I last checked in on the greenhouse last Wednesday before going on a trip. I thought maybe the plants would benefit from an absence of my helicoptering for a few days. All looked well in the garage this morning, but in the greenhouse it was a different story. The three Sempervivums that are relatively new and were in 4-inch pots are frost damaged. Of note is that the older plants in 4-inch pots that have had longer to acclimate to the greehouse are OK, as are the two planted in 6-inch pots.
All of these Sempervivums are supposed to be cold hardy to -20 or worse. The coldest it was in the greenhouse during my absence was +6 last Wednesday night and +10 the following night. But I do realize there is a difference between a plant that is rooted in the ground that has had a full growing season to get established, and one that until recently was in a climate-controlled California greenhouse and is now potted in a small pot and sitting on a bench in an unheated greenhouse in Montana. The three are now stashed in the relatively-warm garage and I hope they revive from the roots in a few months. If they don't come back, lesson learned.
In more positive news, already there are a few sprouts from the pepper seeds I put in a starter on a heat mat last Wednesday, and some thyme even has come up in that short time. I will have lots of mint and rosemary plants from which to choose come planting time. The basil has been less vigorous, but I have a couple of seedlings I should move to 4-inch pots. I should sprout some more, along with coleus (only one vigorous seedling so far).
I received six new 6-inch terra cotta pots that are half the height of regular pots. Interweb sources say that many types of succulents prosper in shallower pots, with exceptions like aloe. I repotted Perle von Nurnberg in a squat pot, and put the new unknown Echeveria from Trader Joe's in the freed-up 4-inch green pot. I drilled a hole in the 2.5-inch terra cotta that formerly held that Echeveria and inserted a cutting of some unknown succulent I got from my nephew. Here are those three in order of height. The saucer for the squat pot is barely big enough to hold it, which I knew from the Amazon reviews. With succulents, I'm usually going to be taking the pot out of the saucer when watering so the excess can drain away easily, so I figure it will be OK. My recent watering session with the new Jade plant was an adventure and required draining for several hours before it was safe to put back in the saucer.
The new Echeveria has not been watered. Perle was watered last Wednesday. The unnamed cutting had several days to dry before I stuck it in dry soil today. None of them will get watered for a week. The sprouting pot, which I mist every few days, now has about 20 items in it and no sign any of them are doing anything. I'm coming around to the succulent way of doing things, i.e. letting thing completely dry out, and then letting them dry out a few more days, then drowning them.
The deer at the greenhouse can't wait until I put some things in the window boxes that they can eat. Just three more months. I hope they like marigolds and mint.


































