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Here's the same scene as above but in sunshine. It is still very cold here and the ice on the fjord hasn't covered that much since 1986.
Today I noticed a continuation of the reversal of the upper tropospheric winds in the vicinity of Finland and western Russia. It appears that how, or if, the current displacement and/or split in the polar vortex plays out will determine our weather in the coming weeks and months.
Here the forecast isn't sure how it will be later this month (they are talking about the same thing your wrote about), colder from east or warmer from west winds, but right now this and next week are cold (-17C last night). On the whole, it looks like we are below freezing all February, but how much, that isn't sure. And I hope it doesn't last all March, too.
Hello LeenaI hope that a thick blanket of snow still safely covers your garden. It appears that the same weather pattern is going to persist for at least the next week.... Hopefully this will translate into a shift in the weather pattern. We could use much more precipitation; maybe less cold would be welcome in your region.
My own H. mollis pallida also succumbed to drought last summer (2019/20) which astounded me as it was 10 years in its place and had grown and flowered so well all along. But it was a very dry season (unlike the current one) and as well as the witch hazel, arisaemas, podophyllums a couple of smaller rhododendrons and many primulas died. I was watering but we had severe restrictions and I was well into a period of not Covid lockdown but immobility due to a knee which needed replacement and had virtually crippled me so the garden all over was badly neglected. Even now, (the knee was replaced in October '20) while the dying has ceased, the plant replacement is impossible in many instances. Some, like the glaucidiums had previously set good seed and I have young plants of both purple and white forms, but at close to 78 I am conscious of the possibility that some things may not flower or not mature anyway, until too late for me.
Cohan, Picea glauca is planted here. The only native spruce is P. abies but several others are planted both in gardens and in forests. However, around here, P. sitchensis dominates.I hope your rowan tree survive!Your birch tree looks very similar to ours! Especially those we have at the west coast!