zoid wrote:AlekH wrote:JeffB wrote:I've been amused by the consistent chatter that we Chicagoans will have to "pay" for the mild winter with a foot of snow in June or some other atrocity. The wacky warm weather is disturbing on some level, but how does the possibility of a frost in late May, which always exists regardless of the winter and spring seasons, mean payback or regret for the gloriously (but disturbingly) warn non-winter we had? I refuse to feel guilty. The ramps are coming up, I have mosquito bites from last weekend, and I expect to be eating asparagus in a few weeks, cherries a few weeks hence. We're basically past winter's end and it didn't happen.
There is no karma in weather, but we certainly could pay for it. A light frost is no big deal but a hard freeze (sub-28), which is still climatologically possible, would be rather disasterous from an agricultural prospective since many plants region wide are a month plus ahead of schedule, leaving them very vulnerable.
So do I still need to wait till after Mother's day to do any planting?
Darren72 wrote:I'm not sure how anyone can answer this if they don't know what the weather will be.
It seems like a safe strategy is to wait, unless you don't mind replanting in the event that there is a hard freeze.
The extremely and unusually warm weather conditions over the past week have created an abnormally early start to the spring "green up" of plants and trees across the area. However, in spite of how warm things have been up to this point, it is important to remember that we are just past the middle of March. With this in mind, it is nearly certain that we are not finished with freezing temperatures across the area. Typically, the average last spring freeze is not observed until the middle to end of April across northern Illinois and northwestern Indiana. In order to gauge the risk of experiencing freezing temperatures into the first portion of the spring season, consider the tables below. These tables display the probabilities of exceedance for the date of the last spring freeze (32 degrees and colder), as well as the date of the last spring season hard freeze (28 degrees and colder) at both Chicago and Rockford. To interpret these tables consider, for example, the 70 percentile for Chicago in the table below. The date listed is April 12th for the date of the last freeze. This means that of all the years in the history for Chicago dating back to the late 1800s 70% of the years experienced the final spring freeze on a date later than April 12th. So, statistically speaking there is a 70% chance that freezing temperatures will still be observed at least once after April 12th. Notice the dates at Rockford are later, indicating significant threats for freezing temperatures through late April to early May.
Chicago , IL
Probability of Exceedance Date of Last Spring Freeze (32° or colder) Date of Last Spring Hard Freeze (28° or colder)
Earliest March 16th March 4th
90% April 5th March 24th
70% April 12th March 31st
50% April 18th April 7th
30% April 24th April 11th
10% May 7th April 20th
Latest May 25th May 10th
In my part of Lincoln Square blooming and growth is more typical of early May than late March. I have planted onion sets, peas and some lettuce.
Darren72 wrote:If it is cheap and easy to replant if there is a frost, go ahead and plant stuff now. The worst that happens is that you replant again later. No need to even think about tomatoes or peppers, though, since they really don't hit their growth spurt until the weather is consistently warmer. i.e. you probably won't get tomatoes in June if you plant now.
Another hard freeze is still possible (always is), but rapidly dwindling in likelihood.
NFriday wrote:Hi- Bad news to report. I just talked to my sister that has the fruit farm in Michigan, and it got down to 19 there a few nights ago, and things do not look good. She said that her apricots and plums got wiped out. Due to the unseasonably warm March, everything bloomed a month early, and there were already some baby apricots and plums on the trees when she got hit with the frost this week, and they all died.
She also lost most of her apples. She will have maybe 20% of a peach crop, and maybe the same in cherries. The strawberry growers are still okay, because the strawberries got watered. She is not sure yet exactly how many peaches she will have this year, but she said that the crop will be awful. Half of our farm is peaches, and if we don't have peaches, nobody does, and so it sounds like the crop is going to be dismal. She also told me a few weeks ago, that 95% of the juice grapes got wiped out in an earlier frost.
It looks like the only fruit that will be plentiful this summer is strawberries, melons, and maybe raspberries and blueberries.
