On the night I left Milan for the Christmas holidays, the temperature was forecast to drop to -14°C (7°F). That's unheard of here. Sometimes in January we might get -6°C (21°F), but that's about the limit.
There wasn't much I could do. The plants on the balcony were already covered in fleece and tucked up against the walls of the house. And quite honestly, I was too busy packing to worry.
But all through the holidays, it was at the back of my mind. What would I find when I got back? Would anything survive?
When I got back, pulling off the fleece to check was not a happy experience. In particular, the succulents had been decimated. The sedum seems to have pulled through, but my lovely, lovely money plant (Crassula ovata) has been frozen to death ...
as has the prickly pear ...
and the mesembrantheum. But at least that saves me having to decide whether to throw it out as I'd been thinking of.
I'm worried to about the aloe. The outer leaves have gone but the centre doesn't look too bad. Will it make it?
I've lost other plants too - the spider plants have been massacred ...
All these are plants which, with due protection, have always overwintered outside without problems. Yet, amazingly, the plants I was most worried about - the annuals that were hardly more than at seedling stage, and the more delicate perennials like my plumbago - all seem to have come through unscathed. I've lost a couple of hollyhocks, but the rest are all there. Even my chrysanthemums - in full bloom when I left. At first sight I thought I'd lost them ...
But look what's happening around the back...
In theory, the coldest period of the year is yet to come - in the next week or so. But fingers crossed that nothing will exceed the pre-Christmas period.
PS : Apologies for the time lapse since the last post. I have been swamped with work. But from now on, things will be back to normal - promise.