Jim: I hope all your plants survived! I had a similar moment, running outside at 3am to pull in a tray of Hipps. Of course CA valley cold weather is a measly 30 something degrees. I had stapled a nice sheet of plastic around the plants earlier in the winter and they were happy and leafing out and then a few storms shredded it. So I relegated to wrapping them at pot level in nearly opaque white sheet plastic. James Frelichowski Jim McKenney <jimmckenney@starpower.net> wrote: I woke up yesterday morning at a bit before 6 A.M., suddenly and from a deep sleep, remembering that I had left a tray of Lachenalia outside overnight. For weeks I've been faithfully putting them outside during the day as soon as the daytime temperature got above freezing, and then bringing them in at night before the temperature dropped to the freezing point. The temperature had dropped to the mid twenties F. I threw on some clothes and went out to retrieve the corpses. I touched the leaves and they were frozen hard. The sweet strains of the avian aubade were momentarily drowned out by some coarse vituperation. Back inside, I examined the plants: definitely frozen, with the dark, water stained look of frozen foliage. I put them aside to see what they would look like when they thawed out. For the most part, they're still alive. There is some dead foliage, but only one plant out of about a dozen seems to have lost all foliage. One of the plants was in full bloom and the inflorescence showed no damage at all. There were also two pots of seedling Nerine with them: these tiny things amazingly show no damage at all. I need a better system. Jim McKenney Montgomery County, Maryland, USA, USDA zone 7, where all day we heard the sounds associated with melting snow. _______________________________________________ pbs mailing list pbs@lists.ibiblio.org http://www.pacificbulbsociety.org/list.php --------------------------------- Yahoo! Autos. Looking for a sweet ride? Get pricing, reviews, & more on new and used cars.