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a through is but a great pocket where water will collect. I would expect to have 2-5 cm of solid ice at the end of the winter
Planted at surface level without rocks, they simply burn to death and very quickly. One good hot, windy day will do it.
Quote from: gote on March 24, 2010, 07:35:44 AMa through is but a great pocket where water will collect. I would expect to have 2-5 cm of solid ice at the end of the winterGote,In Ontario, where the winters were much colder than yours, and mid to late winter thaws and re-freezing were common---I actually found that plants in troughs did better than those in the ground. In fact over the 20 years or so I had a large trough collection, losses could be counted on both hands---and these were rarely winter losses, but mid-summer heat & humidity rotting of saxes.In the very hot conditions of our summers there, I tended to use a richer, slightly heavier soil mixture in the troughs, topdressed with rock mulches. I have no idea if this contributed in any way to the successful overwintering.Also, as Leslie has mentioned, I always plant *very* high initially, so that even after years of "sinking" the plants are still above trough lip level.
Gote, The plants in the troughs have historically survived up to -40C, even totally exposed, although the average was -30 to -35C. Go *much* higher than you feel naturally comfortable with when you first plant them. They really sink a lot, especially in the first 2 years.