Jersey Girl wrote: ↑Sat Dec 10, 2022 11:35 pm
That's about all we have growing wild on the property now on account of the drought conditions. The pines didn't even produce cones the past two years. I used to be able to collect buckets of them in fall and it just kills me because you know, I'm always noodling around with something here and...no cones!
That reminds me … one of our neighbors has a massive cottonwood tree, which - to the irritation of half the street - puts out a crazy enough amount of ‘cotton’ each spring to make our own yard look as if it just got a skim coat of snow. I don’t mind it as it’s attractive in its own way and disappears with one good rainstorm, but this last spring …
nothing at all. No flowers, not a stitch of fluff. It’s as if the tree knew that the rains wouldn’t be there for the seeds (and they weren’t).
I've never tried growing Lupines but I'm assuming your climate is at least similar to ours? I'm at 7600ft here at the house. I hope they come up for you and grow like crazy!
Like yourself, we’re experimenting with what plants work. We’re in zone 6a, so I’m also testing marginal ‘desert’ plants like agave and nolina. Some of the compact and standard forms of agave parryi do OK in winter within this zone. For something that you’d normally see in a drier climate, they actually pair well with a lot of finer-foliage flowering plants, especially deeper green/purple mixes.
Pic below shows them with purple lantana, from our yard in AZ. That lantana wouldn’t last 5 minutes after the temps hit freezing, but the agave is good ‘til near 0 degrees, as long as it doesn’t keep wet.
