Desert soils become very unstable when they are irrigated. Insect problems like borers become obvious the day after a rain. Biological activity blooms in desert soils after a rain. Mushrooms are an indicator that would is rotting because of water and biological activity in the soil.
Type your question here!
Tuesday, March 3, 2020
Friday, February 28, 2020
Lemon and Lime Tree Leaf Drop After Moving Them Inside the House
Q. Last year we wanted a couple of citrus trees, so I bought a lemon and lime, both dwarf trees. I put them in large pots and wheeled them into the house as the weather turned cold. They didn’t get any extra light other than light from the windows. Maybe that was a mistake. Over the last couple of months one of them lost all its leaves. Should I have given them extra light?
A. Leaf drop can be caused by a lot of different things
including inconsistent watering and going from cold temperatures to warm
temperatures, not just a lack of light. A better place to put them would have
been the garage where it’s cold even though there is less light. These trees
need to be outside as much as possible for their best health.
When there is a slight freeze they will drop leaves. When the temperature is lower than this or lasts for a long time then small limbs will die.
When there is a slight freeze they will drop leaves. When the temperature is lower than this or lasts for a long time then small limbs will die.
Move containers with fruit trees into non-freezing temperatures just before freezing temperatures occur and
move them back outside as quickly as possible after the threat of freezing
temperatures are over. At low temperatures fruit trees need less light. Inside the house the trees will need more light because it is warm.
The
threshold for freezing damage to begin with true lemons and limes is at 32° F
or just slightly under it. If there is wind, freezing damage is more extensive.
The garage environment keeps temperatures warmer and keeps them out of the
wind.
At
temperatures just above freezing their need for light, water and fertilizer is quite
small. As air temperatures get warmer, their need for light fertilizer and
water increases. As air temperatures become colder, plants require less and
less light, water and fertilizer. This is true for all plants including
seedlings.
Inside the garage the temperatures will be cool to cold but usually more than freezing. If you need to you can always put a space heater inside the garage to keep it from freezing. But remember, warm temperatures speed up all the plant processes. If you put these trees inside the garage then water them only when they need water. This is easy to judge because the containers are lighter and so they are easier to lift or push around. You can use a soil moisture meter stuck to about four inches deep also. Don’t fertilize.
Inside the garage the temperatures will be cool to cold but usually more than freezing. If you need to you can always put a space heater inside the garage to keep it from freezing. But remember, warm temperatures speed up all the plant processes. If you put these trees inside the garage then water them only when they need water. This is easy to judge because the containers are lighter and so they are easier to lift or push around. You can use a soil moisture meter stuck to about four inches deep also. Don’t fertilize.
Inside
house temperatures are too warm for “outdoor plants”. They dropped their leaves,
but they will most likely put on new leaves once they are moved outside and get
some warmth
0.7 Inch of Rainfall is NOTHING in the Desert
Q. The temperatures have been going up and down in the valley, so I have not started watering. This past weekend I had .07" of rainfall. Most of my vegetation are desert plants. Should I wait until the plant start to bud out or freezing temperatures are no more?
A. Starting the first week of February I will water fruit
trees once a week even though they don’t need it yet. This is to push new
growth and prepare them for fruit production. It’s very important in fruit
trees that they never experience a lack of water while producing fruit. This
can affect fruit size and development.
Water
landscape plants once a week as soon as temperatures begin to warm in February.
Make sure you respect their rooting depth; small plants are irrigated to no
more than 12 inches deep, medium-size trees and shrubs to 18 to 24 inches and
large trees above 40 feet to 36 inches deep.
Cacti
and succulents are a little different because they can experience more droughty
conditions than fruit trees and woody landscape plants. Give them an irrigation
in early February if they haven’t been watered much during the winter.
Delay Pruning Grapes Until it Hurts to Look at Them
Delay pruning
your grapevines a little bit longer. You can cut them back now but hold off on
their final pruning length until after March 1. The idea is to delay the final
pruning of grapes as long as possible before new growth begins. This helps reduce
disease problems from developing on the grape bunches later. If there is wet or
rainy weather in the next few weeks, the grapevines may have disease develop in
your bunches of grapes even though everything appears normal. That’s what
happened last year.
To cut
them back, identify the growth on your vines that occurred last year. This
growth will be a different color than other vine growth. Sanitize and sharpen
pruning shears before cutting back any
grapevine growth. If you don’t sanitize your pruners, you might spread a disease
from cut to cut. Right now, cut this new growth now to about 18 inches long.
