The Courier-Journal (Louisville)

5 ways you can protect your garden during a heatwave

- Paul Cappiello Guest Columnist

If you can’t stand the heat, stay out of the garden.

After the last couple of weeks of our stubborn heat dome, my inbox has been flooded with dozens of “what’s wrong with my ...” and “what will this heat do to my ...” questions.

While I attempt to provide a few answers below, I have to admit that over the last two few weeks, other than some early morning watering sessions, I’ve spent much more time in my basement woodworkin­g shop than in the garden. It’s been hot!

Warmth is a good thing in the garden. We spend all winter waiting for the time when the spring sun’s consistent warmth allows us to plant our tomatoes, cut roses for an arrangemen­t on the dining room table, and generally enjoy the many fruits of the garden. But like anything in life, too much of a good thing can be a challenge. And our recent heat wave has driven home this point with many examples.

What does extreme heat do to my tomato plants?

Tomatoes are warm-season plants. We all know that when we jump the gun with early planting to try to hasten that very first harvest, a cool night or two can turn a vigorous young transplant into a weak, puny, and struggling seedling. They need warm soil and warm sunshine to establish and set themselves on the road to bountiful yield. But once the heat of summer hits we can have the opposite problem.

Heat stress can impact your tomato plants in several ways, literally from the ground up.

Starting with the roots, research is a bit variable but the general trend is clear. Once soil temperatur­e approaches the low to mid-80 degrees Fahrenheit, root activity is drasticall­y decreased. Fortunatel­y for many of us, we’ve stayed below that mark. Western Kentucky University’s Mesonet lists maximum soil temperatur­e at the 4-inch depth this year at about 78 degrees and the 8inch depth a mere 75 degrees. But tomatoes growing in containers are a different story.

I have a couple of heirloom tomato varieties growing in a 36-inch diameter container on my hot, paved driveway. So last week I used a probe thermomete­r to check the root zone temperatur­e in two spots – 3 inches in from the edge of the pot and right smack in the middle. At 4:30 p.m. on a 93-degree day and in full, blazing sun, the edge temperatur­e was 94 and the center came in at 88.

Just for fun I watered the container and checked again. Now it was 74 at the center and 76 at the edge.

Containers offer tremendous­ly variable temperatur­e profiles and this reminds us all of the importance of irrigation. For tomato plants in containers, it’s important to keep in mind that irrigation both supplies essential water and also is an effective temperatur­e control tool. If you watered your tomatoes before work and they still look ok when you get home in the evening, it might not be a bad idea to give them a shot of water to cool off those precious roots.

Is there an upper-temperatur­e limit for tomato root growth?

Tomato tops are also sensitive to high temperatur­es. Checking into published research the story is all over the map. You can find reports that indicate 85 degrees as a maximum daytime temperatur­e above which blossoms abort and drop off the plant. Other studies list 9294 degrees as the critical maximum. One report listed a whopping 104 degrees as the critical point. For maximum nighttime temperatur­es, you can find a range from 75 degrees to as high as 82 for the point above which tomato flowers don’t yield fruit.

This bit of online research into tomatoes and high temperatur­es confirmed two things. First, the vast majority of informatio­n out there is poorly documented, copied, and misinterpr­eted junk informatio­n that you should always read with a healthy bit of suspicion. Best to look for land grant university research reports rather than somebody’s brother-in-law’s cousin who’s got a big following on his bottle cap-collecting podcast!

The second thing that is clear from the research out there, there is absolutely an upper temperatur­e limit for optimal root growth, shoot growth, and flower/fruit production. The variation seen in the results is primarily due to variety differences with modern, so-called High Heat tomato varieties performing best in heat studies.

How to protect your garden during a heat wave

Beyond the vegetable garden, we see similar patterns of plant responses to high temperatur­es. Roses, those constant stalwarts of the hot summer garden, also show reduced flowering and growth when stressful heat waves descend on our gardens. Even the normally iron-clad Knock Out rose showed significantly reduced activity at temperatur­es as low as 89 degrees. The ultimate result was a significant decrease in root growth, shoot growth, and flower size.

So, what can we do as gardeners to help our plants through what will likely become more frequent heat waves, heat domes, and flash droughts? The answers are a bit complicate­d but here is a list of a few suggestion­s:

● Give plants a bit more shade than you might normally think best. The few roses I have grown in my garden have done best in part shade rather than full sun.

● Use larger containers. The smaller the container the more the root zone temperatur­e will follow the air temperatur­e.

● Use irrigation as a cooling technique. Just be careful not to turn your garden bed into a swamp.

● Look for varieties specifically developed for heat tolerance.

● Plant more trees.

Beyond that, I always need an extra set of hands in my basement shop.

Paul Cappiello is the executive director at Yew Dell Botanical Gardens, 6220 Old Lagrange Road, yewdellgar­dens.org.

 ?? JOHN BURKE/REVIEWED ?? Use irrigation as a cooling technique. Just be careful not to turn your garden bed into a swamp.
JOHN BURKE/REVIEWED Use irrigation as a cooling technique. Just be careful not to turn your garden bed into a swamp.
 ?? ANITRA JOHNSON/DELAWARE NEWS JOURNAL ?? Heat stress can impact your tomato plants in several ways, literally from the ground up.
ANITRA JOHNSON/DELAWARE NEWS JOURNAL Heat stress can impact your tomato plants in several ways, literally from the ground up.

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