lesa
Garden Master
My carrots would definitely be planted if those were my temps... As long as your soil is ready to work and not too soggy- I would go for it!
Oh, no, usually the tomatoes go out in mid may with an occasional low 40's at night, but mostly mid 40's at night.Ariel301 said:Really, your tomatoes do fine with temperatures in the upper 30s? That usually killed them when I lived in Colorado.
We have a real problem here with the weather changing dramatically and suddenly. Two weeks ago it was 15 degrees, and then literally overnight it became springtime weather. It does the same with summer, it will be 60 degrees day/50 night and then the next day it will be 90/80, and then suddenly somewhere in December it freezes out of nowhere. Makes it really hard to predict when to plant things!
ChrisStokes Seeds said:Carrot seed requires 6 - 14 days @ a minimum soil temp. of 60F/16C
Ariel301 said:Interesting, Hattie. Your row covers must be different from what most people here use, I've only seen solid plastic sheets as row covers. I bet something like your fleece would help my other problem too, which is the birds eating all the seed before it sprouts, they just tear through bird netting and eat everything.
We have it here in the U.S. we call it a floating row cover and it works great for a lot of uses in the garden.Hattie the Hen said:Ariel301 said:Interesting, Hattie. Your row covers must be different from what most people here use, I've only seen solid plastic sheets as row covers. I bet something like your fleece would help my other problem too, which is the birds eating all the seed before it sprouts, they just tear through bird netting and eat everything.
Hi Ariel,
Yes it certainly works well against the birds, even my own chickens are kept away. One of my big enemies here are pigeons......they pick out the centre tender shoots of any cabbage or like vegetable. I drape the fleece over hoops on all my veg while young for this reason. The material is semi-opaque & looks very like the kind of material one uses for interlining when dressmaking. Here is a UK link with info on the fabric. It comes in different weights & widths. I usually buy a 50metre roll of the the widest as that works out cheapest over a couple of years.
http://www.harrodhorticultural.com/...Ground+Cover+and+Mulching+Fabrics/GDN-030.htm
I think you can buy it over in the US as I mentioned it on TEG last year & someone found a site that sold it.
Good luck
Hattie