But this is not the final cut.
Cutting
back this long growth helps you to see where to make the final cuts around the
first week of March. You will perform these final cuts after March 1. You will
see buds swelling on the grapes now but don’t get nervous. These buds will show
some swelling and whiteness a couple of weeks before you must prune.
The
final pruning cuts on grapes depends on the kind of grape that you have. Some
new growth is cut back very short for spur pruning while others are cut longer
if cane pruning grapes; usually 8 to 10 inches long. Thompson Seedless for
instance is normally cane pruned leaving 8 to 10 inches of new growth while the
new growth of most wine grapes are spur pruned (very short).
Fertilize Grapes in Mid Spring
Q. I have two grape vines, one white and one red. When
and how should I fertilize these grape plants?
A. All grapes whether they are red, white or black are
fertilized a couple of weeks before new growth begins. Your visual key to apply
fertilizer is the swelling of buds for new growth. This gets the fertilizer in
place and ready to be pulled into the plant by the plant roots when the plant
is ready to grow. If you haven’t already done it, fertilize it now.
This is a wine grape just showing new growth in mid spring, about the first or second week of March in the Las Vegas Valley. It is not too late to apply fertilizer...if it needs it. |
The
fertilizer, whether you are using conventional granular, compost or organic types
like fish emulsion should be in contact with wet soil after it is applied. This
means if your fertilizer is “fluffy”, like compost, any surface mulch is raked back,
and the compost applied to the soil surface where the soil will get wet. Then rake
the woodchips back and cover the soil again. Granular or liquid fertilizers
like fish emulsion may be applied to the surface of mulch and washed through it to the irrigated
area of the soil using a hose. Granular or liquid fertilizers are a little
easier to apply than compost.
Granular
fertilizers used for established lawns work well on young vines if the soil is
covered with woodchips. Fertilizers used for tomatoes or roses work well on
mature vines. If you planted your grapevine with a good quality compost mixed
in the backfill you may not need any fertilizer the first two or three years.
Look at the grapevine and judge for yourself. If it had strong growth last year
then apply a half application of fertilizer. If the vine is weak and not
growing well, apply a full amount of fertilizer.
![]() |
Grapes perform much better with a surface layer of woodchip mulch applied to the soil surface in the desert. |
Grapes
don’t grow well when surrounded by rock. Your grapes will perform better with
less stress. In our desert soils, grapes prefer soil covered with woodchips. If
your grapes are surrounded by rock, I would strongly encourage you to rake it
back, spread an inch of compost on the soil surface and cover the soil, at
least six feet in diameter around the vine, with 4 inches of woodchips. Grapes
struggle enough in our hot deserts without adding the extra stress from surface
rock.
Apply
fertilizers about 18 inches from the trunk or main stem of established vines so
they don’t do any damage.
Soft and Juicy Peach Bark May Mean Borers
A. Judging from the picture you sent with all the dried sap
coming from the tree and given it’s a peach, I am 100% certain this is borer
damage. This damage started last year. Borer adults in southern Nevada are beetles that fly and don’t bother a tree
until it’s time for the female to lay its eggs.
![]() |
Sap oozing from a newly planted fruit tree after a rain from borers. |
Adult
beetles lay their eggs on all sorts of weakened and newly planted trees and
shrubs, mostly on parts of the tree at least 1 inch in diameter and in full
sun. The tiny larva from the egg tunnels inside the plant just under the bark,
protected from predators and usually in the spring. Here it feeds on the rich
sap it finds transported from the leaves and roots. As it continues tunneling and
feeding under the bark, it gets larger as it creates more and more damage from
feeding.
![]() |
If the borer hasn't girdled or gone most of the way around the trunk or limb sometimes you can save it without an insecticide by removing all the damaged area with a sharp, sanitized knife. |
The most
susceptible plants in our hot and dry desert are the small and newly planted
trees and shrubs. These borers prefer fruit trees and landscape plants in the
Rose family. This includes most common fruit trees and many different landscape
plants. Probably peach is the most susceptible.
![]() |
Plants will oftentimes produce new growth or suckers below the damage from borers or from its base. |
Once
these plants get large enough to produce their own shade then borer problems
lessen until they get a bad pruning job. Bad pruning jobs open them up to sun
damage again and it starts all over.
