Zone 8 gardening
Sep. 11th, 2007 09:01 amPortland (USDA zone 8) has a much milder climate than Southern Connecticut (zone 6), where I grew up and have done most of my gardening.
I was looking out the window of a local coffee shop the other day and I saw several plants that are too tender for my former home, but thrive in Portland. Here is a partial list of plants I've seen in Portland gardens that are not possible (or well nigh impossible) to grow outside in Connecticut:
I was looking out the window of a local coffee shop the other day and I saw several plants that are too tender for my former home, but thrive in Portland. Here is a partial list of plants I've seen in Portland gardens that are not possible (or well nigh impossible) to grow outside in Connecticut:
- Gardenias! (a houseplant in CT)
- Edible figs (may be grown with protection in CT)
- Crape myrtles
- Hardy fuchsias
- Pampas grass
- Passionflower vines (beyond May-pops)
- Southern magnolias
- Noisette and tea roses (beyond hybrid teas)
- Fatsias (a houseplant in CT)
- Flowering maples (Abutilon, a houseplant in CT)
- Pittosporum (a houseplant in CT)
- ...hmmm, there must be others I can't think of right now.