Category Archives: garden plant lists

featured plants

Meadow Blooms 6 – Snowdrops

Snowdrops are the wonderful winter blooms that last through the dark season.

galanthus, an acre of snowdrops at the Fireside Grill garden Victoria BC Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Their January promise pulls me outside again & again to delight in their tenaciousness.  Each year I plant more bulbs around our garden to extend seasonal interest.  In my dreams, I imagine a meadow, like the one Dad & I just came across in real life.

galanthus, an acre of snowdrops at the Fireside Grill garden Victoria BC Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Initially home to a tea house, but better know as Maltwood Manor estate, it’s no wonder the attached Garry oak meadow inspired art.

Who knows when these snowdrops were planted?  (Maybe 60-70 years ago?)  Happily, they’ve naturalized, spreading through at least 1 of the 3 acres of property at the Fireside Grill.

snowdrops blooming 2013 12 27, galanthus, garden Victoria BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Now I’m curious to see the seasonal progression of this meadow.  What other bulbs are planted here?  Do any of the native wildflowers of the Garry oak ecosystem remain?  And – – what’s the name of that cat who so obviously enjoys this garden??

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P.S. Here are some other snowdrop patches I admire:

P.S.S.  And here are some other meadow faves:

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Embarrassment of Riches

It felt so awkward,  I couldn’t talk about it – – – until now.

At first, I was in disbelief.  Here I am with errands done & time on my hands. What to do?

Check out Abkhazi Garden.   🙂    Each visit, I pick up a few more seasonal tips.  It is always lovely, no matter the month.

snowdrops blooming at Abkhazi Garden November 20, 2015 garden Victoria BC Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

This time, even before walking through the gate, I’m awestruck.
Snowdrops!
At this time of year?
That’s crazy early.

I dig out my camera to prove the sighting.
An embarrassment of riches.

snowdrops blooming at Abkhazi Garden November 20, 2015 garden Victoria BC Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Now, I’ve heard the Oak Bay area is within the rain shadow of the Olympic Mountains (just across the Straits of Juan de Fuca).  Under the rain shadow, there’s more sunshine & less rainfall than anywhere else on Vancouver Island.

It’s real.  My buddy RG, who lives only 3 km down the road, and on the border of Oak Bay, has crocus 3 weeks earlier than we do.

snowdrops blooming at Abkhazi Garden November 20, 2015 garden Victoria BC Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

But these snowdrops – – these are super early.
Unbelievably early.
November 20, 2015.

I asked gardening expert Jeff de Jong about them & he said they were regular snowdrops… no unique species or cultivar… just well established, in a prime location & very happy to be there.  Wow.

I wanted to tell y’all about the blooms, but though it might be taken as bragging instead.  For a while, I contemplated El Nino, & stewed about global warming.

variegated camellia blooming in mid Februarygarden Victoria BC Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Then Jeff posted a picture of a variegated camellia he spotted on December 14.  (Similar to this one I’d come by mid-February last year).  Perhaps his is a natural fall-blooming variety, but the posting took me by surprise anyway.  Even by Victoria’s standards, It felt too early.  Under our grey skies, this seemed an omen of climate change.

Daffodil blooming mid December at Deep Cove Chalet garden Victoria BC Pacific Northwest
photo by Bonnie Manning

Then on December 20, BM posted a shot of daffodils blooming at Deep Cove Chalet.

Are these a super early variety?
Or just well established and happy in a prime location?

Again, I’m awestruck.
On the last day of Autumn – before winter even begins – –
blooms!

Snowdrops, camellia & daffodils before Christmas?  Seems crazy.

Now that Solstice &  Christmas have passed, and we’ve delighted in a few days of sunshine, the snowdrops are just starting to bloom in our garden.  I’m looking at the world with fresh eyes.  No matter El Nino or whatever else is going on, I’ve decided to enjoy the flowers along the way.

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PS Here are some other snowdrop patches I admire:

Hardhack

It first caught my eye on a walk in the sunny, rolling hills of Panama Flats.  What a pretty shrub!  AND It’s happily growing in the wild with no gardener to fuss over it!!!

hardhack, steeplebush garden Victoria BC Pacific Northwest
hardhack
photo by SVSeekins

My mind flashes to fantasies of a low maintenance garden. Isn’t this shrub  a good candidate for membership?

My go-to native plant guide, Plants of the Pacific Northwest, helps identify it:
Common names: hardhack & steeplebush.
BUT it’s the Latin name that rings bells with me:   Spirea Douglasii
Spirea !!
Cousin to the decorative spirea that I see in so many urban landscapes.
Very encouraging.

non-native spirea garden Victoria BC Pacific Northwest
non-native spirea
photo by SVSeekins

The Douglas Spirea ‘s deciduous leafs are grayish with woolly texture which leads me to guess that they’re deer tolerant. Word has it that black tail deer graze it.  Then another source says it is deer resistant  Who knows?

It tops out at 6ft./ 2m, which is handy for hedging.

The typical home is in moist areas.  That explains why it’s found at Panama Flats as well as Swan Lake Nature Sanctuary.  It’s suckering habit produces dense thickets along stream banks.

The pink steeples of Hardhack first appear in June.  The flowers last through the heat of summer eventually turning to brown seed clusters that hold on long after the leaves fall.  That’s a luxuriously long season for feeding bees, then birds!

hardhack, steeplebush garden Victoria BC Pacific Northwest
hardhack / steeplebush
photo by SVSeekins

This plant is just as pretty as the classic lilac (syringa)  & butterfly bush (buddleja).  Both of those shrubs can be dominating in a garden landscape, seeding or suckering willy-nilly.  I reckon hardhack is a choice replacement option, especially because it is much more of a food source to local birds,  pollinators, & wild life.   It can be dominating like the other two, but only in very moist situations.

I’d like to grow hardhack in my yard, but the moisture requirements are too high.  We do have a ditch that would supply the moisture needed…  maybe C would give up a patch of grass along there ??

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