Great video! I never thought to leave the Joe Pye weed up for the winter. I'll give that a try but it might be too wet in my climate for it to look good over the winter but it's worth a try. Thanks.
I have astilbe and coneflower, astilbe grow quickly as well as my conflower. Last year my astible wasnt strong enough to handle manitoba winters. Dyed down but came back quickly.
Thank you from the Canadian prairies!! Definitely need to better plan my garden for winter interest 😂. Two that I've added are the dwarf mugo pine and an amur ming cherry tree. Ive had a few of the perennials and grasses you mentioned on my list for other reasons but now I definitely want to add them!
Great list of plants. I, 100% percent agree to start your garden design with the winter interest especially in colder zones. I have the Sango Kaku JP, Pearl Glam beatyberry and Castle Spire holly. I wonder if your zone went up with the latest USDA update as ours in Lancaster County went from 6b to 7a.
I think a lot of zones changed, but in my experience here (as well as hundreds of other local gardeners) the new zone is WRONG! We are still the lower zone.
Really like your videos. Have you tried winter aconite, a bulb, that typically flowers before snow drops in my zone 6. The bees love it, it spreads gently and Queen Elizabeth the first admired it in her gardens. Arnold's Promise witch hazel is a cross between the japanese and the chinese witch hazel. As far as I can discover the narive witch hazels blossom in the fall and the asian ones in the spring.
Excellent video. You included exactly the right information that we need, and I love how you had pictures of how the plant appears in winter, and also summer (or its prime season). Thank you
Great list- I really enjoyed it! Maybe mix up the background music a bit? Last year I began planting much more with winter interest in mind, and my first plantings of small evergreens. I was curious to see if Nandina “firepower” and abelia “kaleidoscope” would hold their leaves here in our 6B (central Ohio) garden. So far so good, but it’s not even winter yet!
Love the straight to the point presentation 👍🏻
Awesome list and I really appreciate how you included small shots of the leaves/flowers in other seasons.
Glad that was helpful for you!
I’m trying the proud berry coral berry. I think the beauty berry will be my pink and purple pop.
Great video! I never thought to leave the Joe Pye weed up for the winter. I'll give that a try but it might be too wet in my climate for it to look good over the winter but it's worth a try. Thanks.
That's for the comprehensive plant info!
Awesome, nice and quickly given.Thank you.
I have astilbe and coneflower, astilbe grow quickly as well as my conflower. Last year my astible wasnt strong enough to handle manitoba winters. Dyed down but came back quickly.
I'm so glad I found your channel. I've done everything backwards 😭 Now I'm trying to fix it.
You got this! 🌿🏡
@@PrettyPurpleDoor thanks ❤️
Thank you from the Canadian prairies!! Definitely need to better plan my garden for winter interest 😂. Two that I've added are the dwarf mugo pine and an amur ming cherry tree. Ive had a few of the perennials and grasses you mentioned on my list for other reasons but now I definitely want to add them!
Great list of plants. I, 100% percent agree to start your garden design with the winter interest especially in colder zones. I have the Sango Kaku JP, Pearl Glam beatyberry and Castle Spire holly. I wonder if your zone went up with the latest USDA update as ours in Lancaster County went from 6b to 7a.
Yes from 6b to 7a. Won't change much for me though, it's only 5 degree temperature difference.
I think a lot of zones changed, but in my experience here (as well as hundreds of other local gardeners) the new zone is WRONG! We are still the lower zone.
Whew! Great job...
Love how you are to the point with the information stated in your titles! New subscriber here!!
Thanks for the sub! Welcome 😊
Really like your videos. Have you tried winter aconite, a bulb, that typically flowers before snow drops in my zone 6. The bees love it, it spreads gently and Queen Elizabeth the first admired it in her gardens. Arnold's Promise witch hazel is a cross between the japanese and the chinese witch hazel. As far as I can discover the narive witch hazels blossom in the fall and the asian ones in the spring.
Thanks for the info!
Excellent video. You included exactly the right information that we need, and I love how you had pictures of how the plant appears in winter, and also summer (or its prime season). Thank you
So nice of you. You're very welcome
Thank you Amy. 💐💚🙃
Great list- I really enjoyed it! Maybe mix up the background music a bit? Last year I began planting much more with winter interest in mind, and my first plantings of small evergreens. I was curious to see if Nandina “firepower” and abelia “kaleidoscope” would hold their leaves here in our 6B (central Ohio) garden. So far so good, but it’s not even winter yet!
🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌿🌳💚