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General09:27 · 6h ago

How to Protect Your Garden from Heatwave Damage with Proper Care

N12Center
Translated & summarized from N12 by baba
The story · English

Heatwaves pose significant challenges for garden plants as high temperatures increase water loss through leaves, heat the soil, and stress root systems. Many gardeners try to help by watering more, fertilizing, or performing maintenance, but some common actions can actually weaken plants during extreme heat. Experts recommend minimizing stress and maintaining stable conditions for plants.

One frequent mistake is planting new plants or relocating existing ones during a heatwave. At this stage, roots are not well established, making it difficult for plants to cope with increased water loss. If planting is necessary, it should be done early morning or evening when the soil is cooler and evaporation is lower.

Shallow, frequent watering is another error. Watering should be deep and slow to encourage roots to grow deeper, improving drought resistance. Overwatering can also harm plants by saturating soil and depriving roots of oxygen, potentially causing root diseases. Checking soil moisture a few centimeters deep before watering is advised.

Fertilizing during heatwaves can overload stressed roots since plants slow growth and nutrient uptake in extreme heat. It is better to wait for cooler temperatures before resuming fertilization. Heavy pruning should be avoided as leaves provide shade and help regulate water loss; only remove dry or diseased branches.

Weeds compete with garden plants for water, light, and nutrients, so keeping the area weed-free is crucial during heat. Mowing grass too short exposes soil to sun and accelerates moisture loss; leaving grass slightly taller helps retain soil moisture. Mulching with organic materials like wood chips or dry leaves insulates soil, reduces evaporation, and suppresses weeds.

For vegetable gardens, regularly harvesting ripe fruits like tomatoes, cucumbers, and peppers prevents plants from wasting energy on mature fruit and supports continued growth. