Pages

Friday, January 22, 2010

And the Survivors Are…

It’s been about two weeks since freezing temps dealt our plants a devastating blow. Enough time for us to see which plants made it and which ones didn’t. There’s not a lot to say about the plants that are brown and shriveled up, except that, given time they may recover once trimmed back. But don’t act too quickly…in this case, procrastination can be a good thing.

Here’s what a couple of experts have to say about what we should be doing right now:

Tom MacCubbin at Tom's Digs
Teresa Watkins at Earth Shattering Gardening blog

The best thing we can do is turn our attention to the future, and begin making plans to revamp our yards. In every “bad event” there’s always a silver lining. Our silver lining is the plants that braved the low temps and lived to bloom another day.

So, I’m looking for the “survivors.” And, as painful as it may be, I’m asking all of you to walk around your yard to see what perennials and colorful foliage plants survived.

Your participation is requested! Once you’ve done this, please either share your list of plants by adding a comment to this post, or create a post on your blog, and provide me with a link to it and I'll list it below. Together, we can create a list of hardy perennials and colorful foliage plants that will help all of us as we shop for new plants this spring.

Here are some posts I've found on plants that "survived" the frosty week.

The Dirt  -  Penny Carnathanis a co-writer for the Tampa Tribune in this blog.
Gardening in Peace - FloridaGirl in the Peace River area.
Simply Susan! - My list of "survivors."

13 comments:

  1. Great idea! I'm pretty sure everything except for my accidental coffee plant will survive, but these are what stayed green with no protection and only minimal damage:

    Bottlebrushes
    Everglades Palm
    Split leaf Philodendron
    Giant Yucca
    Cordyline australis "red sensation" is "everpurple" :)
    Pineapple guava
    Liriopes
    Giant Crinum (a small plant)
    Loquat
    Various Hollies
    Chamaedorea Radicalis
    Chamaedorea Microspadix

    Not a long list because even my "hardy" plants had a rougher time than last year. I especially recommend the chamaedorea palms!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Here is the list in my zone 10 garden. Thanks for collecting this list!

    Gardenia
    Jasmine
    Builbine
    Sedum
    Agapathus
    Hisbiscus
    Bromeliads (Aechmea blanchetiana 'Orangeade' , Neos)
    Roses
    Pentas
    Diamond Frost
    Red Fountain Grass
    dipladenia pink
    Jatropha Tree
    African Iris (fortnight lily)
    Yellow African Iris (Nile of lily)
    Vinca
    Purple Queen
    Golden Shrimp
    geranium

    ReplyDelete
  3. Love your idea! Here's my list:
    Ponderosa Lemon
    Meyer Lemon
    mango
    Queen Emma Crinum Lily (some outer leaf damage only)
    Yellow Carolina Jasmine
    Ponytail Palm
    Giant White Bird of Paradise (minimal protection i.e. next to house or privacy fence)
    Lantana
    Eugenia
    Honeysuckle
    bougainvillea (minimal outer leaf damage only)
    Daylily butterscotch
    Jasmine (both star and orange)
    ground orchid (with minimal protection from the house)
    rose
    ferns (minimal structural protection)
    echinacea

    ReplyDelete
  4. I'm in Tampa, in northwest Hillsborough County, which is slightly warmer than eastern Hillsborough, but much colder than south Tampa (we're a real mish-mash of zones.) My yard looked blitzed, but I found some real surprises today when I started cleanup. (For more on that, check bit.ly/dirtblog) I also found plants I thought were dead are still very much alive.
    I'm not including the ones I see already listed. Also, these were in the ground and not covered:
    Pagoda clerodendron (can't recommend it enough for heat, cold, drought)
    Gaura
    Knockout roses (they look good)
    Jatropha (one of three looks good)
    Butterfly cassia
    Arboricola
    Thryallis
    Zebra aloe
    In the ground and covered:
    Various succulents including flapjacks (look good)
    Crotons (look terrible)
    The jury is still out on many, which I expect will come back from the roots. I was doubtful about that before today, but I saw lots more life than I expected. Yay life!

    ReplyDelete
  5. This is a great post! I'm definitely looking for more cold hardy plants to add this year. My survivors: Bromeliads (neos of all types), bamboo (multiplex fernleaf), walking iris, azaleas, virburnum, liriope, juncas, red shrimp, rosemary.

    Rainforest Gardenener - I'm on the look out for some chamaedorea microspadix, where did you get yours?

    ReplyDelete
  6. Susan,
    This is a great idea. I've got my eyes and ears open for cold hardy plants that can survive our freaky cold spells without being covered.

    It is important to note the variations in zones these lists come from. AND learning our own gardens is important as micro-climates are plentiful within every Florida garden.

    For instance my Selloum is mush in two locations while it is standing untouched in the 'back 40' densely planted under oaks.

