottage, but this view shows how every bed of the garden is layered with snowdrops, snowflakes, winter aconite and other goodies which shine before the perennials and shrubs take center stage.

David and Micheal know how to live, and ‘A Year at Brandywine Cottage’ sounds real fancy with decorating suggestions, planting ideas, and delicious recipes and all the things you like to see in a book, but the crazy thing is that’s just Tuesday to them.  You pull up on a Wednesday and there’s a bowl filled with floating hellebore blooms, celeriac soup with a crème fraîche, a toasty living room with fire burning, cutflowers, winter arrangements inside and out, friends pulling into the driveway…  It’s pretty cool.

david culp brandywine cottage

Paths through the garden, snowdrops are settling in everywhere.

There was a bunch of snowdrop talk.  There was also snowdrop work which was in progress, but you’ll have to wait until the gala to hear more of that since the heart of it was going on in the growing beds.  Clumps were being selected for dividing and potting up in order to fill the sales table, and for the sake of honesty I had to steer clear of any place where shovels and fancy snowdrops were close to one another.  We headed round to the meadow and up through the hillside instead.

david culp brandywine cottage

Paths meander throughout the sloped areas of the garden.  If you’re familiar with ‘The Layered Garden’ you’ll know this all began with a noxious, weed-filled slope and a run-down shell of a cottage.

galanthus primrose warburg

Treasures are tucked throughout the hillside.

Of course we stayed too long.  The light was already dimming as we meandered back off the hillside.

hellebore brandywine hybrids

Hellebores and a million other things cover every inch of the slope, and there’s much more slope than you can see here.  In another week or two the scene will completely change as all the narcissus come in and the hellebores really get blooming.

The hillside is filled with hellebores, and for many people ‘Brandywine’ is more a strain of hybrid hellebores rather than a cottage.  There’s a reason for that.  Early on in the development of modern hellebores David asked friends overseas for the best and brought back a bunch of these to the US to start ‘dabbling’ with his own hybrid strain.  He wanted a few “nice ones” for the slope and needed more than just divisions could supply, so over the years the ‘Brandywine Hybrids’ came into being.  They were my first experience with a more upscale hellebore and the strain made plants with clearer colors and more outward facing blooms available to even the more average gardener.

hellebore brandywine hybrids

A red section of the slope just getting started.  Notice they’ve all been trimmed back of their old foliage.  Thousands of plants all trimmed neatly and the debris removed…

hellebore brandywine hybrids

A perfect combination of structured shrubs, background evergreens, and spring enthusiasm. 

So hellebores are awesome, but for a little while longer all my focus is on snowdrops and snowdrop galas.  David Culp’s snowdrop gala is set for this upcoming weekend (March 3rd and 4th) and will again make Downingtown Pa the epicenter of American galanthophiles, either in person or in spirit.  There will be online events, in-person and virtual talks, auctions, and Q&As, plus my favorite part the specialty vendors.  I’ve been good and only contacted one seller for a super-special plant, but that doesn’t mean my budget ends with that.  There’s a reason I’ve been holding back with online sales 😉

So maybe I’ll see you there, maybe I’ll see you online, maybe I’m glad this weekend worked out well and didn’t disrupt my plans on attending, but however it works out I hope you’re having a great end of February!

Snowy Drops

Sorry, but a little snow isn’t going to stop the madness.

snowdrops in the snow

Snowdrops with winter aconite and a few cyclamen.

snowdrop kildare

Here’s ‘Kildare’ again. The white of the snow really brings out his green nose.

hamamelis aphrodite witch hazel

‘Aphrodite’ is one of the newer witch hazels here and has been settling in well.  

galanthus norfolk blonde

1 bloom, 1 bloom, no show, no bloom, no bloom, one bloom.  That’s my record so far in the six years ‘Norfolk Blonde’ has been painfully tolerating the conditions of this garden.  This year to add insult to injury, a pale drop I found in a wild Ny population is putting out two blooms, and they look just as special as the blonde I paid for and have been nursing along.  #shadenfreude   

galanthus blonde inge

‘Blonde Inge’ again.  I love the clump this year and now with a little snow the yellow interior seems to glow through.

