Day 57, 6/1
The Big Test Day, 108 degrees! Up and watered garden but not the weed at 5:30. Sun was hitting them at 6:00am sharp. Normally I would have watered but the moisture meter showed wet so, after two days without a soak, they will face the heat. Ten hours of full sun but will be around to make sure they are ok. If they can handle this heat in pots after being fertilized two days ago then I know they will be fine this summer in the ground. Kind of excited! They look really lush and full this morning.
1:15pm:
103 according to reports. By my laser the shade average around plants is 105-112. Leaf temps in the high 80s to 100 or so. Wish I had a soil thermometer, that's where it really matters. Hottest pot tray covering the pot is 165. Mama's not fooling around today. Hottest hour will be around 4:00-5:00pm. No watering, but will top water the mulch around 2:00 or 3:00 to keep soil temps down. No wilting at all.
Mr Wimply, one of the two males in 5 gallons is mildly dryer than others and he recieved a full watering yesterday. Goes to show how important stepping up is. That extra 2" on the botton and 1" extra diameter is huge. I'll wager the sevens have one week's more growth max! Thank you Mandala for awesome seeds, makes me look good!
Started leaving partially eaten tomatoes on ground. The birds are continuing to chow on them, hopefully they will sate themselves and leave the growing 'maters alone. Wishful thinking. The quail have stopped digging in the pots, the mulch, texas ranger branches, and pot trays are keeping them out.
Told my neice that I would be making a rattlesnake pit in the back yard, hence the covered planter area, so she and her kids will have to stay out of the back yard until late fall. They know I remove snakes for the local homeowners and I needed a place to keep them until relocating them at night. Mostly Diamonbacks but one in five are Mojaves. Bad juju. They have a neuro toxin similar to a cobra on top off the same toxins of a Diamondback. Theives beware! The good thing is that, contrary to a Diamondback, they are very nervous and rattle big time as soon as they know you are even in the vicinity so people rarely get hit by them. Kind of a burglar system that warns the thief, lol!
8:30pm;
Man they breezed through the day. No wilt or leaf curl. In the last two days they have actually grown faster, 1/2-2". They look there best right now so I'm relieved. Used two gallons to top water mulch and what was left went into the five gallon pots. Full sun from 6:00 to around 5:00. Drama over.
Almost as hot tomorrow, might go ahead and heavy water, if not for the plants, for me.
The Big Test Day, 108 degrees! Up and watered garden but not the weed at 5:30. Sun was hitting them at 6:00am sharp. Normally I would have watered but the moisture meter showed wet so, after two days without a soak, they will face the heat. Ten hours of full sun but will be around to make sure they are ok. If they can handle this heat in pots after being fertilized two days ago then I know they will be fine this summer in the ground. Kind of excited! They look really lush and full this morning.
1:15pm:
103 according to reports. By my laser the shade average around plants is 105-112. Leaf temps in the high 80s to 100 or so. Wish I had a soil thermometer, that's where it really matters. Hottest pot tray covering the pot is 165. Mama's not fooling around today. Hottest hour will be around 4:00-5:00pm. No watering, but will top water the mulch around 2:00 or 3:00 to keep soil temps down. No wilting at all.
Mr Wimply, one of the two males in 5 gallons is mildly dryer than others and he recieved a full watering yesterday. Goes to show how important stepping up is. That extra 2" on the botton and 1" extra diameter is huge. I'll wager the sevens have one week's more growth max! Thank you Mandala for awesome seeds, makes me look good!
Started leaving partially eaten tomatoes on ground. The birds are continuing to chow on them, hopefully they will sate themselves and leave the growing 'maters alone. Wishful thinking. The quail have stopped digging in the pots, the mulch, texas ranger branches, and pot trays are keeping them out.
Told my neice that I would be making a rattlesnake pit in the back yard, hence the covered planter area, so she and her kids will have to stay out of the back yard until late fall. They know I remove snakes for the local homeowners and I needed a place to keep them until relocating them at night. Mostly Diamonbacks but one in five are Mojaves. Bad juju. They have a neuro toxin similar to a cobra on top off the same toxins of a Diamondback. Theives beware! The good thing is that, contrary to a Diamondback, they are very nervous and rattle big time as soon as they know you are even in the vicinity so people rarely get hit by them. Kind of a burglar system that warns the thief, lol!
8:30pm;
Man they breezed through the day. No wilt or leaf curl. In the last two days they have actually grown faster, 1/2-2". They look there best right now so I'm relieved. Used two gallons to top water mulch and what was left went into the five gallon pots. Full sun from 6:00 to around 5:00. Drama over.
Almost as hot tomorrow, might go ahead and heavy water, if not for the plants, for me.