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Gardening My Hell Strip

The hell strip garden bed in its second summer

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Two years ago, my husband and I moved from hot, humid, Williamsburg, Virginia, to snowy South Bend, Indiana. South Bend sits at the edge of USDA hardiness Zones 5 and 6 (meaning most winters temperatures drop to around -10°F/-23°C). It is a bit warmer in the winter and cooler in the summer than areas south of us due to the moderating influence of Lake Michigan. The lake also provides us with an enormous quantity of snow – over five feet (1.5 m) on average each winter, thanks to a phenomenon called the lake effect. Cold air moves in on the prevailing winds from the west, picks up moisture over the warmer lake, and then, just as it arrives over our house, it cools down and drops all that extra water in the form of snow.

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Peak spring bloom from my hardy snapdragon hybrids.
My basement grow light set up.
Veronica oltensis
Sempervivum in the garden catch my neighbors' attention.
Seed-grown lewisias
New bed prepped and ready to plant.
An assortment of plants ready to go into the new garden
The bed all planted up.
Echinocereus cactus ready for planting
Narcissus ‘Trena’
Iris ‘Atroviolacea’
Plants starting to fill in.
Diversity of flowers from Lewisia ‘Tutti Frutti
Lewisia ‘Tutti Frutti’ with Seseli gummiferum foliage
Penstemon heterophyllus ‘Zuriblau’ with one of the resident dinosaurs.
My own hybrid snapdragons in spring
An unknown campanula
Moon carrot (Seseli gummiferum)
This Echinocereus x roetteri is the most  asked-about plant in the garden

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