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Keep Your Garden Safe from the Cold!

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Water thoroughly! Plants can resist freezing temperatures much better when they
are fully turgid. Water stressed plants will take a hard hit. Consider watering
herbaceous plants and vegetables with SUPERthrive, a vitamin/hormone supplement
for plants.
- Cover all newly planted annuals, perennials or small shrubs using frost cloth.
Cover any tender perennials or cool season vegetable crops, such as broccoli,
cabbage, cauliflower & lettuce to keep from losing your harvest. While hardy
plants and cool season vegetables will typically survive a 15 degree frost, the
flower buds and fruit will most often be hardest hit. Cauliflower heads are
especially sensitive to freezing temperatures.
- A
sheet of frost cloth will provide about 8 degrees of temperature protection. You
can layer two sheets to give you extra protection. Purchase landscape staples to
help secure the frost cloth in place.
- Do
not use plastic to cover plants. Areas of the plant that come in contact with
plastic during a freeze often suffer damage. It's also better to leave some air
space above the plant as insulation, rather than pinning the frost cloth tightly
down on top of the plants.
- Fallen leaves or hay can also be used as a cover to insulate more hardy
herbaceous plants.
- You may leave frost cloth on plants for two or three days if freezing
temperatures persist, but it's best to at least pull it back to allow enough
sunlight to reach plants if warmer temperatures allow for
it.
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 North Haven Gardens - 7700 Northaven Rd. - 214-363-5316 - Jobs - About Us - www.nhg.com
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