At least it is supposed to warm up there this week, and tonight is supposed to be the last night they have frost for a while. Hope this helps, Nancy
JeffB wrote:Looking at historic averages, the second week of April seems to be a real turning point, with a bump up as daily highs reach around 60 and lows are well above hard freeze territory. If I were a gambler, I wouldn't put money on a hard freeze based on what we've seen short, medium and long term.
Edit: by the way, my comments were directed more toward established fruit trees, not new plantings. I can see taking a conservative approach to the latter. Why not? But getting back to early blooms, for which the lot has been cast: By the last week of April last year, after a wet, cool, but not freezing early spring, everything was in bloom or past that in SW Michigan, for example. That was considered a little late according to the farm reports from last year (I have no personal knowledge of what's normal or not). I guess what I'm saying is, yes, it is quite strange that this might all be happening 3-4 weeks early this year but the always possible frost disaster seems unlikely at this point and if it does still happen it probably would have happened anyway, even if we didn't have 80 degree days in March and no real winter.
JeffB wrote:I've been amused by the consistent chatter that we Chicagoans will have to "pay" for the mild winter with a foot of snow in June or some other atrocity. The wacky warm weather is disturbing on some level, but how does the possibility of a frost in late May, which always exists regardless of the winter and spring seasons, mean payback or regret for the gloriously (but disturbingly) warn non-winter we had? I refuse to feel guilty. The ramps are coming up, I have mosquito bites from last weekend, and I expect to be eating asparagus in a few weeks, cherries a few weeks hence. We're basically past winter's end and it didn't happen.
aschie30 wrote:JeffB wrote:Looking at historic averages, the second week of April seems to be a real turning point, with a bump up as daily highs reach around 60 and lows are well above hard freeze territory. If I were a gambler, I wouldn't put money on a hard freeze based on what we've seen short, medium and long term.
Edit: by the way, my comments were directed more toward established fruit trees, not new plantings. I can see taking a conservative approach to the latter. Why not? But getting back to early blooms, for which the lot has been cast: By the last week of April last year, after a wet, cool, but not freezing early spring, everything was in bloom or past that in SW Michigan, for example. That was considered a little late according to the farm reports from last year (I have no personal knowledge of what's normal or not). I guess what I'm saying is, yes, it is quite strange that this might all be happening 3-4 weeks early this year but the always possible frost disaster seems unlikely at this point and if it does still happen it probably would have happened anyway, even if we didn't have 80 degree days in March and no real winter.JeffB wrote:I've been amused by the consistent chatter that we Chicagoans will have to "pay" for the mild winter with a foot of snow in June or some other atrocity. The wacky warm weather is disturbing on some level, but how does the possibility of a frost in late May, which always exists regardless of the winter and spring seasons, mean payback or regret for the gloriously (but disturbingly) warn non-winter we had? I refuse to feel guilty. The ramps are coming up, I have mosquito bites from last weekend, and I expect to be eating asparagus in a few weeks, cherries a few weeks hence. We're basically past winter's end and it didn't happen.
Famous last words...
I've been following the Michigan fruit situation closely over the past few weeks, and the reason why those crops are especially vulnerable is that if they bloom and bud ahead of schedule as they did during the Summer of March, they're vulnerable to killing by later freezes. In parts of Michigan, the last freeze date is usually mid-May, so that means these trees have to get through April and part of May with their buds intact even though low temps in those months is not atypical. What's the likelihood? Low, as it turns out. After at least two freezes in early April, most farmers' fruit trees are wiped out. Concord grapes are out -- I heard that Welch's is scrambling. (I wrote this a couple weeks ago; I think the news is even bleaker now.) I just talked to some people with MSU as well as some farmers -- tart and sweet cherries are done, zippo, in most of Michigan. Apple and peach trees are in rough shape, if not done. Anyway, people should prepare themselves for either really high prices on a small crop at market, or eat blueberries, melons and raspberries. I hear strawberries will be out in 2-3 weeks.
Her peach crop is by far the largest on any fruit on her farm, but it is still awful. She has maybe 25% of a peach crop.
aschie30 wrote:In addition to stone fruit, apples are pretty much wiped out too.
leek, what color did your cherries turn? Dark brown?