Has anyone ever successfully overwintered cape gooseberry plants just by leaving them in the ground?
I ask because today I went to pull out the old plants left over from the summer, and although the top growth is very dead, the roots seemed to still be alive.
I've left the remaining three in the ground, in the hopes that they might survive and resprout in the spring.
I ask because today I went to pull out the old plants left over from the summer, and although the top growth is very dead, the roots seemed to still be alive.
I've left the remaining three in the ground, in the hopes that they might survive and resprout in the spring.
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