At least , I hope it was the net hoar !

We had over a calendar month of warm weather and just about everything come alive up , from pear trees to persimmon , apples to mulberry tree .

And then on Sunday dark , we had an nightlong low of 28 degrees , then 32 the next night .

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It looks like we lose our tomato transplant and take a good bit of damage on the tropicals that were essay to come back from the ground .

When the atmospheric condition is nice and ardent , then hits freeze , plants are simply unprepared . All the new leaves and blooms get wrecked .

But – this should be the end of it .

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We covered as much as we could with thrift store sheets and blanket , including the Solanum tuberosum layer :

We have the best commenters .

We extend a crabapple that was flowering in the food forest and it looks all right .

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I love those blooms .

One of the bad things about garden in the Deep South is the lilt in spring .

If you await until afterwards to engraft , the weather often gets too hot and buggy to grow a good garden . If you plant too too soon , you fall behind your garden to unexpected frigid snaps .

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The vacillation back and forth is terrible . Yet we press on .

THE FROST DAMAGE KEEPS ROLLING IN

The First Frost

Protecting tomatoes from frost

Amazing Vertical Forest Buildings Filter Pollution

A Very Useful Method for Protecting Tender Trees…

The Effect of Thrift Store Sheets on Stopping…

Harvesting Before Frost

Frost Protection for Moringa, Citrus and Other Tropicals

Getting Papaya To Ripen Before Frost?

Survival Plant Profile: Bananas

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