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My garden is finally a place where I find myself winter engaged. I don’t advert my eyes but rather intentionally partake. Getting to this point involved a lot of visiting gardens and nurseries during the winter months. How better to see what looks good this time of the year?

Our local Chinese Garden, Lan Su, recently held a series of free open days. I decided to see how some of my favorites were doing, it’s always nice to catch up with old friends.
NOID rose

There are (or were, one of my favorites seems to have gone missing) several mature mahonia in the garden. I find the bark of this one, Mahonia lomariifolia, to be quite striking.
Mahonia lomariifolia bark

As are the blooms, a bright cheery yellow that looks even brighter when the skies are grey.
1 Mahonia lomariifolia flower

Aspidistra (aka Cast Iron Plant) is an underutilized jewel. As it’s common name implies it can take a beating, and still look good.
Aspidistra

This is a horrible photo of a very cool plant, Poncirus trifoliata ‘Flying Dragon’. In the summertime those curvy thorns are camouflaged by small leaves, in the winter it’s all about the spikes.
Poncirus trifoliata 'Flying Dragon'

Chimonanthus praecox (Wintersweet), more cheerful blooms when we need them most. It seems almost like cheating to photograph them against a blue sky.
Chimonanthus praecox

Someone more versed in the ways of the camellia could probably tell you which one this pink beauty is. I can get part way there by filtering the plant lust search results to share only winter blooming camellias.
Camellia NOID

Iris confusa, a plant that looks best planted in mass.
Iris confusa

Edgeworthia chrysantha ‘Akebono’, the orange blooming edgeworthia, although that’s hard to see now.
Edgeworthia chrysantha 'Akebono'

On the lower right edge of the pond, nandina. Common as dirt some would say, but beautiful none-the-less.
Nandina

A great garden doesn’t depend on plants alone for winter interest…
garden art

Hardscape, structure and personality (some might call it garden art) are needed as well.
hardscape

Broad-leaved evergreens help too, in this case Eriobotrya japonica, the loquat.
Eriobotrya japonica

If you’re lucky (I have not been), you’ll even get blooms.
Eriobotrya japonica flower

Pyrrosia, perhaps P. sheareri, surprisingly a fern (!) and reportedly hardy to the single digits.
Pyrrosia

Rhododendron sinogrande, incredibly huge leaves to 2ft long…
Rhododendron sinogrande

Your eyes do not deceive, there are both blue and green needles, Pinus parviflora ‘Cleary’.
Pinus parviflora 'Cleary'

And the yellow-blooming Edgeworthia chrysantha
Edgeworthia chrysantha

The buds look rather delicate but they’re actually quite tough, surviving 12F in my garden last year with no damage.
Edgeworthia chrysantha close-up

Jasminum nudiflorum. Do you think it’s just a coincidence that so many winter-bloomers have yellow flowers?
Jasminum nudiflorum

Another big-leaved rhody, this one Rhododendron calophytum.
Rhododendron calophytum

And the sexy bark of Lagerstroemia ‘Tuscarora’
Lagerstroemia 'Tuscarora'

Interesting bark is an often over-looked feature that really pops in the winter, Pinus bungeana.
Pinus bungeana

And finally the buds of Daphne odora, about to burst open and perfume the garden.
Daphne odora

Where would you rank your garden on the winter-interest scale? Is it something that’s important to you, or do you enjoy hibernating this time of year and ignore the garden until spring?