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6 Tips for Gardening in HOT Weather 

San Diego Seed Company
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We're still enjoying great weather here, but things are definitely warming up! Let's talk about how you can prepare for gardening in HOT temperatures and how to protect your plants.
SHADE CLOTH
This is a great thing to have around the garden because it's so quick, easy, and effective. If a heat wave is in the forecast, you might not have time to add a fresh layer of mulch. You definitely won't have the years it takes to build good soil health.
Shade cloth is a sure-fire way to protect your plants in a pinch. The key here is to use the right product. I recommend 40 or 50% shade cloth, so that's how much of the intensity of the UV light is changed.
It's best to have some stakes or other infrastructure in your garden to hang shade cloth from, but you can totally just lay it directly over many plants in an emergency. This is a lightweight product and easy to manage.
MULCH
This one takes more preparation, but it's so worth it. Mulch does so much for a garden: it regulates soil temperatures, suppresses weeds, retains moisture, and builds soil health over time.
I recommend all gardeners use mulch, especially in the drier parts of zones 9 and 10. A minimum of a couple inches will help, but several inches or more will really pay off.
SOIL HEALTH
On the note of soil health, this is our third tip but is even more of a long-term strategy. Good soil is a key to growing healthy, resilient plants. Mulch plays a key here, but you should also amend your soil with things like compost and manure.
I recommend doing this at the change of every season. You can top off with a couple of inches, or you can do go down deeper if you need to. Compost can also hold onto a lot of moisture.
MOISTURE
This might seems like the easy answer to gardening in the heat, but it shouldn't be your only weapon. Mulch and healthy soil will help retain moisture, and shade cloth can protect your plants from getting fried.
Plants need moisture, but sometimes you can even overwater your plants if you're just relying on watering as your only way to keep your plants alive.
PRUNING
Pruning is a key part to guiding your plants, but it's possible to overdo it too. It's possible to remove too many leaves which are protecting the fruits and soil. That will also stress your plants.
Of course, be sure to get rid of any diseased or dead parts of the plant, but be sure to check the forecast if you plan on doing some heavier pruning.
PLANT APPROPRIATELY
Finally, grow plants that can take the heat! Drought- and heat-tolerant varieties have been chosen because they outperform other varieties in tough weather.
Choosing varieties that will do well in your climate goes a long way. Most of the seeds that we carry in our seed catalog have some kind of tolerance that makes them a good fit for growing in zones 9 and 10, especially the drier areas.
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28 авг 2024

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Комментарии : 48   
@cs7717
@cs7717 2 месяца назад
LOL 9b We are already at 110+. Our real heat will hit 120 in a few weeks and stay that way most of the summer. We would sign for life for that!
@theropesofrenovation9352
@theropesofrenovation9352 2 месяца назад
IKR?? I'm dying
@SanDiegoSeedCompany
@SanDiegoSeedCompany 2 месяца назад
Yeesh! That's some HEAT
@Edgeofthecontinent
@Edgeofthecontinent 2 месяца назад
Thank you, mulch, mulch, mulch, mulch! Calling chipped drop today. We need to meet Marge.
@SanDiegoSeedCompany
@SanDiegoSeedCompany 2 месяца назад
Bust out the shovels! Marge is getting ready for her big debut.
@jujubee7351
@jujubee7351 2 месяца назад
Can you tell me how I can get mulch? I’m in Riverside 9 b
@farmgirl3501
@farmgirl3501 2 месяца назад
I am in Riverside and I order chipdrop ​@@jujubee7351
@karabean
@karabean 2 месяца назад
Thank you very mulch for this video
@maryconner9577
@maryconner9577 2 месяца назад
Very funny.
@richmaldo9254
@richmaldo9254 2 месяца назад
Thank You!
@dustyflats3832
@dustyflats3832 2 месяца назад
Thank you for saying no matter where you garden from!🎉. We don’t get 130*F but we did have a heat dome last year and never seen 109*F until then. Yes, shade cloth saved our plants in severe drought last year in WI. We have a desert microclimate and will be going from 44 degrees this morning to mid 80s by Thursday and 90s by next Monday. An abrupt change. I found by accident last year beets and radishes need shade here. My area can vary by 6 degrees from forecast. 40% fabric saved a lot of water and produced a good harvest. Lol, I was blessed by arborists and mountains of chips. We have WORMS NOW🎉🎉 I actually dug our sandy soil out of the paths and piled it onto the rows and loaded paths with chips to create moisture banks. We like our sandy soil and I layered the rows with compost.
