It’s another heat wave. So we thought it worthwhile to repeat these tips for water-wise gardening from May 2009 – still useful, even as we enter July:
Okay, the picture exaggerates. But today we’ll get a taste of it, and tomorrow’s forecast is 30˚C and full sunshine.
On hot days like tomorrow, it’s smart to get a jump on watering — particularly anything planted in containers, which heat up and dry out quickly, especially in sunny locations. Here are some tips for tomorrow and all those welcome sunny days ahead.
Water early in the morning.
This protects plants from the drying sun, and gives leaves time to dry off. Lingering damp can foster fungus or mildew.
Deep, infrequent watering is better than frequent light sprinkles.
It encourages deep root growth, which makes your plants hardier. Shallow watering keeps the roots near the soil surface where they are most likely to dry out.
Water selectively.
For example, just carry a bucket of water over to the newly planted rose bush once a week, if everything else is drought-resistant. If you don’t have a rainbarrel yet, this is the time to be thinking of one.
Water from below the foliage if you can.
A soaker hose, for instance, snakes permanently around your garden beds and slowly trickles water into the soil at root level. This reduces wasted water, such as from fan sprinklers, and sends the water down deep. However, and this is a big however, you must remember to turn it off. Out of sight can be out of mind. A timer for your soaker hose is a good investment.
Mulch to conserve moisture.
Mulching helps keep the root zone cooler and moister. It also introduces organic matter into the soil to add nutrients and improve soil tilth or composition. There are many choices. Compost. Wood chips. (I like the finely shredded black cedar, which looks like natural soil.) Shredded leaves. Whatever works in your garden. Even pea gravel — although this won’t do much to improve the soil.
If you use cocoa bean husks…
Be careful if your cat or dog is the kind to eat large quantities of this (briefly) chocolate-scented by-product of chocolate making. This has been linked to illness and, in very rare cases, death due to residual theobromine in the husks. This article from the American Veterinary Medical Association puts it into perspective, however. The AVMA bottom line: the risk is low, but be cautious if your pet is the uncontrollably munchy kind. (I have used this mulch many times with no ill effects to my cat. I stopped because it can be more expensive and harder to find than other mulches, and can develop a surface mold in hot, humid weather.)
The best advice, though maybe too late for many of us…
Choose drought-resistant plants. This practice, called xeriscaping, is and probably will continue to be, a growing trend.
I xeriscape in a benign way under the maples in my front garden, as I usually neglect to water it, simply letting the plants duke it out. Anything that survives gets to stay. This strategy has produced a number of successes and, of course, many failures.
I’ll tell you about my burning bush “sculpture” another time.
4 comments
Good things to remember at this ungodly hot time of year. I have a lot of soaker hoses in places I can't reach with the irrigation system.
Janet, I've been doing a lot more spot watering in the front garden this year because I've redone sections so there are many new plants. I turned my hose on for the first time this year only yesterday morning because the trees were under stress… bad sign when that happens. Thank goodness we've had quite a few heavy rains, so my three rain barrels are pretty full. But with a garden perched on many feet of pure sand, water drains away quickly.
I should have added another caveat about soaker hoses: remember where you put them! Those I'd put in the front garden got sliced and diced by digging and had to be removed. Perhaps I'll replace them; perhaps not.
Glad to see the promotion of 'Dig the New Perennial' and the use of plants that SUIT our climate. It is time the world of gardeners got real, and faced the new world climate changes we are entering into. Ornamental gardens as we knew them, are fastly becoming a thing of the past. Keep up the good stuff Toronto Gardens. We need to spread the WORD.
It is a crime not to be careful with the water with or without hot weather after all it's becoming a rare thing in more and more parts of the planet. 🙁
Thank you for remind us these very simple and useful tricks.
Garden Chair