Plenty of Plantness

Ideally Plantness should be a national holiday so that everyone, well I guess everyone except purveyors of plants, is able to head out each morning and find their daily plant goodies without pressures of starting times or quitting times.  Work really gets in the way.  The weather as well.  Saturday we made our big Plantness road trip in spite of the Pennsylvania weather, only to arrive and find that our first stop was closed because of the snow!  I guess we should have lingered over breakfast for a little longer because now, to kill time, we had to resort to chips and soda on overly-firm wooden chairs pulled up to a table at a gas station “dining” area.  Every now and then we’d poke our heads out to see if the plows had cleared the lot yet,  and every now and then we would eye the candy display or contemplate the quality of gas station nachos.

winter bouquet

A Plantness bouquet with some average and some surprising elements.  I think the tiny orange blooms are safflower (Carthamus) and the blue of the campanula was also unexpected.

After about an hour and a half the snow stopped and the plows rolled through  and we headed over but were informed that the boss with the keys was still about 20 minutes away and struggling with the terrible roads.  No problem.  Kimberley had her magic purse along and was able to pull out the fixings for a charcuterie to nibble on while we waited further in the car.  Sharp cheddar and some summer sausage on baguette rounds, with various other snacks and chocolates can make any wait far less painful.  We even seemed super-patient while we waited for the walks to get shoveled and salted rather than surging through the doors the second they unlocked.  Amateurs we are not.

plantness display

An overview of the Plantness loot on day 8.  

We bought plants.  We were the only customers.  It sounds like Allentown Pennsylvania does not celebrate Plantness the way we do so I won’t feel bad when winter lingers a little more down their way.

So on Day 8 of the Ten Days of Plantness here’s were we are.  Day 1: snowdrops ordered, 2: I accepted a gifted variegated dracaena, days 3&4: a variegated pothos ‘Jade and Pearls’ from my local go-to Hidden Gardens, along with a tropical pitcher plant (Nepenthes) days 5,6: two more plant gifts, a tiny earth star (Cryptanthus) offset which I had been hinting at, and a cutting of scindapsus… which I had also been hinting at 🙂  Then for day 7 at our snowed out greenhouse I picked up a chlorophytum orchidastrum (Mandarin plant)… which I’d never heard of until that day, but it’s in the spider plant family and was labeled as ‘easy’, so…. and I think it looks cool, even if it does remind me a bit of a houseplant hosta.  Okay, two more things which we picked up at the next spot after heading out into the snow again.  For days 8 and also 9 I have two new bromeliads.  They’re somewhat noticeable in the photo.  I’m quite happy.

bromeliad

Labeled as “bromeliad” this one lacks the ‘teeth’ most of my other ones have, and one can run their hands along a leaf without looking for a set of tweezers to remove the barbs.  I think it’s a remarkable leaf pattern.

I was on a self-imposed bromeliad ban but it doesn’t look like that’s lasted since I just picked up two new ones, and that’s fine since it’s Plantness and plant bans don’t apply.  Plus I could have easily selected a third and I didn’t, but I won’t rule out adding another sometime this week or this season because as long as the ban has already been broken…

pearls and jade pothos

Pothos are boring.  My mom had one half a century ago on the mantle and they’re still kinda the same thing just with new variegations.  I still love them but never thought I would pay for it rather than share a cutting but here we are with ‘Jade and Pearls’.

Day ten is possibly also satisfied since I have the Plantness bouquet which was my first photo.  In an awkward moment I walked into the house with the bouquet and someone here asked if they were for her and I had to say no.  If I gifted them they wouldn’t count for Plantness, and even though my well-trained brain was screaming ‘yes!  of course they’re for you’ my arms were also carrying two boxes of pizza and thank goodness that was enough to save me from going down in flames.  There was also ice cream, that’s probably what really saved me.

So I hope your Plantness is going just as well… minus the snowstorms.  If I were a rule-follower I’d stop at ten, but Cathy at Words and Herbs was sharing her Plantness goodies and I saw the perfect glossy, spring-edition garden magazine and I knew that’s one more thing I need.  The ten day forecast does not show gardening weather, and a few magazines with pictures of hellebores and crocus, and a snowdrop or ten would be perfect for a little snug under a blanket reading.  Enjoy!  and all the best for a wonderful week.

