IN THE GARDEN PROTECT RUBBER PLANTS, FICUS TREES FROM FREEZING TEMPS.Byline: JOSHUA SISKIN Q: I transplanted three rubber plants that are all at least 10 years old into my yard. Then snow fell for almost 36 hours, and it seems to have taken a severe toll on each plant. In addition, the temperature drops down to between 24 and 32 degrees every night. Is there anything I can do to attempt to salvage salvage, in maritime law, the compensation that the owner must pay for having his vessel or cargo saved from peril, such as shipwreck, fire, or capture by an enemy. Salvage is awarded only when the party making the rescue was under no legal obligation to do so. them? Is there a way to try to keep them warm? - Tina Barr Apple Valley A: This winter's cold snap cold snap Noun a short period of cold and frosty weather Noun 1. cold snap - a spell of cold weather cold spell came a month earlier than usual and was nastier than anything we had experienced in several years. Ficus trees such as the rubber tree (Ficus elastica) were hit particularly hard, whether in Apple Valley or Woodland Hills. Depending on cold severity, damaged leaf stems, and even trunks may have a water-soaked or burned appearance. There is really nothing you can do to salvage cold-damaged plants other than prevent them from suffering further damage. You can either wrap your plants in old blankets or burlap, or build them simple protective mini-greenhouse frame structures covered in plastic. If you wish to keep your mini-greenhouses in place all the time, you should use clear plastic film, but if you just want to put them over your plants at night, then the plastic can be either clear or black. During the day, the ground is warmed from the radiant heat heat proceeding in right lines, or directly from the heated body, after the manner of light, in distinction from heat conducted or carried by intervening media. See also: Radiant of the sun. At night, this heat radiates back up from the ground into the sky. As long as you have plastic to block the escape of this warm air and keep it around the plant, you should be all right. I know someone in Granada Hills who grows bananas ba·nan·as adj. Slang Crazy: "That's the horrible thing when you're bananas and mangoes, and protects them from the cold under individual plastic ``cages'' during the winter. He protects other tropicals under booths covered with fine mesh shade cloth. Of course, day and night temperatures also need to be taken into account. In northern states, some plants are kept wrapped in blankets all winter long. The fact that your plants are 10 years old gives them a better chance at surviving a freeze than if they were babies. Whatever you do, refrain from pruning pruning, the horticultural practice of cutting away an unwanted, unnecessary, or undesirable plant part, used most often on trees, shrubs, hedges, and woody vines. off dead growth until spring weather returns. Pruning encourages new growth, which would be smitten smit·ten v. A past participle of smite. smitten Verb a past participle of smite Adjective deeply affected by love (for) Adj. 1. in another freeze. TIP OF THE WEEK: If freezing weather is forecast, check the evening sky. A clear sky is more of a threat than an overcast one. Clouds trap heat and prevent it from dissipating completely. One strategy for combating a freeze is to soak your garden well. On a night where the temperature hovers around 32 degrees, considerable heat is released as water turns to ice. In this regard, drip irrigation
Any of the plants that make up the genus Citrus, in the rue family, that yield pulpy fruits covered with fairly thick skins. The genus includes the lemon, lime, sweet and sour oranges, tangerine, grapefruit, citron, and shaddock (C. maxima, or C. grandis; also called pomelo). is concerned, spraying the fruit with water also offers a measure of frost protection. |
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