- Thread starter
- #41
digitS'
Garden Master
See,
the difficult circumstances are weather-related. Days-to-maturity are really just constructed, pie-in-the-sky. Lois Hole referred to them as "perfect" days. (Imagine gardening and advising gardeners in Edmonton Alberta.)
Commercial seed growers for some crops provide information on Growing Degree Days. Heck's Fire, the US Weather Service does it for us and bases the numbers on temperatures and the growing of corn.
Plants are not machines and they perform differently in different locations. Weather is far from static. We cannot know precisely when a variety will be ready for harvest but relying on results from one location is a problem.
All this is why I should make that trip to the mountains northern Spain, the Lake District of Argentina, and the hill country of Tasmania where growing season weather is similar to here. Of course, I might get lost and have trouble finding my way home ...
Steve
the difficult circumstances are weather-related. Days-to-maturity are really just constructed, pie-in-the-sky. Lois Hole referred to them as "perfect" days. (Imagine gardening and advising gardeners in Edmonton Alberta.)
Commercial seed growers for some crops provide information on Growing Degree Days. Heck's Fire, the US Weather Service does it for us and bases the numbers on temperatures and the growing of corn.
Plants are not machines and they perform differently in different locations. Weather is far from static. We cannot know precisely when a variety will be ready for harvest but relying on results from one location is a problem.
All this is why I should make that trip to the mountains northern Spain, the Lake District of Argentina, and the hill country of Tasmania where growing season weather is similar to here. Of course, I might get lost and have trouble finding my way home ...
Steve