Plantness 2026!

Once again it’s that most wonderful time of the gardening year… it’s the first day of Plantness!  Obviously you knew that but when I saw it hadn’t appeared automatically on my phone calendar, I thought good-golly I better make an official announcement!  So here it is.  January 12th is the first day of the ten days of Plantness, a celebration of hope and renewal and a way to get through the ten coldest days of the year (in my zone at least) with an eye on the warming weather which is our future.  The winter solstice has passed, but even with a few minutes added each day the strength of the sun still isn’t quite enough to slow the cooling until about a month later.  For us that’s January 21st when the average temps start to increase again, and by celebrating Plantness we make our way through those last coldest nights to turn the tide and begin to see things warming up again.

bromeliad houseplant

This bromeliad was a 2024 Plantness plant.  Two years later and it’s in three pots around the winter garden and care amounts to nothing more than toping off the water in the leaves every week or two.  I’ve never even fertilized.

So on each of the ten days I shall add a new plant in celebration.  That’s basically the point of the holiday, force yourself to add something new each day, and for as easy (and possibly reckless) as that might sound, it’s really not!  It’s the depths of winter and places are closed or pickings are sparse.  The (other)holiday season wore a couple people out.  We’ve been doing it for a two years now and sometimes it takes a kick in the butt kind of attitude to put on a coat and go out into the dark for a little plant shopping after work, but we know what’s at stake.  Giving Plantness it’s proper dues will guarantee an early spring and if taking on a few new plants is what it takes, I’m there.

brasil heartleaf philodendron

‘Brasil’ heartleaf philodendron was a grocery find and I still love it.  After a poky start it’s really taking off and probably due for a hanging pot finally rather than any more draping across furniture.

“But wait, I can’t possibly fit in ten more plants, but I also don’t want it to be my fault that winter stretches on forever!”  -yes, that’s a responsible thought but please try harder.  There’s a range of options which count and I think everyone can do their part.  New plants count, but so do plant accessories, plant pots, plant soil, outdoor plant orders, seed orders… plant society memberships, plant books, garden tools, garden accessories… cut flowers… basically if you think about plants when you’re buying it, it works… unless it’s a fake plant of course, that never counts.

variegated boston fern tiger

A Plantness favorite, this variegated Boston fern, aka tiger fern, was a little four inch pot of coolness from a specialty greenhouse visited two years ago.  

Alright, I’ll admit it’s a little tricky getting out every day so here are a few of the cheat codes for properly celebrating Plantness.  Multiple items picked up on the same day count forward, ie: three things today will cover Mon, Tues, and Wed.  Gifted plants always count towards the receiver, but might count for the giver if purchased in the appropriate timeframe.  Things ordered but not received can count on the order day… or whenever, and pre-Plantness purchases might also count, particularly if purchased on credit and you have yet to pay the bill.  Even gifted plantness items count if they’re given prior to Plantness -because maybe someone couldn’t wait any longer for that first greenhouse run of the new year and had to make space- you can count these early gifted items as well, just don’t ‘officially’ accept them until after the 12th.  Perhaps it sounds complicated.  It can be.  Message me if you need help, and if in doubt, err on the side of caution and just buy it!

variegated boston fern tiger

A closeup of the tiger fern.  I’m wondering if I separate a few all-chartreuse divisions out, if they would remain stable and if that’s a good thing.

One of the important nuances of Plantness is that longevity doesn’t matter, in fact I encourage people to buy plants which they know will die because as you might guess, dead plants don’t take up windowsill space, so toss the poinsettia and bring home a few florist cyclamen and spring primula…. and then feel free to put them out on the back steps the minute you get bored.

snake plant Sansevieria sayuri

I was way too excited to get this variegated snake plant (Sansevieria ‘Sayuri’) and hope I didn’t scare anyone when I immediately snatched it off the shelf.  Sadly, it’s barely grown since last year and I think it’s me.

I hope you enjoy this year’s ten days of Plantness.  I’ll try and post a few updates as the season goes on but I can’t make any promises.  Please join me though.  My first Plantness purchase, and the reason I didn’t finish this post last night, was a snowdrop order from The Temple Nursery.  The catalog arrived Friday and to even wait one day on sending in an order risks missing out on your choices (so I can’t believe I sat on it through Saturday) but it’s en route now and we will cross our fingers.

galanthus potters prelude

A reliable Thanksgiving bloomer, ‘Potter’s Prelude’ is late this year with all the cold.  Our January thaw had me out taking photos of this drop since it’s finally in bloom, but by the time I got around to this end of the garden a snow squall had changed the tone.

