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36 Comments

  1. Salt of the Earth Jenny. You have the most realistic garden show. I love how you are not afraid to show the messes, it gives me what I need to feel good about my garden in the winter. Your dahlia bed looks just like mine and I feel great about it now 🎉

  2. Dear Jenny, I live in Michigan 6 b. How do you trim all of your shrubs and perennials without stepping on the newly emerging bulb foliage? Our springs are so wet and the ground is saturated and very muddy. My soil is mostly clay. I planted over 1000 daffodils and alliums. Any advice?

  3. It's been the coldest January here in Indy for probably 15 years. I still already have daffodils and irises peeking up. I do dread to see what new plantings in late fall aren't going to make it. Hopefully it won't be too bad, lol.

  4. We had the same weather as you up here in central VA. Though my Heucheras in containers look sad, I believe they will come back. Enjoyed the tour! You make my heart sing! Thanks, Jenny and Jerry!

  5. Upstate SC…Westminster…is waking ⬆️ also! 💛💛 our Daffodils‼️What’s my new zone; it used to be Zone 7? Confusion reigns! PS..🩷 your pink/white striped sweatshirt!

  6. Thank you for the nice tour and all the good plant information! We are under 3 or more inches of snow in Eastern Washington State, and it was great to see your garden.

  7. I have daffodils coming up. They were planted years ago so I have no idea what kind they are, but they are up this early every year. No other varieties I have come up this early.

  8. I have never had any luck moving a heuchera when it is in that state. I have even had them go completely dormant their first year in the ground. Yours will produce new foliage when it gets warmer, and that old foliage with desiccate and be easy to remove.

  9. I have 3 plants that I had to dig up and put into pots to finish out the winter. Im hoping they survive. 1 hydrangea, 1 butterfly bush and 1 coneflower. Do you have any pointers for keeping them alive in zone 5b-6a

  10. Jenny! My heuchera looks the same every spring here is zone 6 in Ontario Canada. You do the same as the Kenton rose. Just cut off all the affected leaves! It will spring back!

  11. Super great video and I appreciate the reminders that even the pros lose plants! Your garden looks beautiful 😍

  12. Hi Jenny! I am a master gardener from Northeast Indiana, and I’d like to join the others in reassuring you that your Heucheras and heucherellas will be just fine. The ones that might be a little iffy are the ones in the hey rack and in the pots. But, I would give them a chance to leaf out before I send them to the compost pile.

  13. I'm with you Jenny about the winter weeds. Definitely more prolific but I also don't want to be covered under snow either.

  14. I like seeing the garden art in the forest pansy bed. I am on the hunt for a miniature dachshund concrete statue. But specifically, in a curled up position because that’s how I find my real life dachshund resting in my garden beds. I know she won’t be around forever ❤

  15. Lemon Coral Sedum has been coming back after -6 degree weather and -4 degree weather the past two years. I'm in the old zone 6B (new 7A) in Kentucky. Yours should do fine.

  16. Loved this tour and you! You have such a warm and inviting personality. Wondering about the irrigation in your Hydrangea Hill as I have a similar, but much smaller, hydrangea garden (12' long x 5' wide (deep). Last year I hand watered but the water kept "running" down the slope. I have access to a 1/2" irrigation line from a near garden and want to run a line from that. I was trying to see how your irrigation was, in particular, due to the slope. Would a 1/4" drip line suffice? and would I run it above each row (there are 2) of hydrangeas? I think I can see that some of your plants have the line surrounding them? Any advice is greatly appreciated! Thank you so much. I am in Zone 6A, Okanagan, BC, Canada!

  17. As someone who gardens in Zone 4b Wisconsin, I can tell you that those heucheras will be just fine. In my area, it gets as cold as -50 to -60 degrees fahrenheit in the winter with multiple feet of snow covering the ground. As a result, my heucheras melt back to the ground every winter. While they may look a bit melted at the moment, new leaves will flush out come springtime.

  18. Hey Jenny, just want to say give your heucheras a chance. They look pretty much like mine do in the spring (zone 4 🇨🇦) So just cut back the bad looking leaves when things start to warm up and they should bounce back just fine.

  19. My quince is indeed flowering. Next up will be red buckeye in March. I’m even bought a hyacinth to have some spring fragrance in the house.

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