View Single Post
  #7   Report Post  
Old 16-06-2003, 04:04 PM
gregpresley
 
Posts: n/a
Default USDA Hardiness Zone for Zip 99516

I have to say that the most glorious healthy giant delphiniums I ever saw
were in Alaska - both in Fairbanks, which is probably zone 2 or lower, and
in Anchorage. 5-8 feet tall, every shade of blue, purple, pink, and
white....breathtaking. Something not well known is that one of the ancestors
of the hybrid giant delphiniums is native to Siberia, so it makes
sense.......
"Jan Flora" wrote in message
...
Those big, generic zone maps are wildly inaccurate in Alaska. The
easiest way to find out your zone is to ask a neighbor who has a killer
garden what zone they use as a guideline.

Homer is Zone 4, because they're at sea level. My house is at 1350'
elevation, so I'm Zone 3, but my local nursery owner says I can get
away with some Zone 4 stuff by working the microclimates on the place,
and she's right -- we do. (We have apple trees growing in a protected
little pocket that gets good sunlight.)

A couple of really pretty plants that thrive up here are Columbine and
Poppies. They're prolific self-seeders and moose don't bother with more
than one bite. They're both perennials.

Jan

In article , "David J Bockman"
wrote:

I couldn't believe it when Zone 5 came up for this area! I'm helping my
brother with landscape design issues and wanted to make certain there

wasn't
a mistake. Thanks everyone,

Dave

"Warren" wrote in message
.net...
David J Bockman wrote:
That's just outside Anchorage, AK.... any help appreciated.


http://www.arborday.org/trees/whatzone.html


--
Warren H.

==========
Disclaimer: My views reflect those of myself, and not my
employer, my friends, nor (as she often tells me) my wife.
Any resemblance to the views of anybody living or dead is
coincidental. No animals were hurt in the writing of this
response -- unless you count my dog who desperately wants
to go outside now.