Right now, after our recent frosty nights, most of the foliage in my garden is a mass of mess. Black, mushy and ugly. I am hard pressed to find anything worth sharing.
But there are a few things that are still unscathed.
I am so very pleased with my Eucalyptus archeri in the front garden, bought a couple of years ago at Xera in Portland. It has really taken off in just the two years since I planted it. It started out as a gallon-size start, not more than a few feet tall, and now it's over my head, way over my head. Ten feet or more. The instructions on the tag say to coppice in early spring to maintain juvenile foliage, but I think I may just let it grow to its full 25 ft. height. I don't mind if it gets long, willow-like leaves, and I really want the trunk to get mature enough to start showing lots of color as it peels.
Here are some other plants whose foliage is still looking good.
Not a Eucalyptus, but a perennial that is a Euc look-alike -- Parahebe perfoliata |
Pinus sylvestris 'Nisbet's Gold' |
Paperbark maple leaf cluster in the clutches of the Callistemon that grows below |