Tomorrow I’m working late, so maybe a grocery store stop?  Wednesday I might try and hit Hidden Gardens which is my local wintertime greenhouse treat, and by the weekend my friends and I are planning a daytrip South to bigger greenhouses and more fun.  Fingers crossed a cake will be involved.

Hope you have as much fun with this as we do, and let me know how it goes!  Have a great week 🙂

The Winter Garden ’26

It’s a beautiful Sunday morning, with an emphasis on sun because that’s what’s important this time of year.  It makes the snow and frost twinkle and the white reflect and it’s fantastically bright unless it’s not.  Recently there’s been plenty of ‘not’ and short grey days do not bring the fantastic as well as the sun does.  Here are two obligatory snow-themed photos.  They were taken on a less-grey moment yesterday since my camera skills can’t handle the brightness of a sun filled snow day.

the winter garden

‘Nuisance snow’ has kept the garden mostly white all December but there have been no larger storms.  That’s a good thing for garden insulation and protection… and a great thing for the snow shoveling back!

During one of the beautifully sunny plus warm days last week I actually picked up a pruner and did some work.  The rambling ‘Wartberg’ rose on the arbor has been getting twiggy and messy and it seemed like a good thing to tackle since I had the ladder out anyway for a gutter inspection.  Just so you know, I don’t think it’s the right time to prune rambling/climbing roses.  Raw cuts in the middle of winter is one thing but there’s also the fact these bloom on old wood, so it’s possible I’m cutting off potential flowers… but I had the ladder, I had the pruners, and I had the itch to do something in the frozen garden, so there you go.

the winter garden

All the trimmings were left where they fell and another dusting of snow showed just how pleased the rabbits were to get at all those tasty rose bits.  Half are gone already and it’s nice to see the bunnies making themselves useful for once!

So it’s been cold and one rose was pruned, so what happened to all the other hours of the day you may ask?  Here’s the long story.  I bought a fish tank.  55 gallons and it’s too heavy for one person to lift even empty, so buying the tank was the easy part and now I needed something strong to put it on.  Enter weeks of thrift store visits looking for solid old cabinets that were big but not too big, ugly but not too ugly, old but not too old.  I finally had a $10 winner and found the help to drag it home and into the basement since the plant room was now going to become a plant/fish room… which seemed obvious once I thought about it.  Days of cleaning, sanding, painting, sealing, polishing and the cabinet looks decent and the drawer pulls look like pulls you would touch again with bare hands.  I set it up.  It was still heavy.  The room still needs work… as in finished walls, so I decided to fill a smaller old fish tank with water rather than the new one since it would be way to heavy to move again if work ever gets started on the walls.  Better to start the fish thing up again on a smaller scale anyway, rather than 55 gallons all at once, so what to do with a big tank fitted with a light and a nice substrate of gravel?

55 gallon terrarium

A 55 gallon terrarium.  Fortunately I had a few spare plants on hand to fill things in a little and get it started.

So in my head I imagine that people who come across this blog faithfully keep track of every adventure and meticulously recall things which run through my mind, even if they’re never mentioned.  I’m sure that’s an easily diagnosed condition or something but to address it let me recap this basement talk with a quick summary.  We built an addition to the house.  Two years ago I broke through into the new basement from the old and am slowly turning this unheated, unfinished space into my winter garden with a bunch of cheap LED shoplights.  The winter garden adventure started years ago in the back of the garage and has escalated each year but never as badly as when it moved into this basement space.  I highly recommend it 🙂

baby's tears Soleirolia soleirolii

The yellow form of baby’s tears (Soleirolia soleirolii) in the tank is a new thing for me.  I’ve seen it in real conservatories as a groundcover or something to cover bare soil in pots and it’s probably a weed in real life so maybe it has just the right hardiness and vigor for me to grow.

