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Showing posts with label Crape Myrtle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crape Myrtle. Show all posts

Sunday, February 12, 2023

February 2023 Staten Island, NY - zone 7 (low temperature, 6F).

It's been an incredibly mild winter overall, but temperatures dropped HARD during a cold snap in December and early February. 

They dropped to 6F (compared to 3F at my place), but the damage there was a little worse than in my yard on Long Island for the evergeeens because they are exposed to so much sun and wind. Everything looks pretty good. This was the coldest we’ve gotten since 2016.
UNPROTECTED:
Aucuba: Some minor leaf burn.
Sabal minor: So far so good!
Daphniphyllum: Minor leaf damage.Usually there isn’t any damage.
Florida anise: No damage
Evergreen dogwood: Total burn (usually no damage)
Frostproof gardenia: total burn
Fatsia japonica: Leaf burn, but no dieback.
rohdea japonica: No damage
mahonia: No damage (still blooming!)
PROTECTED:
Trachycarpus: No damage
Summer snow Gardenia: Minor leaf damage.
Crown Jewel Gardenia: No damage.

Trachycarpus were protected, the illicium floridanum was not & looks great!

Daffodils about 3" up! 

Hyacinth are poking out

Fatsia japonica are a little burned but looks like no dieback here

Daphniphyllum macropodum showing some leaf burn which is surprising. Overall it looks good!

Also surprised to see some minor leaf damage on Aucuba japonica. The full sun and wind definitely contributed to that.

Sabal minor was completely unprotected. So far it looks okay, but we'll find out more in the spring! 

Mahonia japonica and Rhodea japonica looking nice together!

English laurel untouched by the cold. Haven't figured out where to put this one yet!

Gardenia summer snow to the right and crown jewel to the left.


Crape myrtle bark looking so pretty!











Saturday, January 21, 2017

January 2017 Around My Yard

January and February are what I consider the dead of winter here in New York. This winter has been a pretty mild one. Although we have gotten pretty cold (down to nearly 10F), we've averaged daytime temperatures well into the 40s so far this month.

So here is my underwhelming update of the best subtropicals in my yard in January.

 My mahonia is a reliable winter bloomer. Buds appear in the Fall and flowers open up from February through March. The flowers are yellow which are a nice bright touch to dark winter days.


Speaking of bright - even when young Silver Mediterranean Fan Palms (chamaerops humilis var. cerifera) are very colorful with beautiful silver fronds. Mine has been in the ground for 5 years with minimal protection making it one of the hardiest palms I grow. It's a very slow grower though.



I also grow the common green form, Chamaerops humilis. They can easily tolerate temperatures below 20F so there beautiful fronds can be enjoyed most of the winter even in January. I have protected it only for 2 nights so far and in it's 6 years in New York, this palm has survived a temperature of 3 degrees! 


Polystichum polyblepharum (aka Tassel Fern) is an evergreen fern hardy to zone 5. I have noticed some foliar damage with low temperatures only in the teens. So far it seems to be fully evergreen here in New York City. This fern is a beauty during the summer and not too bad looking during the winter. I recommend it!

The first of two plants that I left outside WAY longer than I wanted to, my Fatshedera lizei tree ivy. This plant is a hybrid between English Ivy and Fatsia Japconica. I left it outside in its tiny pot during an overnight low of only 10 degrees!! The whole thing was frozen solid and droopy when I took it into my unheated garage. The next morning it bounced right back. Definitely a hardy plant! 


I cannot believe that I accidentally left my Trachycarpus Nanital outside this late into the year. It saw temperatures into the teens all while inside a tiny pot. I have no doubt that the pot was basically frozen solid at some point the past few weeks... but it handled all that cold with no problem. We'll see if any damage shows up during the spring months.


My big trachys are my favorite palms in the yard. They were babies when I got them and they look good even in January!


The big appeal of gardenias is their fragrant white flowers in the spring and summer BUT they also have beautiful foliage which is a welcomed sight during the winter.

Crown Jewel Gardenias have very low growing habits. They remind me a lot of azaleas.


Frostproof Gardenias have very dense foliage. The leaves are also different than  your typical gardenia. Instead of broad, dark-green, glossy foliage, Frostproof gardenias have more lacy and light green foliage. I think it's a very attractive shrub ... and when it's in bloom it's AMAZING!


