Insulation power of snow
We only made it to -8°F (-22°C — I only really comprehend cold in celsius because of my time in Canada being the previously only time I experienced cold this low) when I got up this morning around 7am.
The gallon jugs in the makeshift faucet boxes were both very cold but unfrozen so I have hope for the pipes in the adjacent walls.
Insulation for -12°F forecast overnight
That’s -24° Canadian. Regular Winnipeg weather!
The Peruvian ground cherry I had been nursing along with towels and tubs and a hot water bottle every night succumbed to freezing last night (it was 3°F outside this morning around 7:30am). I have lots of babies in the plant window though.
Definitely pictures of garden in snow, not dog wearing her booties
Excellent layer of insulation out there!
Unexpected freeze
One corner of the plant window froze!
The drifting side of the house
The wind seems to be from the northwest and the front yard confirms that.
Insulating blanket of FUN
We woke up to a snowy world! Briar has seen snow before and enjoyed it but was hesitant at first this morning. She got over that soon enough and subsequently went insane with happy bouncing.
A dinner with a single garden ingredient
Wes requested rosemary to season dinner this evening.
Snow and melting even at 18°F in the sun
Standing cypress seedlings look pretty wilty in the front yard but I have not checked the backyard ones yet. Lettuce, cilantro, and cabbages I’m unsure how they look (sort of like the sugar snap peas, they could go either way once it warms up).
Leaves for strawberries
I had a nice bag of leaves for the compost pile that I decided could be better used as mulch right now. I put it all on the strawberries as those are the big investment relative to onion sets and potatoes seed eyes.