Describes the blossoms and colour week by week, year by year, in a Zone 8 northern European shrub garden
Hamamelis Week
With snow still lying on the grass beside, Hamamelis comes into blossom in week 2009/09, about seven days after a brief spell of sunny days with temperatures 3 or 4 degrees above zero have tripped its biological switch. Everything else around the witch hazel looks bleak, and Phormium tenax, which for the first time I have left in the ground during our Zone 8 winter, looks rotten and ruined. I should have known: others who have tried to keep this outdoors in northern Germany have reported similar problems. We have longer cold periods than the west coast of England, where these New Zealand flaxes do quite well. Under the trees elsewhere in the garden, Galanthus nivalis appears by mid-week and the shoots of daffodils are already 5 to 10 centimetres above the soil. By the end of the week, spring is in the air: the redcurrant looks close to blossom, magnolia buds are looking pregnant and neighbours' hazels finally have their catkins. These grow longer by the day, and a particularly fine example in a front yard at P---weg 29 has hazel braids almost 10 centimetres long. A stand of very four or five low, cherry-like bushes, perhaps Viburnum farreri or Viburnum bodnatense, at P---weg 31 have also blossomed in a delicate mix of red and pink.
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