fastest way of warming up soil
buenaventura43
12 years ago
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DrHorticulture_
12 years agodigdirt2
12 years agoRelated Discussions
need help with black plastic (black mulch....for warming soil)
Comments (7)This has always struck me as odd, since black plastic doesn't absorb a lot more sunlight than dark colored soil. But I guess it adds a layer of insulation, so that to the extent the soil warms up, it won't cool as fast. In that regard, any plastic would do. Clear would probably work as well as black. Fruit production starts to tail off for tomatoes when nighttime temps don't get much below 75F. Peppers and eggplants should do fine. But that's air temperature. Your plastic on the ground won't affect the air temperature, one way or another. To the extent you have plants growing on the black plastic, they'll shade it, and you won't get any ground heating at all. I mean, the idea is that once the plants are mature, the sunlight should hit THEM, not the plastic. I assume this plastic is perforated, so you can irrigate? You can just check the soil temp, and if it starts getting uncomfortably high, just throw some leaves or newsprint over it....See MoreDo you warm soil in spring?
Comments (6)You have to have sun though. This spring was miserable even under cover, because we had so few sunny days. At the end of April, I was shocked to find cold soil under my hoop houses. The good news is that with plastic or hoop, you need one good week of sunny weather to be in business. We actually did not have it until early May, and then I planted. That was followed by a deluge in the second half of May (one foot of water total), which for the first time here killed 2/3 of my potatoes and 1/3 of my beans (the greens are fantastic though). Had I done like NYG, I would have potatoes, so warming is not a 100% solution....See MoreQuickest way of breaking up clay soil
Comments (23)No offense to hoovb, but yeah, Jean, I was waiting for someone to say something. It's a lot of work, trying to clean up all the "dirt" around here. It's an overwhelming task. It's like steppin' into "uncomposted manure", at times... Speaking of, Grandma, who would be 102 today, said that when she was a young girl, she'd go out and squish her bare toes on a cold morning in warm cow paddies. She also told me that when she was a child, her grandma told her that the Devil had laid her out on a stump, and the sun had hatched her. I used to think she was for real. Turns out, I started learning about biology, and that it was impossible for a mammal, like we are, to be hatched from an egg. And then I learned about the platypus. M...See MoreApril 2019, Week 1, The Warm-Up Is Coming
Comments (44)Larry, I don't know what that is. Do you suppose it could be some sort of Asian green similar to Bok Choy? That white base is what reminds me of Bok Choy, but I don't grow it, so don't know what it looks like at a young stage. Jennifer, I agree that the more property you have, the harder it is. At least the deer and voles have made it easy for me...they eat everything I plant that is not fenced off to exclude them, so I quit trying to have nice landscaping around the house, other than trees and a few shrubs and a couple of vines, because it all just becomes Deer Chow. This isn't necessarily a bad thing as it forces me to concentrate my efforts only within the fenced garden spots. I hope y'all got the photos done today. The weather here was bad in the morning, but not so bad by mid-afternoon. The sun even came out eventually, but now we're back to mud and standing puddles. The dogs came in from their dog yard, and I don't know what they did, but they all had wet, gooey mud about the consistency of chocolate pudding caked all over their feet up to their ankles. I spent a long time cleaning up after them since they left splotches of very wet mud with every step that they took. I'd rather have spent today in the garden, but it just wasn't a garden day today and tomorrow won't be either. Rebecca, I guess everyone was beyond ready for the Cherry Street market to be open and to have all those wonderful things available there. They sure did sell out early. I haven't seen anything 'yet' in the forecast that indicates your area will experience freezing temperatures, but I only look at the NWS forecast and it only goes out 7 days. Our coldest night so far looks like it will be Thursday night, and it really won't be that bad either (46 degrees on Thurs and 49 on Fri), but you're a lot further north, so seeing forecast lows in the upper 30s for your area isn't totally shocking. What worries me about forecast lows is that they often are highly inaccurate a week out. Last week we started out with a forecast low of 39 for our coldest weekend night, and then it dropped daily until it hit 32 I think, and our actual low was 31 or 32 but our Mesonet station was even colder---maybe 29. I think that whole progression of decreasing forecast lows for the 31st of Mar and 1st of Apr was a good reminder to me that just because the forecast looks good 6 or 7 days out, well.....I shouldn't assume it actually will be that good. The rain has been kind to us though....only rain, no hail, and that is about the best one can hope for in April. Areas of Texas well south and east of us got the sort of hail that was in our forecast as a general possibility. At least one area got much worse hail---Grapeland TX had mixed hail that seemed to range from maybe quarter sized to softball sized. I saw not just car windshields and windows either completely knocked out or with huge holes in them, but big fist-sized or larger holes in the bodies of the cars as well. Can y'all imagine what that sort of hail would do to a garden? I heard on the news that some hail-related injuries were reported---mostly due to flying glass. We were supposed to have 3 rounds of rain Friday night/Saturday and instead we only had 1. I'm okay with that. One was enough. Dawn...See Morewayne_5 zone 6a Central Indiana
12 years agoMichael
12 years agowayne_5 zone 6a Central Indiana
12 years agoSlimy_Okra
12 years agoMichael
12 years agobuenaventura43
12 years ago
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Michael