    Here's my list of unscathed plants that were NOT covered.
    African Iris
    Agapanthus
    Agastache Black Adder
    Allium ‘alba’
    Alyssum
    Arboricola Variegata (some are burned on the tips but mostly okay)
    Asiatic Jasmine ~~ variegated and evergreen
    Azaleas
    Belladonna Lilies
    Black and Blue Salvia
    Blue-eyed Grass
    Broccoli
    Bromeliads (did surprisingly well everywhere)
    Bulbine
    Butterfly Ginger
    Butterfly Orchids
    Candy Lily
    Carolina Jessamine
    Chocolate mint
    Confederate Jasmine
    Coonties
    Coral Bean
    Coral Reef Sedum
    Cordyline Chocolate Queen
    Cordyline Red Sensation
    Daylilies
    English Ivy
    False Blue Ginger
    Flax Lily (the iron work horse in the garden)
    Florida friendly gold sedum hybrid
    Gaillardia (my new favorite~~ does well in heat and cold~~ can’t beat that!
    Gama Grass
    Goldenrod
    Holly Fern
    Hurricane lilies
    Indian Hawthorne
    Juncus Grass
    Lettuces
    Ligustrum
    Liriopes (Giant and variegated)
    Louisiana Iris
    Mexican Petunia (too bad ~ wish it would freeze)
    Muhly grass
    Mystic Spires
    Needle Palm
    Oakleaf Hydrangea
    Oregano
    Parsley
    Plumbago
    Purple Queen
    Rain Lilies
    Raphis palms
    Rosemary
    Saw Palmetto
    Shell Gingers (some were tinged but mostly they are fine)
    Spaths (some leaves are burnt but mostly okay)
    Spearmint
    Spinach
    Verbena bonariensis
    Walking Iris
    Walters Viburnum ‘withlacoochee’
    Yarrow

    That's all I can think right now.

    There are many others that were severely damage but will come back like the Hamelia patens.
    Meems

    ReplyDelete
  7. Hi Sis...Here's what survived in my rural location.

    holly fern (I'm planting more)
    African iris
    cast iron 'Peter Pan'
    Brazilian Plume Flwr
    bulbine
    antique roses
    blackberry lily

    ReplyDelete
  8. I'm just north of Orlando and my "survivors" are:

    Pandora's vine
    blue sage
    honeysuckle vine
    thryallis
    camellias
    daylilies
    coontie

    ReplyDelete
  9. A BIG thank you to all of you who shared your lists of "survivors." It looks like we have a lot of options to choose from. I will be putting a list together, and will publish it in an upcoming post...so stay tuned!

    ReplyDelete
  10. We are in Zone 9, and a particularly cold pocket for this far south. I'm certain everything in my garden is alive, but this is the stuff that stayed green and lush:

    Weeping Bottlebrush (Callistemon viminalis)
    Stiff Bottlebrush (Callistemon rigidus)
    Yellow Tabebuia
    Magnolia Grandiflora
    Lorapetalum
    Camellia (all)
    Florida Cracker Rose (‘Louis Philippe’)
    Thryallis (Shower-of-Gold)
    Nandina (Heavenly Bamboo)
    Viburnum (V. suspensum, V. odoratissimum)
    Azalea 'Red Ruffles'
    Bird’s Nest Fern
    Rabbit's Foot Ferns
    Sago Palms
    Coontie Palm
    Pindo Palm
    Queen Palm
    Pygmy Date Palms (3 of the 5)Indian Hawthorn
    Orange Bird of Paradise (Strelitzia reginae)
    Citrus
    Daylilies
    Gaillardia
    African Bush Daisies
    Bromeliads (in shade)
    African Irises

    ReplyDelete
  11. FloridaGirl...Thanks for participating. Our list is growing longer by the day.

    ReplyDelete
  12. After reading the lists, I see I failed to mention a couple of really good ones.
    Like Meems, I am loving gallardia. I have lots of seedlings from last summer's plants and all did very well in the ground and uncovered (zone 9).
    And rabbit's foot fern! Hanging in a basket under an eave, but otherwise unprotected and unscathed.
    (Meems, my arboricola look like they've been under the broile for way too long.)
    Looking forward to your final list Susan. Thanks for doing this! I think it's important to include zones, or at least cities of origin, for the reports on each plant. And I'll volunteer to help with that, if you want. The result will be really valuable. I would LOVE to have less guess work in my covering!

    ReplyDelete
  13. Wow, looks like most people had a lot more survivors than we did. Then again, I keep my eye on the plants that feed the critters, specifically the hummingbirds, and almost all of them look dead. The ones that didn't take a hit at all are the shrimp plants!

    Other survivors:
    wild coffee
    azaleas (of course)
    Simpson stopper
    firespike
    crocosmia
    horsemint
    bird of paradise
    honeysuckle
    jasmine

    I'm sure there are others but those are the ones that stand out in my mind. Fortuntely, the hummingbirds are sticking around the yard because of the feeders.

    ReplyDelete

Welcome and thank you for visiting Central Florida Gardener. This blog was created as a resource for Florida gardeners, and as a forum where we can communicate with our neighbors...offering comments and advice.

Please feel free to join in on the conversation, and if you have a Florida garden blog, please email me ( see profile page) with your URL, so I can include you on our blogroll. Thanks again for visiting, and for leaving your comments.