This one had some early winter troubles. The spear and newest opened frond pulled on New Years Eve. I do not see any further decline though, so I think I'll be able to write it off as a finicky trachy since it's only the first year in the ground. It may not grow as fast this spring as the others, but I'm ok with that.

The other three look to be in mint shape. Spears look great and will not pull.



Now ... on to the foam boxes with the space heater. I have not opened these up since December, so I was definitely curious on what things looked like inside. If you remember correctly, these have a space heater set at 40F, so they have not seen anything colder than 40F since the boxes went on just before Thanksgiving. Before that they experienced one night down to 19F.
This is my oldest trachy, planted in July 2008. It looks visually perfect and I expect it to explode with growth this summer as this will be its FOURTH summer in the ground.

This is a 15 gallon trachy that I planted in June 2010. It didn't do much all summer -- only pushed its spear about 6 inches all summer. It's still green, but looks pretty beat up to me? It was kind of leggy when I got it -- I'm hoping it's just growing roots and will start pushing fronds this summer. Time will tell. I do think, however, that trachys recover from transplant shock much faster the smaller they are planted.

And... finally a pic of what my front yard looks like. Forecast models are possibly showing several days in the 40s the week after next. Could spring be knocking on our door? I hope so.