Pyracantha dieback from borers. Don't expose the trunk or limbs to direct sunlight in the desert on these plants. |
What to
do? Because they are hidden from site when tunneling inside young trees, borer larvae are difficult to find. It’s
easier to see their damage the day after a rain and the tree is sopping wet.
Oozing sap from the trunk and limbs in areas exposed to intense sunlight is a
pretty clear indicator of borer damage. Take a sharp, sanitized knife and
surgically remove the young larva. It’s been suggested to soak the tree with a
hose and water if it hasn’t rained.
There he or she or it is! Sometimes when you excavate the damaged area with a sharp sanitized knife you will see them busily eating away at the soft juicky rich sapwood just under the bark. |
Systemic
insecticides applied to the soil around the tree will kill this larva inside
the tree without using a knife. The most effective insecticide for doing this
job as the insecticide “imidacloprid” listed in the ingredients. One example is
the Bayer product referred to as “Tree and Shrub Insect Control”. Read the
label on how to apply it as a “soil drench”, protect your hands and eyes, and
follow the directions exactly for best results.
![]() |
Remember insecticides are a LAST resort when you have no other choices left. Apply imidacloprid as a soil drench (ingredient on the label) after the tree has flowered to protect honeybees. |
I
caution people to apply it after the tree or shrub has finished flowering in
the spring. Because it is a systemic insecticide that can last for several
months, I also caution people not to eat any fruit harvested for 12 months
after its application.
Weed Control in Dormant Buffalograss
Q. We have Buffalograss for a lawn which we overseed
every winter with ryegrass. We applied the ryegrass late this fall and it
didn’t come up, but weeds did. Now our Buffalograss
lawn is covered in weeds. Is it possible to apply a “Weed and Feed” product to
kill all the weeds and not hurt the Buffalograss? If so, what would you recommend and when
should this be applied?
Weeds growing in Bufflograss not overseeded. |
Closeup of the weeds. Many very early spring weeds are winter annuals like the mustards. They are easily killed but don't let them go to flower and seed! |
A. Buffalograss, like Bermudagrass, is considered a “warm
season grass”. It is native to the Great Plains of the US has a reputation for
low water use. All warm season grasses are brown in the winter because they are
dormant due to cold weather. As their name suggests, warm season grasses prefer
growing in warm or hot climates. Besides Bermudagrass and Buffalograss, other
warm season grasses include zoysia, Paspalum, and St. Augustine grass among others.
These grasses are sometimes called “southern grasses” because they are used
primarily in southern states.
Warm
season grasses start turning brown in the cool fall months sometime in November
and are totally brown here by December. Seeding a “cool season grass” like
ryegrass into a “warm season grass” as its transition to dormancy is happening,
creates a green winter lawn. You have two lawns in one during the winter; a
green lawn actively growing in a brown lawn that is “sleeping”. The key for
successful “winter overseeding” is good timing. A winter lawn of cool season
grass is seeded as weather begins cooling off in the fall but you can’t wait
until it’s cold.
The time
for winter overseeding in this climate is between the end of September and
mid-October. Your November timing was too late. If you have a warm November
it’s possible to make it but that’s not what happened. Last November was a cold
month with unusually freezing temperatures around midmonth. It was too cold for
successful overseeding.
Estimating
when to overseed a lawn is like estimating when to put out tomatoes in the
spring only in reverse. Pay attention to the current weather and weather
predictions for the coming two weeks. If it’s unusually warm, delay overseeding
a couple weeks. If a cold front is coming in then you better get busy and
overseed.
Warm
season lawns like Buffalograss start to “wake up” and grow when it gets warm;
March or early April here. Since the Buffalograss is dormant now (brown) any
weed killer that kills green growth will not harm the dormant lawn. The usual
weed killer used for this purpose is glyphosate. Mow these weeds but apply the
weed killer in early March. A week or so after this weedkiller has been
sprayed, mow the lawn short, fertilize and water it to encourage faster green
up.
Some Cacti are Tender to Winter Freeze Here
Q. I have a 5-year old Prickly Pear cactus. I brought it here
from Florida in 2015 and started it by planting the pads. I’m seeing some
yellowing starting to develop where the spines are located. I am familiar with
cochineal scale and I don’t think it’s an insect problem. What’s causing this
and how do I correct it?
A. Most likely this is cold damage from low winter
temperatures. Most of Florida is warmer than our Las Vegas climate. Your
prickly pear cactus from Florida has never seen temperatures as cold as we get
in Las Vegas. Prickly Pear, a.k.a. Opuntia cactus range in their tolerance to
freezing temperatures from damage seen at 32° F down to 10° F. It depends where
that cactus was originally growing.
