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Re: El Nino and Protecting plants?
- To: "The Jeli's" <u*@cybernw.com>
- Subject: Re: El Nino and Protecting plants?
- From: A* K* <a*@peak.org>
- Date: Tue, 14 Oct 1997 09:23:56 -0700 (PDT)
- In-Reply-To: <199710140652.XAA09821@bert.cybernw.com>
On the Victory Garden, they recommended using cloth to cover your plants
from freezing, not plastic because it causes water to condensate and
freeze your plants (?).
-Amy K.
Corvallis, OR
On Tue, 14 Oct 1997, The Jeli's wrote:
> Date: Tue, 14 Oct 1997 00:01:08 -0700
> From: The Jeli's <utaar@cybernw.com>
> To: indoor-gardening@prairienet.org
> Subject: Re: El Nino and Protecting plants?
>
> >Sorry this post doesn't really have anything to do with indoor gardening!
> >I've read up on El Nino and it seems as if NM is gonna have a really cold
> >winter. Does anyone have any suggestions on how to protect tender plants
> >(passiflora and oleander). Any advice would be greatly appreciated! TIA
>
> I wish I knew what to tell you--El Nino is causing opposite problems up
> here. We usually have wet, cold weather (constant rain and temps in
> the low 40s), but this year they're predicting a warm, dry winter. If so,
> the bugs next year are going to be unstoppable with no cold to kill them
> off. It got into the 70s today. My poor plants are so confused (and so
> am I). We miss our Oregon rain!
>
> As for your plants in NM...are they in pots or in the ground? If they're
> in pots maybe you could cut them back and put them in a cool (low
> 50s) room like a garage or laundry room for the winter. Or wrap the
> pots well (someone suggested bubble wrap to me once, haven't tried
> it), and cover the plants with straw? If they're in the ground, you
> could try covering them well with straw. I wish I could be definite, but
> I live in an apartment and only bring in my really big pelargoniums that
> I've become attached to (my "dumpster" babies). I just winter them
> over in the house where it's warm and let them keep growing, no
> dormancy. They get like shrubs in the summer. Maybe someone on
> the list who has an outdoor garden has better advice. Can they be
> dug up and brought in?
>
> Cami
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> utaar@cybernw.com
> www.geocities.com/Heartland/Ranch/7115
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> "What we call human nature is in actuality human habit"
>
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