galanthus magnet

I’ve been informed this in not the real ‘Magnet’ and for now on I shall refer to it as ‘Notmagnet’.  I bought a “Real Magnet” and it’s kind of behind and a little to the right of center and looks just like ‘Notmagnet’ except for the label being different.  Don’t let a stray ‘Notmagnet’ on the far right distract you from the ‘Real Magnet’ just next to it, and just for the record I like ‘Notmagnet’ a lot because he’s a good doer. 

eranthis orange glow galanthus backhouse spectacles

This orange ‘Orange Glow’ Eranthis hiemalis really is aglow today in the snow. The spot where I threw all his seed last year was scraped by a bulldozer so I’m hoping for a new batch this spring.

galanthus rosemary burnham

‘Rosemary Burnham’ did indeed hold on to her color this year as a result of the cooler weather and refreshing snow.  She’s looking very elegant to me.

And that was fast.  This post only took about 30 minutes, but getting distracted by other snowdrop pictures, previous blog posts, Facebook snowdrop pictures, witch hazels, long term weather predictions, and potato pancakes all took their toll and brought the full investment to about two and a half hours.  Hmmm.  Me thinks someone is easily distracted 😉

No Apologies

The contractor was supposed to put sheetrock up in the closet, and I did have plans to get a few coats of spackle on it and hopefully be able to paint by Monday, but he didn’t.  Thank goodness for that.  All of a sudden he’s the bad guy and I “can’t do anything more until the sheetrock is up”, and spent the whole Saturday looking at snowdrops.  To make it look good I cleaned the kitchen while waiting for the sun to warm things up outside, but for the most part I was 100% unproductive.  Maybe I needed that today.  We’re dealing with a child who can now ask about borrowing the car, and that’s somewhat traumatic since all I can think of is never having a full tank of gas again.

galanthus kildare

The first of today’s favorites, ‘Kildare’.  An elegant Irish snowdrop with a nice green lined tip.  

Actually he seems to have gotten it in his head that he’s also buying a car.  Maybe now is the time to break the news that their car/college fund has been “invested” in snowdrops and there’s not much left in the cupboard for things like insurance, gas, and new vehicles.

galanthus flore pleno

Finally.  The ‘like a weed’ snowdrop which thrives for anyone and everyone has quit being miserable here and is now growing like he should.  ‘Flore pleno’ is the basic double form of the common snowdrop (Galanthus nivalis) and can quickly make large, showy clumps… for most gardeners.

He’s not getting the car tomorrow though.  Tomorrow is Snowdropping ’23 and the car and myself are heading South for a full day of snowdrop overload.  Hopefully it will be like pre-gaming for the Galanthus Gala, although if next Saturday’s snow materializes it will tragically erase my gala dreams by rescheduling a school competition to conflict with the gala.  Oh the irony of a nearly snowless winter bringing a storm on the exact day when I need it to not snow.  Grrrrrrr…..

galanthus long drop

Alongside the potager a more recent snowdrop bed is beginning to fill with goodies.  ‘Long Drop’ is quite a nice snowdrop even though I don’t really need another plain white drop becoming a new favorite. It is though…     

Whatever.  The weather started out cold and ended up beautiful and that’s all that mattered today.  Many drops are up and many are at their peak, and I’m going to quit commenting on how remarkably early this is for us even though it is.

galanthus bloomer

‘Bloomer’ has become a nice patch, and I’m pretty sure I share a photo of this favorite every spring.  

Next week is supposed to be cooler and if it is I might not even complain as much about missing garden time and going to work.  With the Monday being a holiday that’s also a great thing.  I think I’ll celebrate it as Galanthus Day this year rather than President’s Day.

galanthus fosterii

A new one for me, Galanthus fosterii, is a species snowdrop with large flowers and fresh green foliage.  It’s supposed to be a little picky about its spot in the garden so if you don’t see a photo next year you can probably guess what happened.

