BongChoi
Well-Known Member
Based on the combination of outdoor temps, size of plants per available root space, and frequency of watering(edit: mistook volim for OP), I would pay close attention to the turgor pressure in the plants. When it gets hot the plants working a lot harder to move that water and keep the pressure high. If the root zone starts running out that's when your plant droops from less internal water pressure. Whatever watering tactic keeps the turgor pressure levels high and even, without having excessive runoff, do that. That's the zone you want to stay at in my opinion.
You shouldn't have to worry too much about root rot as long as your soil has proper aeration.
You shouldn't have to worry too much about root rot as long as your soil has proper aeration.