That's a great "segue" to another evergreen plant that is in bloom in January. My Loquat! This plant has seen temperatures down to 16F this year before I finally caved and gave it protection. Not only did it see some pretty significant cold weather, but there was no foliage damage and it is still holding on to healthy flower buds. Unfortunately I am not expecting any fruit from this tree. The foliage alone makes it worth growing.



My plumerias are blooming too (indoors at least). I just took a trip to South Florida and plumeria blooms were EXTREMELY hard to come by, all the trees were just about completely dormant. So I guess it's a nice accomplishment to have my largest plumeria blooming in January for 3 winters in a row now. The blooms develop normally and there are currently no pests like aphids of spider mites bothering it. I am really happy to see thriving and it's nice to smell plumeria flowers up here in the winter!


Begonias are almost too easy to grow! 



My Confederate Jamine spends most of the winter outside my front porch. It goes inside when temperatures drop below the upper teens. It starts to get damage below about 15 degrees. If I bring it inside for the winter, its beautiful blooms will happen too early in the season. It's a spring bloomer.


I'll end this post with some shots of my Crape Myrtle. I put spanish moss on my Crape Myrtles every season. Usually I take it off to overwinter the moss in my unheated garage but I am letting it be this year. It has been so wet and mild this winter here that I think it just might have a shot at surviving if we don't get too cold. The Spanish moss is definitely alive as we approach the end of January so fingers crossed. 



But even without the moss Crape Myrtles are beautiful in the wintertime. Check out the exfoliating bark! Not as dramatic as their bright blooms in the summetime, but they are one of the more attractive deciduous trees around here in the wintertime. 







Thursday, August 4, 2016

Some End of July Photos Around the Yard

My sitting area

A few steps back.


This coconut palm was just a sprout in June 2009. It's stayed small and healthy ever since!


Petnas


Side entrance to my yard has come a long way in the past few years.


Pool area


Plumeria "Crazy" living up to its name.



Happy that my Kopper King Hibiscus are starting to bloom! The Adondila is enjoying its 5th summer in my yard!



Love the silvery undersides to my Trachys at night.


Lots of things going well in this picture.


Bees buzzing on the ice plant blooms.


Crape Myrtles starting to do their thing! August is a big month for the crapes.



Check out the banana canna! So small just a few weeks ago and now HUGE!


I started this spaghetti squash as a seed in June from an expensive spaghetti squash from the supermarket. It is fruiting!


Some colocasia pups!


Monday, November 30, 2015

November Pics Around My Yard

Remember that frost scare I talked about in my October Post? Well it hasn't really gotten any colder since. All the plants that survived through that are still doing great.

Here's my mekong Giant. It will be overwintering outdoors. I hope it survives!



A restaurant down the block landscaped with coconut palms this year. Here they are around Thanksgiving time still looking green. Could you believe that Coconut palms could co-exist with christmas decorations in NYC!


My Washingtonia Palm is still very green as are my cannas. No hard freezes in the front yard yet!


I am in complete disbelief with this one. My Kopper King Hibiscus is actually still blooming despite it being late November! Anyone who grows hardy hibiscus know to only expect blooms during the hottest weeks of the year. These are newly planted though (I planted them in September) and I guess the greenhouses they were grown in threw them off schedule. We'll find out their real blooming schedule next summer!



Although crape myrtles are generally associated with the southern states, they compete with the fall foliage of northern trees easily! My crape is definitely one of the more colorful trees on the block (Keep in mind people mostly plant bradford pears on my block and their foliage isn't too spectacular in my opinion).



Fall foliage with palms.



My Loquat is blooming. This tree is marginally hardy here in NYC (I'll be protecting it anyway). These blooms are about the most fall color you'll see from them. Their appeal this far north is their leathery evergreen leaves. Down south they are growing for their tasty fruit!


A couple of angles from the front yard.




Here's a closeup of my Washingtonia.




It's amazing to be greeted with mandevilla vines after Thanksgiving.



My Sabal Minor and Black and Blue salvia still looking like summertime. They will be going through their first winter this year. My begonias are still looking great in November too (you can see the edge of that planter to the very right of this picture).



I've definitely started to associate fall with butterfly ginger. If I'm lucky the blooms will begin to open up in August, but they'll always be enough buds from summer to last into the first frost. There are still plenty of blooms in November. The blooms are beautiful but the fragrance is what makes this plant really incredible. I actually bought these plants as tiny roots in Hawaii at a tourist shop. They were really easy to grow!











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