@Chris-op7yt
@Chris-op7yt 2 месяца назад
i'm still learning how things are often context sensitive. Here in southern part of Australia it gets very dry in summer, so much so that dead organic matter mulches become extremely hydrophobic and usually hide the problem of dried out soil. Then it's almost impossible to re-wet the mulch and soil underneath. turns out the mantras often repeated here too, water deep and not often, and mulch mulch mulch, arent always good things. thanks for all the tips though.
@brainjar14
@brainjar14 2 месяца назад
Woody mulch doesn't go hydrophobic in that way, nor do straw-like mulches. They will either absorb water or allow it to pass through to the soil beneath. Mulch that is finer and/or more peat-like can definitely go hydrophobic, repelling water off the surface rather than absorbing it or letting it pass through. Applying water as slowly as possible helps with re-wetting either soil or mulch that has gone hydrophobic, and of course, volume. And if you for whatever reason only have access to mulch that will become hydrophobic when dry, one of the best options is to irrigate underneath the mulch instead, such as with in-line drip emitters.
@Chris-op7yt
@Chris-op7yt 2 месяца назад
@@brainjar14 : i did indeed get driptape irrigation in the veggie patch, at least. i've done all the organic mulches, and all do the same thing in a very dry summer climate followed by somewhat wet winter and spring. that's because they're made of mostly cellulose. besides being a great waste of money that almost all goes to the sky, lots of dead organic matter in soil or on top of soil makes it cold and wet in winter/spring, and then there's a very short window of microbe proliferation before dead organic matter becoming hydrophobic in dry conditions. it does not let water pass but runs the water off, if there's any depth to the mulch. the build up of the microbes during favorable short window of opportunity dies off and makes the hydrophobic conditions worse. we've been brainwashed since the industry started making sellable product from unusable organic waste that it's absolute gold for soil. it's not. the well meaning but gullible organic crowd helps to pump loads more carbon dioxide into atmosphere, whilst imagining garden fairies doing dances at night on the soil. high organic matter, cool and wet conditions are great for mushrooms and fungi of all sorts, some bad, but that only happens in favorable climatic conditions. if you go to the extensive forests in Tasmania, which is colder and wetter than here, you will find a foot or two of non-decomposed wood litter, from naturally broken branches etc. over many years, piling up. And in favorable conditions, at least 95% of dead organic matter goes into the air, just like in forests where there is good constant moisture. thankfully (ironically) carbon dioxide is not visible to us, so we dont see our dollars literally going up in the air. it's fine for influencers to show truckloads of almost free mulch...but the intent is actually for people to buy bagged compost/mulch from nurseries. it's not gold for soil, it's a goldmine for the industry.
@brainjar14
@brainjar14 2 месяца назад
@Chris-op7yt I guess we'll have to agree to disagree, on a lot of things. I grow in the climate you describe and mulch doesn't behave how you describe. Cellulose doesn't do what you say it does. And San Diego Seed company ain't getting kickbacks from Big Mulch.
@Chris-op7yt
@Chris-op7yt 2 месяца назад
@@brainjar14 : i did t say anything about sandiego seed. was additional info
@Valleyfarms303
@Valleyfarms303 2 месяца назад
This is awesome! Thanks 💚
@L3fT0H4nD
@L3fT0H4nD 2 месяца назад
I'm going to try all of them. TY.
@portaamber
@portaamber 2 месяца назад
I think we need to meet the cute sheep. For reasons 😁
@SanDiegoSeedCompany
@SanDiegoSeedCompany 2 месяца назад
Definitely gotta give her some screentime next time!
@poodledaddles1091
@poodledaddles1091 2 месяца назад
Hmmn, may need to put shade cloth on my list.
@SanDiegoSeedCompany
@SanDiegoSeedCompany 2 месяца назад
It can be a game changer!
@vee5032
@vee5032 2 месяца назад
Shade is already on my garden, 104F and getting hot 🥵
@SanDiegoSeedCompany
@SanDiegoSeedCompany 2 месяца назад
Yeesh! That's TOASTY
@sameenaalkowni3471
@sameenaalkowni3471 2 месяца назад
What type of mulch do you recommend for fruit trees?
@SanDiegoSeedCompany
@SanDiegoSeedCompany 2 месяца назад
Free, local, disease-free, and untreated! Working with local arborists is best. There are some trees that have certain properties that might not be good for specific crops, so be sure to ask & know what to put where.
