Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
plants for a cold rocky garden
We have friends moving to an island off the south coast of Tasmania, which
is cold and rocky. I wonder if a kind person who lives in Scotland or the Shetland isles could give me some hints on what plants would grow in a cold climate? |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
In article , Helen
writes We have friends moving to an island off the south coast of Tasmania, which is cold and rocky. I wonder if a kind person who lives in Scotland or the Shetland isles could give me some hints on what plants would grow in a cold climate? I think we may have different interpretations of the word 'cold' ;-) From the BBC weather pages: "Tasmania's climate is strongly influenced by the relative warmth of the southern ocean so that winters are mild at sea level and summers rarely excessively hot. Its climate and weather throughout the year are rather similar to that of northwest Europe, particularly Brittany or northwest Spain." -- Kay "Do not insult the crocodile until you have crossed the river" |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
"Helen" wrote in message ... We have friends moving to an island off the south coast of Tasmania, which is cold and rocky. I wonder if a kind person who lives in Scotland or the Shetland isles could give me some hints on what plants would grow in a cold climate? Did you know that at Inverewe there are plants growing in the open which I would regard as half-hardy? Franz |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Although the Northern part of Tasmania is rather as the BBC weather pages
stated, there is quite a difference between the North and South, and even more so between the mainland of Tasmania and the little islands off the south coast. There is nothing between them and Antarctica, and the winds can be freezing!!! ( That's why I like Sydney ): ) "Kay" wrote in message ... In article , Helen writes We have friends moving to an island off the south coast of Tasmania, which is cold and rocky. I wonder if a kind person who lives in Scotland or the Shetland isles could give me some hints on what plants would grow in a cold climate? I think we may have different interpretations of the word 'cold' ;-) From the BBC weather pages: "Tasmania's climate is strongly influenced by the relative warmth of the southern ocean so that winters are mild at sea level and summers rarely excessively hot. Its climate and weather throughout the year are rather similar to that of northwest Europe, particularly Brittany or northwest Spain." -- Kay "Do not insult the crocodile until you have crossed the river" |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
In article , Helen
writes Although the Northern part of Tasmania is rather as the BBC weather pages stated, there is quite a difference between the North and South, and even more so between the mainland of Tasmania and the little islands off the south coast. There is nothing between them and Antarctica, and the winds can be freezing!!! ( That's why I like Sydney ): ) OK, fair enough. But Scotland is considerably more north than Tasmania is south, and which means much shorter days in winter with all that means in terms of long cold wet spells. If you could post more details of what the climate is actually like in the bit of Tasmania you have in mind, someone here might be able to decide whether their climate is like the Tasmanian one. btw, the convention in this ng is to bottom post, and if you top post, it messes up the sequence of messages. "Kay" wrote in message ... In article , Helen writes We have friends moving to an island off the south coast of Tasmania, which is cold and rocky. I wonder if a kind person who lives in Scotland or the Shetland isles could give me some hints on what plants would grow in a cold climate? I think we may have different interpretations of the word 'cold' ;-) From the BBC weather pages: "Tasmania's climate is strongly influenced by the relative warmth of the southern ocean so that winters are mild at sea level and summers rarely excessively hot. Its climate and weather throughout the year are rather similar to that of northwest Europe, particularly Brittany or northwest Spain." -- Kay "Do not insult the crocodile until you have crossed the river" -- Kay "Do not insult the crocodile until you have crossed the river" |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
"Kay" wrote in message ... In article , Helen writes Although the Northern part of Tasmania is rather as the BBC weather pages stated, there is quite a difference between the North and South, and even more so between the mainland of Tasmania and the little islands off the south coast. There is nothing between them and Antarctica, and the winds can be freezing!!! ( That's why I like Sydney ): ) OK, fair enough. But Scotland is considerably more north than Tasmania is south, and which means much shorter days in winter with all that means in terms of long cold wet spells. If you could post more details of what the climate is actually like in the bit of Tasmania you have in mind, someone here might be able to decide whether their climate is like the Tasmanian one. btw, the convention in this ng is to bottom post, and if you top post, it messes up the sequence of messages. "Kay" wrote in message ... In article , Helen writes We have friends moving to an island off the south coast of Tasmania, which is cold and rocky. I wonder if a kind person who lives in Scotland or the Shetland isles could give me some hints on what plants would grow in a cold climate? I think we may have different interpretations of the word 'cold' ;-) From the BBC weather pages: "Tasmania's climate is strongly influenced by the relative warmth of the southern ocean so that winters are mild at sea level and summers rarely excessively hot. Its climate and weather throughout the year are rather similar to that of northwest Europe, particularly Brittany or northwest Spain." -- Kay "Do not insult the crocodile until you have crossed the river" -- Kay "Do not insult the crocodile until you have crossed the river" The last I heard from there was the maximum temperature was about 8deg.cel. and the minimum -1 or -2. This is of course late winter. The soil is very shallow and rocky. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
In article , Helen
writes The last I heard from there was the maximum temperature was about 8deg.cel. and the minimum -1 or -2. This is of course late winter. The soil is very shallow and rocky. Most of the UK is colder than that in winter! (Where I am, about half way up the country if that, we frequently go below -5 at night, and have periods where it doesn't come up much above 0 for several days - ponds can remain frozen for days on end). So from the point of hardiness you don't have a problem - if it's marked as hardy for the UK, it should be OK in Tasmania. Where you have a problem is the shallow soil - so things which ask for a deep moist soil might be a problem. I think Tasmania also has higher rainfall, doesn't it? I'm presuming that your max temperature also refers to winter - what are summer temperatures like? -- Kay "Do not insult the crocodile until you have crossed the river" |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
"Kay" wrote in message ... In article , Helen writes The last I heard from there was the maximum temperature was about 8deg.cel. and the minimum -1 or -2. This is of course late winter. The soil is very shallow and rocky. Most of the UK is colder than that in winter! (Where I am, about half way up the country if that, we frequently go below -5 at night, and have periods where it doesn't come up much above 0 for several days - ponds can remain frozen for days on end). So from the point of hardiness you don't have a problem - if it's marked as hardy for the UK, it should be OK in Tasmania. Where you have a problem is the shallow soil - so things which ask for a deep moist soil might be a problem. I think Tasmania also has higher rainfall, doesn't it? I'm presuming that your max temperature also refers to winter - what are summer temperatures like? -- Kay "Do not insult the crocodile until you have crossed the river" Thank you for your advice re hardy plants. I have relations in Crewe, which may have the same temperatures as yours., and have a lovely garden- btw they have had a horrible summer this year - nothing except raspberries grew! In Tasmania's mainland it can become very hot in summer, and they have dreadful bushfires in some years. In those little islands off the south coast, the temperatures reamin fairly cool, even in the summer, with only an occasional 'heatwave' with the temperature hitting the early 20s. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Cold, Cold, Cold | United Kingdom | |||
Help with huge rocky area | Edible Gardening | |||
Rocky Mtn. Area invaded by cutworms??? | Gardening | |||
geraniums in rocky soil | Gardening | |||
Rocky Mt juniper question | Gardening |