People ask us all the time, “What do you do this time of year?”
A lot of people seem to think that our greenhouses are as barren as the frozen Wisconsin landscape and that everything just magically appears, all full grown and ready to go, come spring. While we may not have nearly as many customers during the winter months, we still manage to stay pretty busy getting ready for all those spring-fevered gardeners who will begin emerging from their winter dens near the beginning of April.
One of our biggest tasks during these cold winter months is propagation. Whether it’s dividing grasses and ferns, cutting and rooting all manner of ivies, geraniums, and sedums, or planting seeds and bulbs, we’ve got our work cut out for us.
Each year we grow close to ten thousand plants from cuttings we take here in our own facilities, from geraniums to ivies to sedums to conifers. Of course, we’re careful to make sure we only propagate non-patented plants, since people in the plant world are just as fastidious about their new varieties as any inventor would be about protecting his inventions.
This year, we’ve been working on some special projects to get ready for our Fairy/Miniature Gardening Workshop. When it comes time for our workshop, we’ll have a whole slew of sedums, ivies, miniature conifers, and other miniature plants ready to become part of someone’s miniature garden.
- miniature evergreens and other miniature gardens plants
- various sedums for our miniature gardening workshops
- These cuttings are a little further along
Another effective method of propagation is dividing. We do this mostly with our grasses and sedges.
- healthy new roots
- the newly divided grasses all potted up
- who knew you could get this many baby sedges from only three plants
- this Japanese variegated sedge will look great in a miniature garden
- newly divided grasses
This is where a lot of our propagation happens. We like to call it “The Propagation Station.”
- dividing grasses
- Propagation Station
So there you have it–propagation is just one of the ways we stay busy during these cold winter months. Thankfully, things are pretty toasty in here under all this plastic.