Perhaps I've focused on the negative enough for now. It's time for a visit to the lush tropical environment of my greenhouse, which has been keeping me sane lately (well, as sane as I ever get, which isn't saying much). On these cold, dark winter days I have been spending a couple of hours each day puttering in the greenhouse, potting up, sorting out, making room for winter's seedlings, grooming plants as they sometimes die back a little in winter's darker light, and listening to the rain as it beats on the roof.
Basically I use the greenhouse to start seeds, to overwinter the plants that spend the spring, summer and part of autumn on the front and back porches, and for a bit of storage. If you want to see how they looked this past year on the front porch, Peter The Outlaw Gardener posted about it, which you can view here.
To the right as you go through the door, there are quite a few potted plants, but the Monstera is covering them all
My favorite motto
Staghorn fern, a recent acquisition that I mounted myself
When I put plants away in here at the end of the growing season I try to group them by care and light needs, but that isn't always possible.
These shelves are a bit inaccessible, so it's a good thing they will probably need the least water over the winter
This Begonia luxurians is finally starting to look lush
Two Dyckias bought over a year ago and still not potted up
Dyckia flower
Piles of stuff crammed under the wire table
There's always a pile of unused ceramic pots that are not winter-proof
Can you see Baby Groot hiding in the asparagus fern?
Six pots of Aloe polyphylla
Five pots of Geranium sidoides
Four pots of Kalanchoe synsepala
Three Agave desmettiana pups
Two pots of Sedum spathulifolium 'Carnea'
And a partridge in a pear tree.... No, actually, a Moby baby -- Agave ovatifolia -- that split into five plants
Aloe starts and four pots of Centranthus ruber that I started from seed last winter and never planted out along with a few other tender plants
More starts of various tender succulents
For most of the winter this electric heater keeps the greenhouse in the low 50s/high 40s at night
On very cold nights, like recently when it was going into the 20s, I augment the electric heater with this propane heater. On its lowest setting it provides just enough heat to keep the greenhouse in the 50s from about 10:30 at night until about 7 a.m. the next morning.
For the first time this year I decided to put a draft excluder along the bottom of the door, because I noticed cold air coming in that way, and I think it has helped a bit
I like to decorate the greenhouse with birdcages with various inhabitants that keep me amused.
If you're wondering where summer went, I'm holding it captive in my greenhouse
The world on a bed of moss with a Harry Potter time-turner
That'll stop the robots from taking over the world
Oops! I must have forgotten to feed them
The following -- Ruby Slippers -- is a work in progress. I might fill them with soil and succulents, and decorate further with scraps of blue gingham and maybe a pair of cut-off braided black pigtails. Who says you can't rewrite the ending of The Wizard of Oz to suit yourself?
That little girl who keeps crying about wanting to go home is so annoying. Don't you think the witch deserves to win?
Be careful, or the witch might turn you into a frog!
And now -- do you have about 7 minutes to waste? I filmed a video tour of the greenhouse with narration. I tried it first with no narration, which was boring, so instead you get to listen to my goofy, overexcited, breathless voice. There's a fair amount of overlap between the video and the picture tour above, so proceed at your own risk.