This is the type of freeze damage that I am used to seeing on prickly pear cactus. |
These were nopal cactus from Sonora but grown in Las Vegas where winter temps were just a bit too cold for them. |
Opuntia
cactus are native to Central and North America with some types growing in the
warm Sonoran Desert and others in our colder Mojave Desert. Pads used for
propagating this cactus coming from the Sonoran Desert will not tolerate the
freezing temperatures of the Mojave Desert. But Opuntia grown from pads taken
from the Mojave Desert will.
Next spring growth may come at the center of the pad after winter freeze damage. |
In the
future don’t apply any fertilizer to tender Opuntia after July 1. Not applying
late summer or fall fertilizers improves their ability to withstand freezing
temperatures. For a similar reason, start withholding water from Opuntia to
slow their growth in the early fall months. Not encouraging new growth by
withholding fertilizer and water helps to hardened them off for the cold winter
months.
Thursday, February 27, 2020
Best Time to Prune
The Best Time to Prune
I had a
college professor who taught the best time to prune was when the pruning tools were
sharp. It was a little bit of a joke because most people believe the only time
to prune plants is during the winter. That’s true if you’re using a chainsaw,
reciprocating saw, hand saw or loppers but if you’re using a hand shears my old
college professor’s advice was on the mark. If you’re using a hand shears to
remove some offensive plant growth you can do it any time. Just make sure its
sharp.
My pruning classes always begin by adjusting, sharpening and sanitizsing ALL pruning equipment! |
Sharpen, Adjust and Sanitize
If
you’ve ever taken my classes on pruning
you know that I’m a stickler for three things when preparing to prune;
adjusting a loppers or hand shears so it doesn’t rip plants instead of cutting them,
making sure the blade is sharp for the same reason and sanitizing these blades.
You wouldn’t go into a doctor’s office and let him or her use a dirty needle or
scalpel. The same holds true for plants.
Advanced stage of fire blight dieasese, one of many plant diseases passed along from plant to plant by dirty pruning equipment. |
Chances
are when using dirty tools five times out of a thousand nothing will happen. We
use the same logic for protecting ourselves with insurance; it won’t happen to
me! In 50 years of pruning plants I have seen an actual problem develop from
dirty tools perhaps five times. But I have seen unexplained problem diseases
develop later to pruned trees and shrubs many other times. The usual fault is
claimed to be from “borers”. Was it?
Sanitize Your Pruning Tools!
There
are at least eight plant diseases I know of that can be transferred to plants
through pruning cuts using dirty tools. There are probably more than this. Once
a saw, loppers or hand shears is sanitized it is always placed back in a
scabbard, draped around a neck or hung on a neighboring tree but never laid
back on the ground. Six of those eight diseases can come from laying sanitized
tools on the ground after they’ve been sanitized.
What to
use for sanitizing equipment? I prefer spraying the blade with straight
isopropyl alcohol, bought just about anywhere, after the blades have been
washed with soap and water. Some people prefer bleach but if you use bleach
then oil all the metal parts, so they don’t rust. In a pinch, I will wash the
equipment and use a butane lighter to heat the blades. That works as well.
Do you
ever wonder where lawn diseases come from? Later in the season we will talk
about sanitizing lawnmower blades. Lawnmower blades are terribly dirty and can spread
lawn diseases from yard to yard as well.
Desert Horticulture Podcast: Desert Landscape Design vs Xeriscape
Desert landscapes don't have to be all cacti and rock. How does a desert landscape design differ from Xeriscape? Or does it?
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
Pruning Citrus Fruit Salad Tree
Q. When should I prune a "salad" tree? Mine has 5 varieties of lemons and 2 oranges
and is almost 5 years old. I am afraid
of pruning the wrong branches and affecting the varieties and yield.
A. Pruning a “salad tree” is more difficult than a fruit
tree with only a single type of fruit growing on it. Think of your “salad tree”
having different fruit growing on it, all sharing a common trunk or large limb.
When pruning, it is important to remember that each type of fruit growing on
that tree needs its own space.
Some
types of lemons and oranges have stronger growth than others. Your job when
pruning is to prune back the strongest growth of those varieties so that the
weaker varieties can survive. Otherwise the weaker varieties will die out from
competition and only the strongest growing varieties will survive. This is the
main reason why “salad trees” end up with two or three varieties that survive
after a few years.
