Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Small Hail: Before and After

Just a few days before we received a pretty good amount of pea-size hail, I posted this picture of my Ghost Plant for Foliage Follow-up.


After the hail, they appear a little bruised and battered; their smooth leaves showing some divots, pockmarks and off-colored dents


Nature giveth.  Nature taketh.  And sometimes nature just smacks things around a bit.

8 comments:

  1. We didn't get the hail here...and I live about a quarter mile away from Annie (The Transplantable Rose), and she said she got hail. Nature is so weird sometimes.

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  2. katina: Yeah - the whole time I was watching it fall, I was thinking "Thank goodness it ain't the golf ball size stuff we got last year!" I'll take bruised plants any day.

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  3. Hi, it was really nice to meet and chat with you today. I have so many ghosts in the patch (and not just the plant variety, trust me!)...but that is another longer story, best told around a camp fire. I Love these little succulents, and I am constantly spreading them all around the Patch, in the ground, in containers... such a survivor!

    ESP.

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  4. ESP: It was good to meet you too. I enjoy the gray coloration most - shady plants tend to lack that color.

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  5. What a shame. We were fortunate not to have any hail- but then the winter took car of most of my graptopetalum. It turned to mush.

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  6. Lancashire: Yeah, I was pleased mine actually made it through winter with no protection and only a few battle scars.

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  7. That ghost plant is so striking, even with pock marks. Does it grow in shade, or is it hanging out in a sunnier spot in your garden? Looks like it should be a pretty drought tolerant plant as well?

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  8. Linda: It catches less than an hour of direct light, then gets dappled shade for the rest of the day. Likely would be even happier with more sun.

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