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Rick - You must be a bit inland from the east coast as we missed the snow and wind. New Brunswick, about 100km due north of here got walloped with both and passed on to the Hebrides.Went to -2c last night and barely holding 0c presently.johnw
Looks like it has/will blow itself out before it gets here. Our forecast is quite pleasant (for the Hebrides) and today has been gloriously sunny.
Our problem seeds to be the dryish summers here make for very late starts on the autumn bloomers. The same problem with Cyclamen hederifolium, if we don't start watering in late August they simply start flowering too late in the year.
if we don't start watering in late August they simply start flowering too late in the year.
I'd be surprised if it isn't less than you get in Halifax. My impression of Canada is that you have a very rapid transition from hot Summer to cold Winter and back from Winter to Summer making for short Autumns and Springs. So by watering in August you are compensating for the fact that temperatures are still too high so as to achieve flowering as soon as temperatures drop low enough.
... the hotter Annapolis Valley of NS ...
Alan - Indeed we get between 50-60" of rain a year right here in my part of the city. The rain is "spread evenly" throughout the months according to the books; in fact we get long stretches of dry summer weather and the average is made up in a couple of heavy rains which rarely penetrate, all exascerbated by thin mineral soil. This is a big country - a 9.5hour flight from St. John's to Victoria - and it hard to generalize but while much of the country often appears to go from winter straight into summer the coasts do not. Our springs are the slowest imagineable with daff foliage often in good shape into July thanks to the Labrador Current, autumns linger on into November and sometimes December thanks to the Gulf Stream. It could very well be our slow downward transition to autumn delays hederifolium flowering but I doubt it as the hotter Annapolis Valley of NS has them flowering 6 weeeks ahead of here on the coast. More retentive soil perhaps?I wonder how the Boston area fares with hederifolium and the flowering dates there? They get far hotter than even interior NS (especially at night) and stay hotter longer. johnw - +5c & sunny
.. I am trying hederifolium and expect it will do well. My plan is for it to bloom with my fall drops. Is that too much to ask?
In my UK garden, the few plants of C. hederifolium I grow show different flowering times, the later ones being at least a month later than the early. The peak of flowering is in September, which is too early to coincide with snowdrops.