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lori, have you tried any of the high alpines, himalayan or not--those that have a problem with lowland summers?..
my ground water is very cold, even in summer--when i am watering my vegetable garden, potted flowers etc, i try to put the water in pails to warm first, or let the hose sit in the sun to warm up..
Quote from: cohan on December 05, 2009, 09:16:28 PMlori, have you tried any of the high alpines, himalayan or not--those that have a problem with lowland summers?..Well, I guess I should look up the provenance of what I do have and what I have failed with. Quote from: cohan on December 05, 2009, 09:16:28 PMmy ground water is very cold, even in summer--when i am watering my vegetable garden, potted flowers etc, i try to put the water in pails to warm first, or let the hose sit in the sun to warm up..I wouldn't bother, Cohan. No one warms the rain water and it's cold too. It frequently falls to 10 C when it rains here, and we have frequent hail too. Most of the precip is in solid form some years. (I'm actually serious about that last point!) Also, in the mountains, it can snow or freeze at any time, so these plants really don't need coddling. Water coming out of a hose is cold too. Anyway, IMO, warming the water would be a pointless effort for outdoor plants. Calgary is not actually in the foothills either... it's marginally closer than Rocky Mountain House is though. The "foothills" are defined by the beginning of thrust faulting, which starts to be visible at surface ~30 km west of Calgary along the #1 highway. (The hills and dales in and around Calgary -that are causing so much trouble for traffic lately - are glacially and erosionally formed.)
To get any ripe tomatoes before the end of summer, at least in this part of the city (on the cooler, higher elevation edge), one needs a greenhouse (which we have).
To get any ripe tomatoes before the end of summer... one needs a greenhouse (which we have).
cohan, Lori, Forgive me my inattention! Of course 1000m elevation at your latitude gives a hope to himalayan plants. Lori,Yes Moscow is situated at a large low plain. My garden is higher – at 240m. This place is named mountains because of hills. But there are no any stone, cliffs, etc..
Areyou sure it isn't Manchester, England?
Mmm temperate rainforest- certainly not much of that left standing in the British Isles