Whatever.  The garden season is off and running and I could get used to this.

galanthus snowdrops

Snowdrops still a little floppy after a 23F night wilted them all down.  Hopefully real cold and a dump of snow don’t still come to visit this winter.

galanthus blonde inge

‘Blonde Inge’ sprouted up in three days.  I guess things are done waiting it out and just growing as if it’s March.  The warm weather tomorrow will open these up and should reveal their glowing yellow inners. 

So of course I’ll have more to report after tomorrow’s excursion and hopefully it’s as good as they normally are. I’ll be with snowdrop nuts all day, how can it not be?  Enjoy!

A Beautiful Day in February

Wednesday was beautiful and I got home just in time to see the latest blooms opening under the soft glow of evening night.  That sounds exceptionally fantastic.  In reality I ran into the house, ignored the family, grabbed the camera, and rushed outside to grab some pictures before it became too dark for my mediocre photographic skills.  I almost made it all around the garden before dusk.  Things are great and beginning to enter the territory of full bloom, and it’s disgusting I have to work for a living.

galanthus diggory

‘Diggory’ is completely up and open and has taken on his distinctive ‘puff’ shape.  He’s really an exceptional snowdrop.

I’ll try to be quick today.

snowdrops and winter aconite

Alongside the driveway snowdrops and winter aconite are now joining with the pinks of the first cyclamen coum flowers.  This is my favorite early spring combination of blooms. 

galanthus blewbury tart

Alan Street’s ‘Blewbury Tart’ is a favorite of many snowdrop lovers.  For good reason.

galanthus green brush

‘Green Brush’ is picky here, and I’ve had to take up offers for replacements twice already, but he still stands out as an excellent green tipped snowdrop.   I hope he continues to multiply in this spot. 

galanthus ronald mackenzie

There was no begging an offset of ‘Ronald Mackenzie’ from anyone.  In a moment of insanity the gardener bought one of these “difficult to please in the garden” yellow snowdrops and is still holding his breath on year two, even though Ronald seems to tentatively approve of his planting site.

galanthus anglesey abbey

An orange snowdrop?  I almost gave a little gasp when I saw the tinted glow on ‘Anglesey Orange Tip”.  Last year I missed it (the color fades as the flower opens fully) but this year it’s unmistakable.

More snowdrops are yet to come, but today the front border along the street is beginning to gain a respectable show of yellow winter aconites. As an aside, it appears the gardener tried to get a stepping stone path started last year, but it also looks like he came up a little short…

‘Rosemary Burnham’ comes up with her deepest saturation of green and then fades either slowly or rapidly depending on the sun and temperature. If it gets cold tomorrow (which is predicted) this color should last nicely!

‘Brenda Troyle’ is one of the first named snowdrops planted here, and it’s nice to think that all the single bulbs will eventually become similar clumps given nine years of growing.

Hopefully that wasn’t too bad.  This weekend I’m planning to get in my annual snowdropping adventure to points South, so of course that always deserves a post of its own, and in just about two weeks (March 3&4) there’s David Culp’s Galanthus Gala in Downingtown Pa.  That’s a lot, so don’t start looking for a break in the snowdrop posts just yet.  If all goes well there are many more to come so keep that “oh nice Frank, good for you” comment ready ’cause I’m barely getting started.

Earliest Spring Ever

We can usually squeak our last day of local skiing in during the first week of March, but this year the middle of February will be stretching it.  Spring seems to be here.  Not Easter dress, bouquets of tulips spring, more of a garden waking up, could still get buried in snow kind of season where you’re somewhere after mud season but not yet ready to put the winter coat away completely.  None of that makes sense, but maybe it does, and I suspect that’s a reason you still read this blog rather than just skim the pictures… not that I could blame you for skimming, it’s all just snowdrop nonsense again!

spring snowdrops

Winter aconite (Eranthis hyemalis) and snowdrops (Galanthus nivalis) next to the driveway.

Although it’s been remarkably warm the plants still don’t seem to have that urgency you see after a March blizzard melts and everything erupts.  Tulips and daffodils are still lying low and only a few crocus have started sprouting.  The snowdrops seem eager but a few are still holding back as if they’re also a little apprehensive regarding the calendar.  Whatever.  I declared spring last week and spring it is.  The entire garden was finished off this weekend and nearly every bed is cleaned of winter debris and cleared of tired hellebore and epimedium foliage.

spring garden cleanup

Just like my definition of spring’s arrival bucks the trends, my ‘cleaned up’ beds will also not please everyone out there.  There are still leaves everywhere, but at least the birch trees were power-washed last fall, so thank goodness for that! 

