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joan Fairman 15-07-2004 11:02 PM

IPlanting above 5 thousand feet
 
I was wondering if anyone had a suggestion for the kinds of plant,
flowers and ground covering that would grow at this elevation and
higher.

David Hill 16-07-2004 12:02 AM

IPlanting above 5 thousand feet
 
.......... I was wondering if anyone had a suggestion for the kinds of plant,
flowers and ground covering that would grow at this elevation and higher
..........."
That depends where in the world you are, 5000ft in Mexico, 5000ft in India,
or 5000ft in Canada would all have very different conditions.

--
David Hill
Abacus nurseries
www.abacus-nurseries.co.uk





Mike LaMana 16-07-2004 02:02 AM

IPlanting above 5 thousand feet
 
I was wondering if anyone had a suggestion for the kinds of plant,
flowers and ground covering that would grow at this elevation and
higher.


Is there NO vegetation in the area?!? Do you live on a lava flow, mudslide,
sandbar, or open water??

--
Mike LaMana, MS
Heartwood Consulting Services, LLC
Toms River, NJ
www.HeartwoodConsulting.net



Iris Cohen 16-07-2004 02:04 PM

Planting above 5 thousand feet
 
I was wondering if anyone had a suggestion for the kinds of plant,
flowers and ground covering that would grow at this elevation BRBR

Do some research on gardening in Denver. In my visits there I noticed their
plant selection is somewhat limited, mainly because the climate is very dry.
Consider growing alpines.
Iris,
Central NY, Zone 5a, Sunset Zone 40
"If we see light at the end of the tunnel, It's the light of the oncoming
train."
Robert Lowell (1917-1977)

Stephen M. Henning 16-07-2004 02:04 PM

IPlanting above 5 thousand feet
 
(joan Fairman) wrote:

I was wondering if anyone had a suggestion for the kinds of plant,
flowers and ground covering that would grow at this elevation and
higher.


Elevation is important to some plants, but climate is more important.
For example, plants for the top of Mt. Washington (moist, zone 3) would
be different from those in Denver, CO (dry, zone 4) and these would be
different from those in the High Plains of Oregon (very dry, zone 5).
Let us now where you live and the hardiness zone.

Your best source of information would be your county agent. Also, good
local nurseries would have a lot of experience in what does well and
what doesn't. Then within a climate and elevations range, there are
"microclimates" such as protected shady areas, exposed sunny areas,
protected sunny areas, exposed shady areas, etc. Each microclimate will
be suitable to different plants. Plants grown at the same elevation
will do best. There will be less adaptation required.

By the way, many Rhododendrons which are usually grown in very temperate
climates near the ocean are from the Himalayan mountains which are the
highest mountains in the world but are close to the equator. So native
elevations doesn't always translate into similar elevations in different
climates.

--
Pardon my spam deterrent; send email to

http://home.earthlink.net/~rhodyman


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