Frost and Early Blooms

Pink Dawn Viburnum Flower cluster Feb 2023 By Melanie Reynolds

Happy Valentine’s Day to you!

February has found me delighted to find and photograph some of my favorite things that occur this time of year. Two cheerful early bloomers and some hoar frost! What I can’t stop calling “Hoary Frost” with a “-y”, maybe because another name for it is “Hairy frost” because that is what it looks like.

Frost & Ice:

Hoar Frost 1 Feb 2023 By Melanie Reynolds

I’ve been trying to get a good picture of this phenomenon for a while now. This type of frost occurs when you have a sudden freeze on a clear cold night. Because I live in Western Washington where we often have damp foggy air we only get the opportunity for this type of frost a few times of year. Once the sun rises the delicate structure of hair-like ice strands quickly melt.

I found this hoar frost on the leeward side of my giant mulch pile the morning after a clear cold night where temperatures reached nearly 20°F (-6°C).

More pictures of the Hoar/Hairy frost:

Hoar Frost2 Feb 2023 By Melanie Reynolds
Hoar Frost3 Feb 2023 By Melanie Reynolds

The birdbath turned into a frozen explosion of water.

Frozen Birdbath Feb 2023 By Melanie Reynolds

This Begonia leaf is feeling frosty.

Frost on a Begonia Leaf Feb 2023 By Melanie Reynolds

My two favorite early bloomers:

Pink Dawn Viburnum (Viburnum x bodnantense ‘Pink Dawn’)

This beauty doesn’t just look amazing, it also smells amazing! When I was at the garden nursery a few years back I smelled it before I saw it. Once I saw it, I had to take it home. I dragged the 20lb pot across half the length of the nursery in the rain before I finally found a cart to put it on!

Pink Dawn Viburnum Early Bloom Feb 2023 By Melanie Reynolds
Pink Dawn Early Bloom2 Feb 2023 By Melanie Reynolds

and the unscented…

Common Witch-hazel (Hamamelis virginica var. macrophylla)

Common Witch-hazel Close-up Bloom

Common Witch-hazel Wide View Feb 2023 By Melanie Reynolds

These two witch-hazel trees are outside the Woodinville, Washington library on the west side of the building.

Snowdrop failure?

I planted some Snowdrops this last Fall, but I haven’t seen any of them yet. I’m starting to wonder if the area I put them in is too dry or if the squirrels had a very Merry Christmas buffet of the bulbs.

Have a good rest of your week!

Reminder: Next Photo Submission

Ferns and/or Unexpected Blooms

Due: February 28th

To be posted on: March 1st

The Fine Print:  Photo Submissions Guidelines

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16 thoughts on “Frost and Early Blooms

  1. Your pictures of hoar frost are fascinating! Living in Florida, I don’t ever see that. And I love the viburnum and witch hazel. I am impressed with the quality of your photos that reveals all these wonders in detail. Thank you!

    Liked by 3 people

    1. Thank you, Lisa! Believe it or not, I mostly use my iPhone 8 for most pictures because I’m lazy and one almost always has their phone in their pocket, right? It’s amazing how far cameras on phones have come! I am frustrated though as my battery is dying and its only now that I realize that this generation of phones doesn’t allow for battery replacement on an otherwise perfectly good working piece of technology. I already intended to do a post about the ‘right-to-repair’ and merits of universal design, this is just more motivation.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. My father used to call that “planned obsolescence.” It keeps businesses in business–but I don’t like it one bit. I wish things would be built to last.

        Liked by 2 people

      2. Yes, that’s it! We can counter it with sensible diversification though. I always want people to remember their own power. A business’s success depends on its consumers (or lack there of) to navigate their strategies.

        Liked by 1 person

  2. ooh! some of my faves, too, but which don’t like my climate.
    But you may have noticed…there is often something looks like the one you can’t have. That said, many of my loves are, like myself, very unconfdortable in tropical climes! Win some, lose some!

    Liked by 2 people

  3. It will be some time here before we have any real blooms, but if this warm weather keeps up the bulbs, which are already well up… will be blooming WAY before Easter. I’m hearing we many hit low 60’s by week’s end. In February?

    Hoar frost fascinates me. We don’t get that here. And I adore common witch-hazel. Looks great in very tall vases. Happy Hearts Day to you too.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. I’m surprised you don’t get the rare occasion for Hoar frost there. I thought you were in PA. Can’t imagine hitting 60s this early either! Some people are saying these blooms are early, but they seem right on schedule to me. I had to guesstimate when the Witch-hazel had bloomed and I feel like I was almost too late. Thank you, as always, for coming by and saying “Hi!”

      Liked by 1 person

  4. I love the photo prompt for this month! I need to get really creative with that one. Nothing’s blooming outside here. We still have a couple of feet of snow. Great pictures of hoar frost!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. I imagine you’ve got some nice ferns around there though! Maybe some old pictures come to mind? It still counts as nature if some resourceful person has to go take an indoor nursery center to get a picture. Ha,ha,ha Thanks, Mark! I hope to see what you can offer!

      Liked by 2 people

      1. Things will start to melt in the next week or so. I may be able to find some Christmas ferns that actually stay green all year round even when they get buried. And, there always in the nursery!

        Liked by 1 person

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