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IN THE GARDEN ALWAYS WATER IN THE MORNING FOR BEST RESULTS.


Byline: JOSHUA SISKIN

Q: My girlfriend and I asked our gardeners which time of the day is best for watering lawns and landscapes. Hers said in the evening, and mine said early in the morning. I have my front sprinklers come on at 6 a.m. and the back at 7 a.m. twice a week until it gets hot. Then I increase watering to three or four times a week. Is this the correct amount of watering time, and is early watering better? I was always told that night watering brings out bugs and dries too soon. Please advise.

M. Rizzardi,

West Hills

A: The best time to water is early morning, since that is when plants are ``awakened'' by the sun and begin making their own food in a process known as photosynthesis. Plants photosynthesize pho·to·syn·the·size
v.
To synthesize by the process of photosynthesis.
 when there is light, which opens their leaf pores, known as stomates. When the stomates are open, carbon dioxide carbon dioxide, chemical compound, CO2, a colorless, odorless, tasteless gas that is about one and one-half times as dense as air under ordinary conditions of temperature and pressure.  is absorbed from the air. This carbon dioxide then combines with the hydrogen in water (taken up by roots) to form sugar, which is a plant's only true source of energy and nutrition. What we purchase at the nursery under the label ``plant food'' is actually a mineral supplement that allows the plant's own food-making process to take place.

Stress reduces the efficiency of all biological and biochemical processes, and photosynthesis is no exception. As the day progresses, a plant faces intensifying heat and wind. These weather variables increase plant stress and make photosynthesis a laborious process. Early in the morning, when the temperature is cool and the air is still, photosynthesis (or plant-food manufacturing) can go forward at a steady pace.

Watering in the evening does nothing for a plant or lawn until the following morning, when the moisture in the ground can be taken up by roots and utilized in photosynthesis. In the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified"
meantime, meanwhile
, all the problems associated with standing water come into play, especially the proliferation proliferation /pro·lif·er·a·tion/ (pro-lif?er-a´shun) the reproduction or multiplication of similar forms, especially of cells.prolif´erativeprolif´erous

pro·lif·er·a·tion
n.
 of certain disease organisms. Evening watering can be lethal to California natives and other drought-tolerant plants such as rosemary, lavender and cactus cactus, any plant of the family Cactaceae, a large group of succulents found almost entirely in the New World. A cactus plant is conspicuous for its fleshy green stem, which performs the functions of leaves (commonly insignificant or absent), and for the spines (not  of every description.

Except in highly sandy soil, spray sprinklers should be left on for no more than five minutes at a time. After five minutes, runoff Runoff

The procedure of printing the end-of-day prices for every stock on an exchange onto ticker tape.

Notes:
If the "tape is late" then it can take a long time to print off all the closing prices.
 occurs, and you will just be watering the sidewalk. A lawn, however, will require up to 10 minutes of spray sprinkling to replace the water lost during the previous day. The way to get your 10 minutes of water with minimal runoff is to divide the watering time into two five-minute periods, say at 5 a.m. and 9 a.m. In the interests of efficiency, it is highly recommended that you automate your watering system.

In hot weather, lawns will require 10 minutes of daily watering, with spray sprinklers, five or six days a week. If you have slow-moving rotary sprinklers, which cover more ground than spray heads but apply water at a slower rate, leave them on for 15 minutes at a time. Fifteen minutes of slow-moving rotary sprinkler water delivery are roughly equivalent to five minutes of spray-head delivery.

Annuals and vegetables require roughly the same amount of water as lawns. Flowering perennials vary widely in their water requirement, depending on habitat, but require ample water no more than six months out of the year. Ground covers also vary widely but, generally speaking, require about one-eighth the amount of water needed by a lawn.

TIP OF THE WEEK: The worst mistake made when the weather warms is to significantly increase water allotment to plants that originate in Verb 1. originate in - come from
stem - grow out of, have roots in, originate in; "The increase in the national debt stems from the last war"
 the dry regions of Australia, South Africa South Africa, Afrikaans Suid-Afrika, officially Republic of South Africa, republic (2005 est. pop. 44,344,000), 471,442 sq mi (1,221,037 sq km), S Africa. , the Mediterranean or our own back yard. Plants native to these areas should not require more than a single weekly soaking throughout the year. Iceplant, gazania n. 1. any plant of the genus Gazania valued for their showy daisy flowers.

Noun 1. gazania - any plant of the genus Gazania valued for their showy daisy flowers
flower - a plant cultivated for its blooms or blossoms
, geranium geranium, common name for some members of the Geraniaceae, a family of herbs and small shrubs of temperate and subtropical regions. Their long, beak-shaped fruits give them the popular names crane's-bill (for species of the genus Geranium, , perennial herbs such as rosemary and lavender, and many types of sages and bulb plants are in greater danger of contracting fungus diseases from excess water than they are of dying from thirst.
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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:May 21, 2005
Words:661
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