Gus
I put my hoop house up last weekend its 16ft x
40ft on wensday afternoon about 4:30 (shade had hit the hoop house )
outside temp. was 83 inside was at 112.6 I wish I had checked it in full sun.
Good Luck all
Joe H.
Sunny N H Where the BIG ones grow
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-- Original Message -----
From:
G*@aol.com
To: p*@hort.net
Sent: Friday, April 19, 2002 7:28
AM
Subject: Re: heating cables
(advantage)
In a
message dated 4/19/02 7:21:14 AM Eastern Daylight Time, P*@dnr.state.oh.us
writes:
Subj:RE: heating cables Date:4/19/02 7:21:14 AM
Eastern Daylight Time From:P*@dnr.state.oh.us Reply-to:p*@hort.net To:p*@hort.net Sent from the
Internet
Perhaps a cheaper alternative is to build a
greenhouse over your planting area. I built a 16'x12' (approx
10'x12' once erected) PVC arch and covered it with green-house
plastic. The whole thing cost me about $15 in PVC and $25 in
plastic.
If you erect it well before you plant, it wall
resolve multiple problems for you. Mine covers two planting sites,
it has warmed the soil about 20 degrees above outside (haven't measured
it yet, ask John Maston) and it protects the plants from a late
frost. An earlier version also helped me dry out the patch enough
to till since my patch has been very wet this spring.
Is there
some advantage to the heating cables that I am
missing?
-Gus
I've used them for about 15 years
in combination with greenhouse type of protection. Their biggest
advantage is when you get an extended cloudy or rainy period during
germination. With the lack of sunshine there is little heat generation
for the seeds. (I direct start) They also help generate heat under the
blankets at night to prevent freezing. It is not uncommon for me to see
20's in early May.
George Brooks North Tewksbury, MA USA Pumpkin Nuts
Page Approximately 25 miles Northwest of Boston in the Merrimack
River Valley Zone 5N Personal Bests 617.6 1991 641 1993 648
2000 (Unofficial & died prematurely on Aug 29)
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