tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1903271386070223045.post26189912409279465..comments2023-05-11T06:58:10.292-04:00Comments on My City Garden: The anxiety of early bloomsKathrynhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08101274476936267801noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1903271386070223045.post-249814203275270292017-03-09T10:54:18.458-05:002017-03-09T10:54:18.458-05:00Best of luck to your trees! It sounds like you'...Best of luck to your trees! It sounds like you're doing what you can. I find a tough part about gardening is having patience to wait and see...Kathrynhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08101274476936267801noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1903271386070223045.post-14557663261106063702017-03-08T18:32:40.636-05:002017-03-08T18:32:40.636-05:00my forsythia has been blooming in pieces since feb...my forsythia has been blooming in pieces since feb. 25, many weeks early, so i'll never have a full-blooming one this year. also have daffs and day lilies up about 6 inches (and yes, they should be ok on their own) and columbines up about 2 inches, and that's just what i can see from the kitchen window. but i have lots of frost cloths and a few leaf piles, and i'll do a walk-through tomorrow so i can get all the tender perennials covered before it goes down to 12 or whatever on the weekend. i fear for the early magnolias, but hope the fruit trees can still hang tight. we have several large orchards in this area. --suz in NE ohioAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com