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Winter plants

amber waves heuchera
The warm weather we had up until a couple of weeks ago made me appreciate not just the dead plants I cherish so much for dried arrangements, but also those that hung in and stayed green (or some other living shade, like the Heuchera ‘Amber Wave’, right) up until mid-January or later.

Here are some more pix of plants before we got some snow cover.

amber waves heuchera
Cyclamen coum

Lamium and leaves.
Lamium and leaves.

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Weird Willows

weird willow stem
Larger image.

This stem is from a shrubby willow I started from a cutting a couple of years ago. It’s a 6-foot-tall and -wide specimen now, with at least a dozen of the terminal stems flattened and ‘hyper-budded’ like this. Weird.

I asked one of our woody plant people and she said it’s a genetic thing, and that they’re used in dried flower arrangements. I’d also heard from another source that this might also be triggered by stress. It’s along the road and gets a lot of salt, but I don’t know if that would count.

I do plan to see what happens in spring when all those buds break, and also want to see what happens when I root a plant from one of these stems. I’ll keep you posted.

Update: I saw a picture on another blog. Forget the environmental cause. It’s Japanese fantail willow (Salix sachalinensis).

Willow and Solidago stem arrangement.
Willow and Solidago stem arrangement.

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