CreedTaylor
Member
Alumi-net> black shadecloth.
Alumi-net = not stealthy enough.Alumi-net> black shadecloth.
Shade cloth was probably the best investment I made for my veggie garden this year. Today hit 105°, but you wouldn't know it to look at my plants.It really is amazing how much shade cloth works. I had wilted squash in a green house pushing 115 inside and covered them with the cloth. A few hours later the wilting was cut in half and by night time they were happy again.
You can get shade cloth at home depot for pretty cheap. It's light, and re usable. I don't see why anyone wouldn't want it. It's good security cover if you double layer it too.
..Ummmm.. these are light loving plants, not heat loving. Roots literally cook at 110° and growth at the canopy stops around 80-85° - word.
I agree. I have some sativas that are in an environment right now that is pushing 120 degrees easy. They seem to be ok with it. They actually even slump at night and perk up when it's hotter than hell. I might name the strain after Satan.For soil at root depth to reach 110...are you fucking kidding...that means air temp would have to be 150'-160' killing everything on the earths surface to heat roots 2-3 feet deep(depending on age of plant)....I mean get real....hotter days simply means like I said before more watering....
Good to hear. It's nuts how much light actually still gets through the cloth as well. It's a win win.Shade cloth was probably the best investment I made for my veggie garden this year. Today hit 105°, but you wouldn't know it to look at my plants.
I had read somewhere that plants don't even use all of the available sunlight, I don't know if that's true or not, or what percentage the plants use if true, but that makes a perfect case for shade cloth. As I mentioned, it was 105° today, but the dirt under my tomato plants is still noticeably damp from watering last night, so the shade absolutely helps keep the soil temp down and reduce moisture loss from evaporation.Good to hear. It's nuts how much light actually still gets through the cloth as well. It's a win win.
like I said at first....water and watch them grow!!!Today was a scorcher. I'm watering heavy and often but I'm seeing some rapid growth as well in all this sun. Almost looks like inches a day on a few plants.
I have one girl who gets thirsty faster than the others for some odd reason. She's become my watering gauge. When she looks thirsty I water all of them.