Your job
is to be the chief mediator or referee when pruning. Surrounding strong growth
needs to give up space through pruning so the weaker varieties have a chance at
survival. When you bought the tree, each of the varieties had a label so that
you knew where they were located. It’s important to keep these labels up to
date so you see where different varieties are located. This helps to create
space for new growth when pruning. It also teaches you which varieties are
stronger than others.
Citrus,
in general, is easy to prune. Pruning is done immediately after harvest. Any
suckers are removed from the main trunk up to a height of about 18 inches. The
canopy, or top of the tree, does not need extensive pruning. If crossing limbs
are found, the offensive limb is removed at the trunk or a major limb. If a
limb is growing on top of another limb, one of them is removed in the same way.
Rather
than a “fruit salad” tree for small landscapes I prefer to grow individual
trees planted close together; sometimes referred to as “planting in the same
hole”. These individual trees are pruned separately so that they occupy their
own spaces. The result is the same; smaller harvests at different times of the
year but the pruning is much easier.
Yep You can Grow Azaleas in the Desert. But Why?
Q. Is it possible to grow azaleas in the Mojave Desert? We want to get more color in our yard and
having lived in the east for many years we know that azaleas add an abundance
color in the spring. I have terrible soil so I know I would need to drastically
amend the soil. Suggestions or comments?
A. You can grow any plant in the Mojave Desert including
azaleas. It’s a matter of how much you want them because plants that don’t
belong here, like azaleas, cost more to maintain. These non-desert plants
struggle in our climate and force you to take care of them if you want them to
succeed. My second point is that your “sense of place” has never changed. You
are still thinking like an Easterner. You live in the Mojave Desert now. It’s
time to adjust.
Sense of Place
Your
sense of place relates to where you think of as home. I remember moving from
the Midwest to the dry Western states many years ago and missing all the
“greenery”. After adjusting to this new “home” I found all of the “greenery”
hurting my eyes on return visits. It was just too green. After an adjustment
period, my new sense of home was the dry Western United States, the different
shades of brown, pink, purple and yellow I saw in rock. Plants were found
sparingly.
Desert Color
Before I
tell you how to grow an azalea here, consider desert perennials that grow easily
in the desert and add color. They are easier to grow, require less frequent
watering and still provide a great deal of seasonal color. I am talking about colorful plants such as penstemon, sage,
salvia, and others. Many of these desert or desert adapted perennials provide a
great deal of color at different times of the year and most like lots of
sunlight!
Some websites to visit on small plants for color:
Red Penstemon |
A good
place to look for these plants is online before you go shopping. Get familiar
with these names of desert perennials because it can get confusing at the
nursery. Try looking online at the Southern Nevada Water Authority (SNWA)
searchable database of plants and Arizona’s AMWUA (Arizona Municipal Water
Users Association) database. Become familiar with their recommended plant lists
and the plants they recommend. Once you do that, then it’s time to go shopping!
Growing Azaleas
Now to
your azaleas. Azaleas are considered an ericaceous plant. This means
they prefer acidic soils, not alkaline desert soils. Prepare to add a chemical
amendment to the soil to acidify it such as aluminum sulfate. Aluminum sulfate
is much more powerful in its soil acidification properties than soil sulfur.
You will probably need to add it to the soil once or twice a year to adjust the
alkalinity. One of the ways that azaleas tell you there is a soil problem is by
its yellowing leaves or a brown “scorchy”
edge.
By the way, if you end up using sulfur to lower soil alkalinity, make sure it is a fine sulfur
powder and not sulfur granules, sometimes called soil sulfur. The sulfur powder
reacts much faster with warm, wet soil than soil sulfur as granules.
Try Brooks Hybrid Azaleas (red and white) developed in the Modesto area for the hotter drier climates. Another possibility are the Indica Hybrid Azaleas which are supposed to be more tolerant of sunlight.
Azaleas also
like lots of woody debris, leaf litter and organic soils. So, using compost as
a soil amendment and covering the soil with woodchips will be a good first step.
Select a cool microclimate in the landscape that is shady but still bright.
Azaleas NEVER like intense sunlight. North exposure or early morning sunlight with
shade the rest of the day might be a good choice. Filtered light is preferred,
never direct sunlight. Under the shade of a tree but lots of reflected light is
a good spot.
