Archive for August, 2012

COOLER WEATHER IN OKLAHOMA ALLOWS PLANTS TO FRUIT

What a difference 2 weeks make!  14 days ago we were battling a long stretch of 100 plus degree heat and a punishing drought dehydrating every living thing across Oklahoma.  We are still in a drought but most of the state has been blessed with at least 1 or 2 refreshing rains and we have enjoyed a nice run of cooler August weather with highs in the low 90’s.  Our night temps have dropped into the 60’s and 70’s over this stretch.  Those lower night temperatures allow our trees and plants to take a deep breath and relax a little before facing the heat of the next day.  Many plants, like the ever popular tomatoes, can’t pollinate and set fruit with high night temperatures. These lower temperatures allow pollination again and should help all your plants that survived the furnace of July to find new energy for fall.  Many plants will start to perk up, produce new growth, fruit and flowers as long as you help meet their watering needs in this greatly improved “fall-like” weather.

This nicer weather will help improve your fall plant choices in a few short weeks at your favorite local nursery or garden center.  The fall hardy mums the last 2 seasons have been of lower quality than normal as growers fought intense August and even September heat which caused heat delay and smaller fall mums.  The fall crops are growing nicely in greenhouses across our state and with this cooler weather it looks like growers may produce one of their best hardy mum crops in years.  Growers have already potted up the first crops of fall pansies and this weather will help improve the quality of the pansy plants you can buy in late September and October to beautify your fall and winter garden.

 I want to take personal privilege to bid a fond farewell to David and Bev Shumate and all their fine team of horticulturists at Horn Seed.  We are truly sad to see them closing this landmark Oklahoma garden center after 91 years.  They have been in the current location for over 50 years at the old “Classen Circle”, and have served hundreds of thousands of Oklahoma gardeners and generations of market farmers.  They have made a huge impact on the beautification and health of all those Oklahomans they have served over the years.   It is sad to think about all that great talent and service we have lost in our community in the last several decades with the closing of so many wonderful independent growers and garden centers like Horn Seed.  I have fond memories of some of the others that closed before them including Higdons Nursery, Porter’s, Sneeds Nursery, Capitol Gardens, Bruce Rey Nursery, Satterlee Nursery,  Moesel’s Hort-Haven, Booton’s, and Warren and Son Nursery.  These local nurseries served the community in many special ways through education, support for local institutions, and a local knowledge of the trees, plants, soil types and water quality and a special desire to help Oklahoma gardeners succeed.  Please join me in saying  ”Thank You” to the Horn family for many years of service to Oklahoma and please try to support the remaining local garden centers and nurseries so they can survive to serve future generations of Oklahoma gardeners.

 

EXTREME HEAT MEANS MORE NEED FOR WATER

This last few weeks has been feeling very much like the summer of 2011.  The recent “flash drought” and very high, hot temperatures has put intense stress on most farm crops and our trees, shrubs and gardens.  Be respectful of your local water supplies and follow any mandated watering times but please walk your yard and property and do at least enough watering to keep your trees, shrubs, perennials and other long term or special plants alive.  It is best to soak your plants when you do water to support the deeper plant roots and to reduce surface evaporation.  You can apply a liquid polymer and wetting agents to make the “water wetter” and cause it to soak further in the ground and to stay longer in the soil.  You can mulch the tops of flower beds and container gardens with any of a number of kinds of bark mulches or hulls to slow down water evaporation, lower soil temperatures and retain water longer in the root zone.  A mulch of 1” to 3” thick over the soil surface will reduce watering requirements by 50 percent or more.  Mulching will also reduce weed germination, and will dramatically reduce your need for weed pulling or herbicides.  Lower weed population also reduces the competition for water so your desired plants can access more of the available water.

 You can almost tell how deep a plants’ roots go into the earth by how green the plant is. Compared to those stressed with leaves turning yellow or brown, wilting and even dropping from the plant.  Shallow roots plants like bermuda grass lawns will turn brown or burn the quickest while deep rooted trees like pecans can hang on the longest with limited stress since they are rooted deepest into the earth.  This drought is serious enough especially following the intense and extended drought of spring and summer 2011 that many shrubs and trees are showing the cumulative stress of these challenges.  Many are literally having their own plant style “heat stroke”.

 You can water by hand with a waterhose, or you can use many styles of water sprinklers.  Nothing beats drip irrigation for its slow, steady, soaking ability that uses less water while actually getting more of the water  to the plant roots.  You can also recycle bath or dishwater to water your plants.

Please join me in praying for rain but in the meantime get out and water the plants you want to save.

DIVERSITY ADDS EXCITEMENT TO SEASONAL GARDENS

Here we are already at the halfway point of calendar year 2012 and almost 40 percent of the way through the 2012 growing season. Our growing season typically runs from our last freeze date in early to mid April to our first freeze date in late October or early November. But individual crops have their own calendars and time frames that may be based on day length, sun intensity, temperature or moisture availability. We know that some crops peak in the early spring like tulips, daffodils and forsythia. Others will peak in the fall and a few very hardy crops actually peak in the heat of the summer like okra, penta, lantana and crape myrtle. Our yards and landscapes are the most exciting when we plant a variety of plants so that we have color or can harvest at different points of the growing season. This diversity adds excitement to your décor and the aesthetic view and value of your property.  It can also enhance your interest in spending   time outdoors in the yard to observe the many seasonal changes.

You can plant container grown plants, even in the heat at this time of year as long as you stay on top of their watering needs.  We are entering our third week of daily temperatures around 100 degrees.   Those persistently hot temperatures along with little or no rain for weeks has put us back into drought conditions and many established trees and shrubs are under extreme stress.  New plantings will likely not survive without  your supplemental  watering.  Established trees, shrubs and even flowers and vegetables will be rooted deeper into the earth where there is at least some moisture in the soil that they can suck up and use.  New plantings have a limited root zone, nearer to the soil surface and can get dried out or dehydrated much quicker. 

Those of you that are growing plants in container gardens can observe a similar condition in that plants in small pots will dry out much quicker and need water more often because their container does not have as much soil mass, and cannot hold as much moisture after a watering where plants in large containers can go longer and need watering less often, but still more often than flowers or vegetables growing in a flowerbed in the ground. 

We were blessed to get a number of spring rains and to stay cooler through June compared to last year.  This has led to some really nice harvests of tomatoes, peppers, squash and many other veggie crops. Now that we are “heating up” most of the plants in your yard are counting on you for water,  to help them bridge through the drought and heat to survive until fall and the cooler temperatures and it’s refreshing, renewing rains.  If this is the time of year you get a chance to plant, please plant but remember that summer planting comes with a commitment  to water.   Do check your plants regularly and soak the new and established plants as needed.  Please remember your newer plantings will need water more often.