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It does look a bit sad for itself but no more than normal given the snow and the cold temperatures in your part of France. If the weather picks up a bit eventually, it will survive, definitely still alive at the moment looking at the pic.
I was going to ask the same thing Datz. It has been -8° here over the past couple of nights
It seems that they are frost hardy down to -12 depending upon the variety so hopefully they will perk up soon. I'm thinking of putting some frost protection over them though because the temps here (as you know) can get down as low as -20°
A garden is a lovesome thing, God wot! (Thomas Edward Brown)
Thanks for the replies. I will hope for the best.
Scarey55 it's a bit nippy this week n'est pas?
Luckily I dug up some Jerusalem Artichokes before the freeze set in. Can't get to them or leeks or savoys now as the ground is rock hard! It's our first gardening winter here so it's all a bit trial and error as to what to grow. However the locals say it's got cold early this year.
Weathers been lovely here! Calabrese is still cropping.
My Majesty made for him a garden anew in order to present to him vegetables and all beautiful flowers.- Offerings of Thutmose III to Amon-Ra (1500 BCE)
One week later and the garden is still mainly under snow. We have had a series of sunny days and temps up to 8C however, the garden doesn't get enough sun at this time of the year to melt the snow.
I think I need to rethink what's achievable during the winter here, and get a small poly tunnel!
Follow my progress in gardening at altitude in France www.750metres.net
One week later and the garden is still mainly under snow. We have had a series of sunny days and temps up to 8C however, the garden doesn't get enough sun at this time of the year to melt the snow.
I think I need to rethink what's achievable during the winter here, and get a small poly tunnel!
I've got a tunnel already datz, but I'm now considering buying a length of polytunnel quality polythene to make big cloches for outdoor things if the weather gets really bad (lucky for me we're a lot better off so far than you are, although I dare say it won't last!). The tunnel is fab, but I think having a movable mini-tunnel / giant cloche thing would be really useful -I'm planning on using it over early potatoes to protect from frosts, and maybe even unexpectedly early blight if I'm lucky
1km and 300metres of altitude down in the village...... No snow left. We just seem to cop a bit more with the extra altitude. Also we are in a forest clearing surrounded by trees, so at this time of year with the low sun we only get 3/4 hours of sun in the garden.
However in the summer when the valley is baking it's still pleasant where we are, so swings and roundabouts!
After roughly 5 weeks in the snow it rained today and the garden finally cleared totally of snow. PSB looking healthier.
However it's been a glorious period of cold but sunny and dry days.
Follow my progress in gardening at altitude in France www.750metres.net
Lost most of them. When I checked them closely, most of the stems had snapped, even tho I had staked them. The remainder are now under fleece and enviromesh.
Follow my progress in gardening at altitude in France www.750metres.net
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