The trees around here are all budding out way too early too.
Akiva Silver wrote:I think that Colorado might be more suited to something like a nut pine than to a fruit tree, but I have never lived there.
For what its worth, I have seen American type hazel flowers survive temps as low as 5 f.
Badgersett also says that their hybrid hazels can tolerate freezing after blooming.
[T]hey have been through a +4° F freeze IN FULL FLOWER; with
no effect on the crop. That’s only 4° above 0°. I’ll say that again. Hard freezes have no effect
on the crop. Frequently they will flower in early April, with the ground still frozen; it's their
normal timing. This is hard to comprehend for people used to apples or cherries, where a
slight frost of +30°F during flowering can completely destroy the crop for that year.
Source
Another woody
perennial that might work out well is honeyberry. They are supposed to be one of the earliest producers and their flowers are supposed to be fairly frost tolerant.
I planted some honeyberries last year, and I have hybrid hazels on order from Badgersett (in theory) but I don't have any personal
experience with them when it comes to weird weather.
There are some really short woody perennials that might do okay due to snow cover. Many varieties of blueberries, canberries, lingonberries and other members of the vaccinium genus are dwarfs. Some currants have a tendency to sprawl along the ground.
I'm looking into growing grapes up here, and one technique people in cold climates sometimes use is to train grapes to a collapsible
trellis. During the winter the grapes are laid down so they get protection from the snow. This necessitates cutting them to the ground every once in a while so that they remain flexible
enough to lay down. I'm not sure if that counts as "woody" or not.
I know very little about mulberry trees, but I've read that they produce fruit all summer. Do they set all of their buds and flowers at once, or are they continually producing them over the
course of the summer? If it's the latter they might be resistant to weird weather.
Then there's the ultimate woody perennial:
mushrooms! (har har har)