@albertnett7864
@albertnett7864 2 месяца назад
Go get em large Marge.
@perryjoejimbob
@perryjoejimbob Месяц назад
I have watermelon and pumpkin seedlings I need to plant, they need more root space. But temperatures have averaged 112°F for 10 days, topping off at 118°F. And up to nearly 110°F for the next several days with extremely low humidities ( down to 5%). Should I hold off putting the seedlings in ground until this heatwave subsides? NorCal weather has been rough this year, a low of 18°F and high of 118°F. My tomatoes and peppers are struggling, losing all flowers and some near death. Shade not helping them.
@perryjoejimbob
@perryjoejimbob Месяц назад
And I was enjoying my garden so much this year. I had big plans for canning, pickling, and fermenting. Last year was a good year, so I doubled my efforts this year. I hope many of my plants can recover, but we still have August to get through.
@Daughter_of_the_MostHigh
@Daughter_of_the_MostHigh 2 месяца назад
where is a good place to get mulch, what is a good mulch for someone who doesn’t have a normal amount to spend on the garden
@SanDiegoSeedCompany
@SanDiegoSeedCompany 2 месяца назад
Where do you live? San Diego residents can get free self-load mulch from the Miramar Greenery. Also, call every arborist truck you pass, they love a free place to drop mulch as it costs to take it to a landfill.
@garlicgirl3149
@garlicgirl3149 2 месяца назад
Good question 🤔.
@carina4018
@carina4018 2 месяца назад
I called a local tree trimming company and they put me on their list for a truckload of mulch. The only thing is that it's a very large amount. It filled our whole driveway!
@farmgirl3501
@farmgirl3501 2 месяца назад
Is there any tree mulch type you would not use?
@SanDiegoSeedCompany
@SanDiegoSeedCompany 2 месяца назад
Only if its diseased or sprayed with chemicals. Some might be better to use in a pathway or to avoid with certain plants, but there's a place for pretty much any and all mulch.
@monicagonzalez5525
@monicagonzalez5525 2 месяца назад
What is considered to hot? Over 100?
@SanDiegoSeedCompany
@SanDiegoSeedCompany 2 месяца назад
It depends on the plant. 100 can greens or herbs, but a healthy tomato or okra can handle it. It's partially the temperature but also the intensity of the sun (and the soil, moisture levels, and much more). If your plants look like they're struggling or wilting and not bouncing back at night, then it's probably too hot for them.
@humanbeing4368
@humanbeing4368 2 месяца назад
Did you recently get married? I just noticed a ring on for the first time!😅
@SanDiegoSeedCompany
@SanDiegoSeedCompany 2 месяца назад
Rings aren't so great for gardening and getting dirty, but that happened a LOOONG time ago haha
@humanbeing4368
@humanbeing4368 2 месяца назад
@@SanDiegoSeedCompany Belated congratulations to y’all! You are right about jewelry and gardening in general.
@bmiles4131
@bmiles4131 2 месяца назад
Unless you have a cat. Cat will lay on shade cloth on plants. It attracts them.
@SanDiegoSeedCompany
@SanDiegoSeedCompany 2 месяца назад
So true! Ours love to lay on it
@garlicgirl3149
@garlicgirl3149 2 месяца назад
Soooo, since watching video I have gone to 3 stores where the associates say, "Shade cloth??!" ❓️🤔 Ahhhh...then I proceed to explain what it is, but I guess because in the past 40 years, 60% of farms have been sold. No one has a clue. This place gets HOT!!!🥵
@SanDiegoSeedCompany
@SanDiegoSeedCompany 2 месяца назад
Dang. It can be tricky to find which is why we started carrying our own.
@FloridaGirl-
@FloridaGirl- 2 месяца назад
They sell it on amazon. I watch for sales on it . Just bought 3 more. But it gets so dern hot in sw FL. I use June - sept to ammend beds and veggie garden mostly fall and winter. Totally reverse of what I did in North.
@garlicgirl3149
@garlicgirl3149 2 месяца назад
​@@FloridaGirl-I am not an Amazon fan. I know...crazy.
@garlicgirl3149
@garlicgirl3149 2 месяца назад
​@@SanDiegoSeedCompanyOh!!!
@garlicgirl3149
@garlicgirl3149 2 месяца назад
​@@SanDiegoSeedCompanyI did not realize you sold it!! I feel stupid. I will just buy from you.
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