Blog

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.

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.

Sunday music: Gogol Bordello

Gypsy punk is definitely an acquired taste. (If this is too much, try techno-gypsy: Balkan Beat Box.)

Two songs from Gogol Bordello’s latest CD, Gypsy Punks: Underdog World Strike, live on Jools Holland Show. Fun fact: Front man Eugene Hutz starred as the translator in the 2005 flick Everything is Illuminated. The band had a small cameo.

Language warning. Heck, the whole thing is pretty subversive.