It was not just warm yesterday, it was hot. It was 92 degrees, a record. And very humid, summery and windy. We're sleeping with the windows wide open all night.
Today has cooled and is much more refreshing and breezy and dry. It's in the high 70s.
Yesterday in the heat I planted one of the new sassafras plants, and transplanted the tiny little Arbor day twigs out in the meadow (a sugar maple and a red oak.)
Bad idea, it was just too hot and windy. Too uncomfortable and not good for the plants.
I got after more rosa multifloras, cutting them and painting the stubs with herbicide.
Today, I did small jobs. I planted the three little bun-shaped chamaecyparis plants in the front walk, cleaned things up, edged the dogwood garden where the epimedium is spreading and puttered. I moved a few crowded rosy garlic scapes, I even trimmed the sedums --- in April. . . so early! They were already getting big and needed pinching for shape.
I also trimmed the Ghost Hills heaths. The two that remain have finally grown into loose, rounded shapes. They had been so malformed and ragged looking for the first several years.
Then six yards of mulch arrived from Envirocycle! I started to spread a little in the front walk area and around the climbing hydrangea, but the majority of mulch moving remains to be done.
Blooming on April 17 --- the cute orange geums and the sky blue forget me nots. I like seeing them across from each other along the dry creek bed.
The flowering dogwood is in full hot pink bloom.
The epimediums under it are all out. The epimedium rubrum plants under the maple in back are much less full. They're blooming, but barely. They still need a year or two to establish. But the fairy wings 'Frohnleiten' under the dogwood have spread so, and are blooming now.
The only three sassafras that survived have grown and are now blooming for the first time out by the road.
And the bottlebrushes of the fothergillas are out, even the new plants in the gravel garden border. Last year, which was a cold damp spring, the fothergillas were at this stage on May 5. The Angelina sedum has been a bright gold all spring.
It is all a little early, and it looks nice, but the dryness has made everything tentative, not bursting forth as these spring bloomers normally would.
A lot to do still. Mulch, mulch, mulch. Plant the three tuliptrees (Little Volunteer) I got for the back meadow. And the persimmon and the other sassafras. Plant the veronicas at the back of the Birch Garden. Dig 8 more holes for the sunflower seedlings. And more plants are coming!