I've noticed an interesting pattern with my blog posts of late. One day it's "Winter isn't so bad, look at all the interesting textures and the plant interplay with snow and ice." The next day it's "This sucks, let's look backward or forward and reminisce about actual living blooms or healthy foliage." A bit schizophrenic if you will.
And that just about sums it up for me. While I've come to appreciate the winter garden more and more and its beautiful subtlety, I still long for the days when I couldn't keep up with the pruning or deadheading or even the weeding.
Today was one of those "Winter ain't so bad" days as I wandered the yard for the first time in two weeks. We have had brutally cold temps for days now but that wasn't going to stop me in my quest for the beloved "winter interest". Frost bite and runny nose be damned; we are getting some pics up in here.
There is no better example of winter awesomeness than the peeling bark on trees. Throw in some late afternoon sun and you've got yourself a cornucopia of interest:
River Birch
Multi-trunked River Birch
'Winter King' Hawthorn
Without any leaves or flowers in sight, it is an awesome opportunity to get up close and personal with the tree limbs and enjoy their subtle colors and textures:
'Winter King' Hawthorn
Next, we move on to the deciduous shrubs. Many offer great branch color that contrasts so well with all of the surrounding "brown-ness":
'Henry's Garnet' Itea
Dappled willow
Or even their own version of peeling bark hidden deep inside all of that shrubbery:
Ninebark
Of course, I couldn't compose a winter post without some reference to an ornamental grass, and for today, I was digging the spent "blooms" on a patch of 'Karl Foerster' grass:
I even find interest in the spent siberian irises, with their dead foliage lit up by not only the winter sun, but also the snow at their feet:
The spent seedheads of the bee balms ...
A reminder of what was and what will be:
Same goes with the obedient plants ...
And their once crisp white blooms:
The aforementioned siberian iris and their seedpods add a certain look to the landscape ...
Although they cannot compare to their "spring look":
And finally, a lonely bud bides its time until ...
It puts on a show for both the eyes, and more impressively, the nose:
Be on the lookout for the next post which will go back to winter denial/hatred.
John