Posted by Dave Hill on December 24, 2010, 7:19 am
I wonder if this long cold spell will get my daffs moving, up to the
snow there was hardly a trace of them, a few of them were showing
about half an inch but with most there was no sign.
Well behind the normal growth for this time of year.
David Hill
Posted by Dave Liquorice on December 24, 2010, 9:31 am
On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 04:19:06 -0800 (PST), Dave Hill wrote:
> Well behind the normal growth for this time of year.
Don't expect to see any sign of ours for a couple of months at least,
snow cover or not. B-)
--
Cheers
Dave.
Posted by Darkside on December 26, 2010, 12:47 pm
>On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 04:19:06 -0800 (PST), Dave Hill wrote:
>> Well behind the normal growth for this time of year.
>Don't expect to see any sign of ours for a couple of months at least,
>snow cover or not. B-)
I'd normally expect to feel the crunch of little daffodil shoots
underfoot in January, but it's been so cold for so long that I'd expect
them to be late this year.
Has anyone even seen a snowdrop?
--
Sue ]:(:)
Posted by 'Mike' on December 26, 2010, 1:05 pm
> Has anyone even seen a snowdrop?
> --
> Sue ]:(:)
Only just seen a drop of snow ;-))
Mike
S.E. Isle of Wight
--
...................................
Today, is the tomorrow, you were worrying about, yesterday.
...................................
Posted by Baz on December 27, 2010, 9:28 am
>
>
>> Has anyone even seen a snowdrop?
>> --
>> Sue ]:(:)
>
> Only just seen a drop of snow ;-))
>
> Mike
> S.E. Isle of Wight
>
>
How lucky you are Mike.
We are so very sick of it. I think it was Nov.11 it started here and still
not gone yet, but the forecast for our region is good and last night was
the first time since then that we didn't have a frost.
Bet my new Kiwi bush suffered though.
Happy new year you lucky devil
Baz