A good amount of rain is forecast for Thursday and that combined with more warm will likely get everything sprouting.  Even a cold Friday night (just in time for the weekend) won’t be enough to stop the progress.

spring snowdrops

More leafy beds.  ‘Richard Ayres’ in the center is looking better than he ever has, the mild weather has spared this early bird from his normal beatings.

You may have noticed I allow quite a few leaves to stay on my beds and if you really insist on knowing more I’ll be happy to go on and on about it.  Around here my autumn cleanup has been reduced to barely cleaning out beds, mowing all the leaves up from the lawn, and then just dumping the chopped mulch over whatever lays there to cover it all up in a nice consistent chopped leaf look.  I act like it’s a careless activity but to be honest I’m almost neurotic about stray grass seedheads falling into the mulch and having their beige-ness contaminate the brown-ness, and having spots where there are too many whole leaves, and not enough chopped bits to settle everything down, and…

spring snowdrops

This spot by the compost has just enough broken bits of twigs and small leaves to look like it just happened.  Even the bit of brick looks like it was just left where it fell rather than placed there because I liked the mossy look of it. 

So is it obsession or just some elaborate story being spun to cover up a sloppy cleanup?  Maybe I don’t even know myself, but I do know my policy of mowing whatever I can saves me from a ton of trips to the compost pile.  Weeding and compost turning and digging and hauling are a bunch of work so why not throw everything on the lawn, suck it up with the mower and then use it elsewhere (or back in the same bed) as a mulch to keep down the weeds?  Saturday there were piles of hellebore leaves heaped on the lawn, Sunday there was a nice mulch smothering the bittercress in the tropical bed.  I think that’s a win-win.

galanthus egret

This is the first spring I’ve ever actually seen ‘Egret’ show it’s distinctive upward curl to her petals.  Exciting?  Of course.  It doesn’t take much with snowdrops.

So it’s not even mid February and the garden is already tour-ready.  I’ll be spending the next few weeks leading tours through the garden and reminding visitors to follow the official snowdrop path and to not stray into the moss garden.  I’m sure everyone will be thrilled with my snowdrop stories and of course be amazed by my name dropping.  Boy will I be busy.

galanthus dryad gold bullion

A few years ago a friend gave me a tiny sliver of the yellow snowdrop ‘Dryad Gold Bullion’.  She’s done well and even if she looks similar to her ‘Wendy’s Gold’ parent, I think she’s slightly more vigorous.  

When the tour buses stop I wonder if they’ll notice the still-not-repaired bulldozer tracks across the yard, the scaffolding, and the piles of gravel and scrap siding.  And the mud.  Hmmm.  Maybe in my enthusiasm I’m missing a few things but such runs the passions when spring comes knocking, even if winter was all of 8 days this year 😉

The First day of Spring

I’m sticking to my guns and declaring today the first day of spring.  Non gardeners will spend the next three months whining and complaining about cold weather and chilly winds but some people are only happy when they’re complaining, so good for them.  The sun was out and the temperatures shot up to sweatshirt weather and I did next to nothing all day, just sat around and then sat around some more.  My second coffee probably took an hour to finish and hopefully I didn’t get a sunburn in the process since I was outside for that plus another few hours sitting, wandering, sitting, poking, sitting, uncovering…

galanthus wendys gold

The yellow snowdrops are my favorites.  Here’s ‘Wendy’s Gold’ fully up for the season and pristine after spending a few days under a bucket.

In case you’re wondering how things made it through the frigid cold, they’re fine.  So many things were starting to grow and I had my doubts about all those tender sprouts but only a few things took a hit and the majority look ready to take on the season at full speed.  I’m glad the cold was so short lived, I think that made a huge difference.

galanthus rodmarton

‘Rodmarton’ wasn’t even covered and still looks good.  As far as double snowdrops go I like this one a lot, with green tipped, fat blooms that stand high on sturdy stalks.