Stay
away from planting azaleas that were gifts in pots. These are “greenhouse
azaleas” and not a good choice for our landscapes in most cases.
What to do the Day After it Rains
Look for Borers
It
rained most of the day last Saturday in Las Vegas. The following Sunday would
have been an excellent time to look for borers in the trunk and limbs of in
landscape plants. Their presence would be announced by sap oozing from these
infested, but water-softened, locations even though no visual damage is
apparent. If you see sap oozing from landscape plants and fruit trees, it’s a
good time to dig into those areas with a sanitized knife to see if you can find
this critter and remove it. This will prevent it’s continued damage this spring
and summer. Otherwise you might find a
dead limb or two or worse in July or August.
![]() |
Sap will ooze from borer infested trees and its gooey |
Mushrooms are Normal
After a
rain mushrooms appear in a few days wherever wood is rotting on the surface of
the soil or underneath it. You’ll see them popping up through woodchip mulch
and where dead roots of trees might have rotted. Water helps dead wood rot and
disintegrate into the soil where the mushroom mycelia grow. This rotting adds
organic matter to the soil, encouraging roots to grow and causing it to become dark
brown and rich.
Just
like desert wildflowers, mushrooms pop up quickly to spread their “seed”
everywhere in a couple of days after a rain. These mushrooms stay fresh only a
couple of days before they mature and die. Sometimes “mushrooms” form beneath
the soil, like huge fleshy alien balls, and then pop open at the surface
releasing their spores. As soon as you see these mushrooms, knock them over
with a rake or smash them with your foot. Pet dogs have reported to become sick
if they eat them.
![]() |
A little bit hard to see but these mushrooms popped up everywhere in the woodchip mulch. Mostly stems left now. The caps are nearly gone. |
![]() |
Underground mushrooms like this one can pop up from the ground after a rain. |
![]() |
When dug up these fleshy underground mushrooms may look like this. |
Irrigate Away from Cement
Rain
changes everything in the desert. Desert soils are dry soils and not meant to
be constantly wet. When desert soils become wet I think of them as “unstable”,
both structurally and chemically. An infrequent desert rain is not a problem.
But when irrigation water is applied over and over to a soil that is normally dry,
these soils shift, collapse and chemically change. In urban landscapes this can
be potentially destructive.
This is
the reason for keeping irrigation water 3 feet away from the foundation of a
home, patio, driveway, wall or sidewalk. Corrosive salts are in the soils and
irrigation water. These corrosive salts will “eat away” at cement and steel.
Salts in the soil dissolve when water is present causing the soil to collapse
over time. Water dissolves these salts and carry it as far as it reaches and
then deposit it in straight lines or circles. When the same amount of water is
applied over and over, the salts are deposited to the same spot each time.
These are the white rings and lines you see on cement and block walls.
Salt in the water or soil or fertilizers can eat away at concrete, even the so-called resistant Type 2 and Type 5 Modified |
Dissolved salts can creep up walls from being continuously wet. Eventually they will eat away at the blocks and mortar joints. |
Greenhouse Space Available for Rent
There is some shared greenhouse space available to rent. The greenhouse is the old Dave Turner greenhouse now located near Boulder Hwy and Tropicana. It is 30 x 90. If interested contact Mark at mark_pedigo@yahoo.com
Desert Horticulture Podcast: Growing Jujube in the Mojave Desert; An interview with Rafael Evangelista
In this interview with Rafael Evangelista you will learn about a love affair with a highly successful fruit that does astoundingly well in our Mojave Desert climate.
Desert Horticulture Podcast: Irrigation and Desert Plant Water Use, Part 2.
The second episode in this podcast discusses the practical side of irrigating desert landscape plants.
Thursday, February 20, 2020
Desert Horticulture Podcast: Irrigation and Plant Water use, Part 1.
Use Part 1 as the first step in understanding how to irrigate plants in the desert. Understand the difference between xeric and mesic plants and why its important to water them differently.
Tuesday, February 11, 2020
Chef Looking for Local Myers Lemon Fruit
I have a chef friend was looking for a small quantity of Meyer lemons. This is February 11 and he realizes it's at the end of the season for Meyer lemons but he only needs 50-100 fruit. Does anyone have them and would they like to sell them for a fair price to this chef?
This begs a question. I have a twitter account. It is located at #Xtremehort On this twitter account I post infrequently but I let people know if there is a pest problem or danger to growing fruit and vegetables in southern Nevada. I am wondering if I should also offer my twitter account to chefs and local producers so they can connect. Any thoughts on this?