So it seems a lot of work was put into a new fishtank only to leave it fish-free, and it might be odd that I’d clean and set up the 30 year old tank which was there the whole time instead but here we are.  It gives the winter garden a nice bubbling water effect.

indoor conservatory

The fish tank, the one with actual fish, is the new centerpiece of the winter garden.  Goldfish are the fish of choice.

This is a lot of fish talk for a gardening blog, so let’s move on to the plants of the winter garden.  Again, for the casual visitor, this new basement winter garden is home to all the houseplants and overwintering tropicals which needed shelter from the ice and cold outside.  It’s not heated but warm enough for most, and it’s a different group of plants when compared to my second winter garden which exists out in the less-heated-but-also-not-freezing-garage winter garden.  The garage is for real work, seed-starting, and overwintering annuals plus a home for cool-weather blooming things like cyclamen and primula.  I’m sure most people divide their winter gardens in a similar way.

indoor conservatory

Ferns and ficus, begonias and bromeliads, and pretty much anything else which needed a winter home after spending the summer on a porch or the shaded side yard.

Just like many things here, this new basement winter garden started out innocently enough and then escalated.   Last summer a $6 kiddie pool inspired a fountain and goldfish pond on the back porch, so why not store it in here for the winter?  The fountain fish are wintering in a (third?) fishtank at school, but the fish-free fountain makes a nice addition to the basement.

indoor conservatory

Scraps of astroturf, leftover tiles and bricks, all found a home in the winter garden.  Even an old dresser mirror came out of the storage room for this.

Other than still not having actual walls, the new winter garden did make some progress this year and it’s finally become the winter conservatory which I’m too cheap and poor to actually have.  I can sit down there sipping tea, basking in the growlights, and even inhaling the fragrance of citrus blooms because my lemon tree is currently in bloom.  The actual plant looks questionable but it does have the strength to put out a bounty of blooms and I appreciate that.

indoor conservatory

Lemons which might have grown as much as they ever will, followed by blooms for next season’s fruit.

To me the blooms are a hopeful sign for a bounty of growth next summer, assuming the plant makes it through to next summer.  Also hopeful is the condition of my $7 clearance palms which are not yet dying in the far corner of the conservatory.  I’m pretty sure they’re Manilla palms (Adonidia) which are supposed to be trickier indoors, but all I’m hoping for is status quo for the next four months until they go outdoors again.  Hopefully they can drag death out for five months at least.

adonidia manilla palm

Some of the palms are thinking about new leaves, but I think three or four have lost their growing points, something which happened prior to me purchasing them, and likely a fatal loss.

This post is becoming much longer than I was planning, which isn’t a surprise considering my record so let me end on two things.  First I want to brag endlessly about the first winter garden harvest, a crop of calamondin oranges off what was probably last summer’s most extravagant purchase.  I think I spent around $34 on it in June, but as it flowered throughout the summer and began to form tiny fruits I decided the expense was worth it.  Even now I can recall the sweet fragrance as I sipped coffee on a humidity soaked morning on the back deck last August.  In spite of the sweet fragrance our sampling of one of the tiny oranges this week determined the flavor to be anything but sweet.  They’re beautiful but sour.  I see they make decent preserves though and perhaps I can con a friend into transforming them into something toast worthy.

indoor conservatory

A little calamonin on the winter garden bench.  Studies show people are far more impressed by these than anything else I’ve ever grown.

Okay, second thing and I’m done.  We have a new puppy consuming all the time which isn’t spent on fishtanks and flowers and holiday festivities.  ‘Lemon’ has a bunch of energy and a full contact play style which six year old Biscuit does not share, so someone has to either take his place or act as referee while she learns how things roll here at Sorta Suburbia.  Eventually something is bound to give and it’s likely that something will be us, as we bend to her will.

lemon the yorkie pup

Introducing ‘Lemon’ who arrived here two weeks ago.  For the record no one in this house with a ‘Y’ chromosome was involved in selecting the name.

Puppies, new fish and plants.  I’m well positioned for the new year and I hope you are as well, and although my enthusiasm on the very last day of vacation might not completely reflect my enthusiasm for a return to pre-dawn commutes, the days get longer from here on and that’s a good thing.  Plus! Plantness approaches 🙂

January 12th is the first day of Plantness, and I’m sure you know that but just in case I’ll give a reminder and a summary in the next post.  In the meantime I wish you an excellent week!