Your Weather, 2022

digitS'

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A sprinkle of rain this morning, which will help even out yesterday's irrigation in the big veggie garden.

It's 63°f this morning, so 17°C and may be 86°f and 30°C by afternoon.

A breeze may help for today's garden activity, @Marie2020 , and the air is seldom still out there. Might start out a little humid but I'm hanging laundry out under the deck roof anticipating that 30°C will dry them nicely by the time we arrive back home. Should be a good day for killing some weeds ;).

Steve
 

Gardening with Rabbits

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Three days ago I did not think it would rain and even after what rain we did get, the garden still looked dry and my flowers in the front were drooping, so I watered the garden and went to bed and it rained and rain and then yesterday woke up to thunder and lightening and rain. The garden looks better though. I think again I was not watering enough.
 

ducks4you

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Here is a recent article about drought:

How to Protect Landscape Plantings During Drought​

How plants deal with drought and how you can help

Posted by

Christopher Enroth

July 08, 2022

The summer of 2012 saw my first year as an Extension horticulture educator; it also was one of the driest years on record. Illinois saw massive shortages of rainfall that year- complete with water restrictions, loss of crops, and the demise of many ornamental landscapes. It was a summer that will be remembered. So, what are the best practices for getting your landscape plants through a drought?

Drought and Plants​

Due to its slow progression, drought is one of the few weather-related disasters that we can actively work to remediate during the actual weather event. However, drought’s nearly benign presence has a nasty habit of sneaking up on homeowners, especially when it comes to our trees.

Indications of drought are fairly easy to distinguish in our herbaceous perennials, annuals, and many woody shrubs, as these plants tend to wilt during times of water stress. Be mindful of landscape shrubs and small trees like holly that have waxy leaves. These tend not to wilt but simply dry, turn brown, and drop. The same goes for our needled evergreens.

Cool-season lawns have a survival mechanism that allows them to go dormant during hot, dry weather. Dormant lawn grass is straw-colored in appearance and is a slight deterrence to those who enjoy walking barefoot on the lawn. And what a good deterrent it is, because walking on dormant grass risks damaging the growing point at the soil line (a.k.a. the crown) that sends up new leaf blades during active growth. While dormant, your lawn will only need to be watered in the most extreme of droughts. After a month of no rainfall, a dormant lawn begins to run the risk of suffering irreversible death of the crowns. To keep the crown alive during extreme drought Illinois Extension recommends watering ¼- or ½-inch of water every two to four weeks, respectively. That amount of water is enough to keep the crowns alive, but not enough to knock the grass out of dormancy.

Making a plan for watering​

During extreme drought communities might face water restrictions; therefore, you must prioritize your watering regimen. Lawns can be seeded and regrown within a year. Perennials and shrubs can be replaced next season. The big-ticket items in our landscapes are our large shade trees. You cannot replace a fifty-year-old tree without investing another fifty years. Unfortunately, many homeowners don’t think to water their mature trees, believing an extensive taproot has made it to some reservoir deep underground. When in fact most trees do not have taproots. Typically, tree roots are found in the top eighteen inches of the soil.

When strategizing your watering make sure to give the following plants priority:

  • Recent transplants
  • Specimens that have suffered stress or damage in recent years
  • Trees or shrubs whose planting location restricts root expansion
  • Plantings grown near heat-reflective surfaces
  • Plants that are already indicating stress (yellowing foliage, wilting, scorch, leaf drop, dieback)
During a drought, when do we need to start watering our trees? A good visual rule-of-thumb is when the soil begins to separate from paved areas and around foundations due to a lack of soil moisture. Timing your irrigation depends somewhat on species, season, and soil type but a general rule is to water slowly and deeply allowing the soil to dry out between watering.

Do not fertilize during drought conditions. Fertilizers promote growth in plants, which is the opposite of what the plants are trying to accomplish as they slow down their processes in response to the drought event. Most mature and naturally established woody plants rarely require fertilizer as they would not have grown in a spot lacking their nutrient needs.

Good Growing Tip of the Week: Don’t have a drip irrigation system? A dripping hose placed within the canopy line of a tree does the trick. And for those spots where the hose can’t reach, a five-gallon bucket with holes drilled in the bottom works just as well.

https://extension.illinois.edu/blog...ow-protect-landscape-plantings-during-drought
 

flowerbug

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finally some rain is hitting the ground. we've needed this for weeks. the funny part is that the weather forecast hasn't changed for hours but the storm has been coming right at us and seemed large enough to survive the transition to the valley. it still hasn't any mention of chances of rain until tomorrow morning after 4am... ok, well, i sure hope that happens too... :)
 

heirloomgal

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It was 28 C / 82.4 F today but it didn't feel hot because there was no sun. There has been a lot of sunshine in the last month. It's amazing how different 28 is without direct sun. Now there is a wonderful breeze rustling the leaves. Gosh I love summertime!

eta: The weather network has been so wrong all summer! Professional guessers I guess?
 

flowerbug

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more rains this morning, i'm not sure if we had any last night or not. good to have, so happy to finally have more than just a quick rain. chances for more this morning by the looks of the rardar. we really needed this. also, i really needed this - a break from watering, weeding and any other projects for a few days.
 
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