I would love to hear your thoughts at any of my email addresses: Extremehort@aol.com; Xtremehort@gmail.com and Xtremehorticulture@gmail.com
This begs a question. I have a twitter account. It is located at #Xtremehort On this twitter account I post infrequently but I let people know if there is a pest problem or danger to growing fruit and vegetables in southern Nevada. I am wondering if I should also offer my twitter account to chefs and local producers so they can connect. Any thoughts on this?
I would love to hear your thoughts at any of my email addresses: Extremehort@aol.com; Xtremehort@gmail.com and Xtremehorticulture@gmail.com
Monday, January 27, 2020
What Succulents Will Work in the Hot Desert?
Q. I love the California look of lots of succulents
planted in the yard and in pots on the patio. We moved into our new home late
last summer and I placed some potted succulents around the pool area. Most of
them burned and died because of the intense sun. What succulents survive in
direct sun here in Las Vegas? I’d like to plant some in the ground as well as
grow some in pots.
A. This is a two-part question; what is a succulent and
how to change a harsh desert climate into one that’s favorable to grow succulents
12 months of the year.
The
category of succulents is huge. Succulents have some plant part which can store
water when water is not available. Cacti are a type of succulent. But there are
succulents which are not cacti. The succulents you like are probably the “fleshy”
succulents. These types of succulents grow best in dry climates that are cooler
than our Mojave Desert climate. Low humidity is not a problem. It’s the intense
sunlight, high temperatures and poor soils that create problems for them. Mediterranean
climates, warm or even hot in the summer while wet in the winter, typically favor
fleshy succulents. Coastal southern California is a warm Mediterranean climate
but the interior valleys are part of the Mojave Desert and, just like ours,
fleshy succulents won’t do well there.
Your first
selection criterion is the winter low temperature. If it does not survive in
winter freezes then replant in the spring every time there is a winter freeze. There
will be winters it doesn’t freeze and other winters it might freeze two or
three years in a row. There are areas in landscape that are warmer than others
called microclimates. There are also microclimates in communities within the
valley that are warmer than others.
It is good to remember because as you have found out
ornamental succulents will struggle to perform in our desert climate during our
intense heat and sunlight. Even some cacti that come from milder climates
struggle in the Mojave Desert. A second point to remember, all plants perform
better in the heat and dryness of a desert climate if they are healthy. This
means that even cacti and other succulents which are not cacti will be
healthier if the soil is amended with compost before they are planted. I know
it does not sound logical but I have found that in many of our desert soils in
the Mojave Desert there just is not enough organics in the soil to promote
strong health and good growth of cacti and other ornamental succulents
The
exposure to direct sunlight can be a problem for most succulents in our Mojave
desert climate. This is not the case in gentler, more Mediterranean climates
like coastal Southern California. We can still grow in the Mojave Desert many
of the same plants provided they withstand our winter freezing temperatures and
are planted in different locations than you would plant in coastal Southern
California.
Some
favorite succulents to plant include Aloe Vera, Hearts and Flowers (Aptenia),
Hen and Chicks and others. What most people do not understand is they are
missing some very important succulents in the groups that we think of mostly as
cacti: agave and yucca. These two groups of plants are full of species that are
cacti and others that are true succulents.
Remember the following when selecting succulents and
where to plant them:
1. They may
freeze. Sometimes we have freezing temperatures and other times we may not. If
the succulents you pick are tender to freezing temperatures you will lose them
some years. Expect that and buy more and replant in late spring.
2. Provide
protection from late afternoon intense desert sunlight. Some succulents require
more light than others. If they produce flowers that you like then they need
more sunlight. Those succulents that don't produce any important flowers can be
planted on the east side in partial shade. Most succulents can handle early
morning sunlight until about 10 AM and they should be in partial sun the rest
of the morning and in the shadows late afternoon.
3. Amend the
soil with compost at planting time. Good drainage is important to these plants
so the soil must drain water. Adding compost as a soil amendment improves
drainage (soil structure) and provides plant nutrients for growth. Succulents
will be happier planted in amended soils.
4. Water
succulents in the morning. Most small succulents need irrigations every day
during the heat of the summer. Water them with a valve used for irrigating
lawns, annual flowers or vegetable beds. Larger succulents like many of the
yucca and agave can be watered more like small to medium sized shrubs. Size
makes a difference!
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