RE: More garden reading, sedums and a New England Garden TreK?


Cheryl,  the tender sempervirens are listed separately.  All others, I
assume, are hardy.  Personally, I would love to grow some of the very
exotic, tender Agaves - But!  I don't have room for anything else that needs
winter protection.  My basement, bedroom light garden & greenhouse are
stuffed!  :)  No snow here either, but that  is our norm.  We rarely have
snow.  But wind!  We have had lots of it this winter and I'm sick of it.  If
I ever move, that will be the primary consideration - to get out of the
wind.
Marilyn Dube'
Natural Designs Nursery
Portland, Oregon


-----Original Message-----
From:	owner-perennials@mallorn.com [owner-perennials@mallorn.com] On
Behalf Of Cheryl Isaak
Sent:	Thursday, December 27, 2001 6:03 AM
To:	perennials@mallorn.com
Subject:	RE: More garden reading, sedums and  a New England Garden TreK?

Hi Marilyn,

> Have you heard of Squaw Mountain Gardens in Estacada Oregon?  Try
>www.squawmountaingardens.com.  They have an amazing assortment to choose
>from.  Unfortunately no pix, but a collector such as yourself will do fine
>with the botanical names.
Hmm - now when will I have time to surf again -it's hard with the kids home
from school.
Do they list hardinsess zones?

No snow here, so I am wondering how various plants will do.  Many things I
grow really want snow cover.
Regards,

*************************************************************
        Cheryl P. Isaak, Londonderry NH   (cheryl@isaak.mv.com)
        Zone 4/5a - AHS Region 4
*************************************************************



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