Saturday, May 2, 2026

Winter's bones, garden scars

HALLIE EPHRON: It's still a bit chilly here in New England but spring has definitely sprung. The weeping willows have already passed from their beautiful opening number (yellow/lime green buds) to green. Cherries, dogwoods, forsythia, all are blooming like crazy, and cool temps are keep the blossoms on the magnolias. 

But everywhere the remnants of a brutal, late winter blizzard that left my yard buried for weeks in 3 feet of snow are still in evidence.

Most of the bushes and trees have survived intact and are blooming ferociously.



And my early spring carpet of blue scilla have burst from the ground and are putting on a show.

And then there's this...
This Japanese quince bush should be in full, hot pink bloom. Instead, it's barren.

It should be bursting with pink flowers. instead, it's barren of blooms. The bark has been stripped from its branches, starting at about a foot off the ground.

Time will tell whether it will "spring" back next year but I'm not optimistic.

Here's another Japanese quince which only seems to be half dead. 




Consensus here is that the culprits are rabbits. The bane of my garden.

For weeks after a formidable blizzard, the ground was blanketed in 3' of snow, covering up the grass and weeds that sustain the rabbits. The snow weighed down the bushs' branches and the rabbits climbed aboard and helped themselves to their bark, stripping the branches clean.

And so no flowers formed. No leaves are budding. 
I'm not optimistic that the bushes will come back. Time will tell.

What do you think? Is there any hope that my Japanese quinces will come back?

Are you having a gorgeous spring, and does your neighborhood bear winter's scars?

3 comments:

  1. Sadly, I'm not too optimistic about your Japanese quinces, but it's good that most of your plants survived our brutal winter. Here, everything seems to be blooming as it should . . . .

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  2. I have some rabbit damage on my blueberry bushes. My forysthia is blooming nicely and the antique dogwood is getting ready, as is the lilac and the big rhododendrons.. Sorry about your quince!

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  3. We have snow this morning. I'm ready for spring but it's never reliably here in the High Peaks until later in the month. I do have some daffodils blooming but usually my lilacs are putting on their show at the beginning of June.

    I've never had anything to do with Japanese quince, as it won't survive here, but I believe it's one of those shrubs that you can cut to the ground (if necessary) and it will come back. It blooms on "old wood" so you just wouldn't have any blooms this year and it would be very small for a while. The branches that are completely girdled are dead and should be cut off, either way. Good luck!
    (Selden)

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