So now that spring is here I shall also announce the start of the over-sharing season where this blog fills with a monotony of white and green and sometimes yellow flowers which vary about as much as an island full of golden retrievers.  Hmm.  How’s that for an image?  Shipwrecked sailors would run the risk of being licked to death but would likely lose consciousness first from laughing too much.  But yeah, lots of snowdrops on the way so fair warning.

galanthus sutton courtney

‘Sutton Courtney’ is also up and open.  I love this one as well and she seems to be on the mend again after the gardener stupidly dumped several inches of soil on this bed to raise it some more without replanting the bulbs higher.  Don’t do that.

Maybe winter will return.  Maybe you’ll get a break.  I don’t think so though, so if you’re going to try and stick around just get those standard ‘looks nice’, ‘oh I love them’ comments ready and you won’t even have to read a post since they’re all going to be nearly the same.

At least I’m excited.  Hope you have a great week!

That Was Rough

We are on the fourth day of winter here and there’s even a dusting of snow on the ground to make it look serious.  People were finally zipping up their winter coats and by Friday most of the mountain lakes had ice extending from shore to shore.  Seeing winter weather here was half a relief until I looked at the ten day forecast and saw at least three days next week where the daytime high was over 50F(10C), so calm down.  Don’t pull out the ice fishing equipment just yet.

cold snowdrop

The snowdrops (Galanthus ‘Colossus’) are mostly wilted and flat in the cold.  That’s a good thing actually.

Based on the daily news reports I’m sure everyone was aware that cold weather was headed across much of the US this week.  I’m actually surprised there were no evacuation postings based on the way they were describing it, with dramatic windchill predictions, ‘record-breaking’, ‘life-threatening’ lows and all the dangers associated.  Maybe someone even named the cold front.  Cold front “Karl” is bearing down on the Northeast, buy your milk and bread (minus the egg$) now!!! before the brutal assault begins.

freeze protection spring bulbs

I did manage to bucket a few clumps and then threw fleece over this bed for good measure after ‘Mrs Macnamara’ and ‘Barnes’ flexed their previously damaged foliage and made me feel guilty about neglecting them last time. 

Today when I woke up we were down to -2F (-19C).  That’s about right in line with a normal winter low, even if this winter has been nothing close to normal.  I strolled around a little in the afternoon when the thermometer had risen to around 20F and things might not be too bad.  In spite of how advanced many of the sprouts were, two days of cold prior to the plunge allowed plants to get ready for the blast.  The witch hazel curled up and the snowdrops went limp.  Limp, sugar concentrated snowdrops don’t freeze as well and the wilted foliage doesn’t burst as easily from expanding ice crystals.  Tomorrow when spring arrives we will see what bounces back.  Hopefully most everything will since the coldest weather was just one night and things were somewhat ready for it.  Nature can be smart, probably smarter than an idiot teen who needs to be told to go back into the house and put on a coat before this car is going anywhere for goodness sakes it’s not even 8 degrees out…

freeze protection spring bulbs

It was so nice and sunny (yet cold) Thursday after work that I did go a little overboard with the freeze protection.  Cut evergreen boughs, buckets and fleece were doled out for the most precious and precocious of the snowdrops.

I really can’t blame the teen entirely.  His father is the one who planted all these European and Asian snowdrops and witch hazels, and thought a winter garden would be a good idea in a climate which welcomes brutal winters.  He’s not exactly the brightest either but let’s not dwell on that right now.

freeze protection spring bulbs

Even the regular golden winter aconites(Eranthis hiemalis) are thumbing their noses at this winter.  In another week they’ll be sprouting up everywhere with an enthusiasm better suited to March.

So in another moment of brightness I’m declaring the winter of ’22-’23 to be over.  February and March can be cold here but I’m giving up on winter, and next week everything is being uncovered and I’m starting the official spring cleanups regardless of historical averages.  I should be disturbed and cautious but that’s our world these days and I’m saying it’s time to plan for snowdrop season and make a few calls for this spring’s snowdropping adventures.  Giddyap I say and plan on making the best of the warmth!