Misery loves company - the winter hall of shame

I unearthed my outdoor trees on the 27th, set up my benches. I for sure lost a tiny pinyon, maybe a ninebark. My larger pinyon looks good, as do ponderosas, cotoneasters, aspens, willows, and my gooseberry-type. Too early to tell on some others, but I'm not worried. It's nice the see the little guys again.
Can I ask about the piñons?
If you collected them in fall, or the roots died in a freeze, they can look just fine all the way into June when they've finally depleted their energy reserves.
 
Can I ask about the piñons?
If you collected them in fall, or the roots died in a freeze, they can look just fine all the way into June when they've finally depleted their energy reserves.
The survivor was collected summer of '20, is a stunted little thing that was growing in a rock pocket. It grew nicely last year. The dear deceased was collected summer of '21 as a clump of seedlings. I lost 3 of the clump over the previous winter.
 
The survivor was collected summer of '20, is a stunted little thing that was growing in a rock pocket. It grew nicely last year. The dear deceased was collected summer of '21 as a clump of seedlings. I lost 3 of the clump over the previous winter.
Good. Just had to check. LoL
 
Exactly my experience. I've already pulled out several small tridents that I'm not hopeful about.
I've got a small trident finally popping a bud. Its the only one, but its something. Also, some zelkova seedlings haven't proved to me that they're dead yet.
 
Looks like my oldest daughter's yew may have suffered some frozen roots. It's been on a slow, steady decline.
Cleaned it up a bit for her to let some light inside, and hoping for a recovery, but not holding my breath.
 
Sorry for all your losses. Sounds terrible. Good thing I never get freezing temps here. No casualties over the winter.
 
Which brings to mind our southern hemisphere folks. How are things looking as you head toward winter?
 
Anyone else have any trees that deep down they know are done but still keep the remains out and water them hoping they were just being lazy? I have a boxwood I'm holding out hope for but it's not promising.
 
Anyone else have any trees that deep down they know are done but still keep the remains out and water them hoping they were just being lazy? I have a boxwood I'm holding out hope for but it's not promising.
Not this year, but I have done that exact thing.
It's not dead until June!
 
I lost my first Bonsai which was a smallish Juniper, so not as great a loss as others have had. We had a mild winter and excessively rainy spring: it was kept outdoors throughout, and my best guess was root rot. I honestly can't even remember the December weather. But I also had a frozen pipe. Lesson learned.
 
I lost my first successful ground layer. I cut off the old root system, trimmed the new roots and repotted. In hindsight, I may have done better to wait for the next repot to trim the new roots.
 

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I lost a Chinese elm & had new leaves frost burnt on a Trident Maple. And I'm not out of the woods yet (pun intended), and I won't feel safe until Memorial day. Once the new leaves got frost burnt two weeks ago I've been two stepping when the lows get near 34F. :)
Edit/confession. The Chinese elm came back to life months ago. Those things are tough!
 
I lost my first successful ground layer. I cut off the old root system, trimmed the new roots and repotted. In hindsight, I may have done better to wait for the next repot to trim the new roots.
Maple ?
 
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