boudreaulicious wrote:I have herbs (thyme, oregano) and various plants that are still clearly alive. Outside, not sheltered or mulched or anything. Creepy and disturbing as far as I'm concerned.
pairs4life wrote:I have short-term very, very good news for you leek.
The USDA has released an updated hardiness zone, and whether you believe in climate change, or not, we've moved up a Zone. That means a longer growing season here in Chicago with a last frost date of APRIL 15!!!!!!!!.
Here's a link: http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/pr/2012/120125.htm
leek wrote:On the other hand, if we get any cold between now and April 15, let alone frost, I have no cherries. AND I had Cherry Fly Worm last year and I have to spray, and I was supposed to spray before there are buds, I think. Grrr.pairs4life wrote:I have short-term very, very good news for you leek.
The USDA has released an updated hardiness zone, and whether you believe in climate change, or not, we've moved up a Zone. That means a longer growing season here in Chicago with a last frost date of APRIL 15!!!!!!!!.
Here's a link: http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/pr/2012/120125.htm
LikestoEatout wrote:We just noticed bulbs coming up this morning. We have herbs by our back porch that we have harvested from all winter but they are along a south facing brick wall.
pairs4life wrote:... Come on folks, we get a longer grow season even if the future of the planet is in peril.
HankB wrote:pairs4life wrote:... Come on folks, we get a longer grow season even if the future of the planet is in peril.
I'm more concerned with the intensity of the growing season then the length. I have recently gotten back into gardening after not doing much for quite some time. Last summer lots of things did not do as well as I could have hoped for. I think that a very dry first half of July followed by a very wet period was the chief culprit, but I also think that the heat did not help much.
In any case, I was in my yard yesterday spading some turf to make the garden a little bit bigger. Most years I would not be able to drive a spade into the frozen ground this time of year. And yes, I noticed daffodils poking through a week or so back.
Attrill wrote:This is getting crazy. Almost everything I have in the ground is coming up. It won't be a problem at all if the weather stays like this, but If we get a March/April cold snap I'm going to lose a lot of annuals (or at least have a lot of unplanned work to do). My grape vines are budding, strawberries look ready to flower, etc. Ugh. If we avoid another cold snap it will be great, but the chances are pretty good we'll get another one.
CLIFF NOTES FOR THE FORECAST...MAX TEMPERATURES ONLY 15 TO 20
DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL TODAY...BEFORE AT LEAST A SOLID WEEK WITH MAX
TEMPERATURES NEARLY 30 DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL
Almost everything I have in the ground is coming up. It won't be a problem at all if the weather stays like this, but If we get a March/April cold snap I'm going to lose a lot of annuals
sundevilpeg wrote:Almost everything I have in the ground is coming up. It won't be a problem at all if the weather stays like this, but If we get a March/April cold snap I'm going to lose a lot of annuals
Why would annuals of any kind be a concern at the moment, unless you are referring to plants that seeded themselves last fall?
AlekH wrote: Forecasting the weather beyond 7-10 days is a low probability gambit but it looks like we'll only have a 15-20 day window from late march to mid April where a freeze is historically likely...because it isn't happening before then.
RonJS wrote:AlekH wrote: Forecasting the weather beyond 7-10 days is a low probability gambit but it looks like we'll only have a 15-20 day window from late march to mid April where a freeze is historically likely...because it isn't happening before then.
What has killed 90+ of my tomato, basil and pepper plants (I had started indoors from seed), is the historically "unlikely".
May 25
...CHICAGO... MAY 25, 1992: COOL WEATHER SETTLED OVER NORTHERN ILLINIOS CAUSING LOW TEMPERATURES TO FALL NEAR THE FREEZING MARK. ON THIS DATE... THE LOW BOTTOMED OUT AT 32 DEGREES. NOT ONLY DID THIS SET A LOW TEMPERATURE RECORD FOR THE DAY BUT WAS ALSO THE LATEST FREEZE IN CHICAGO'S RECORDED HISTORY.
May 21
MAY 21, 2002: THIS WAS THE COLDEST DAY IN A CHILLY MONTH AT ROCKFORD AND CHICAGO. BOTH STATIONS REPORTED LOW TEMPERATURES BELOW FREEZING...WITH 31 DEGREES AT CHICAGO AND 29 AT ROCKFORD... SETTING A RECORD LOW TEMPERATURE FOR THE 21ST.
From: http://www.crh.noaa.gov/lot/?n=May_wx_trivia
Ron
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.
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.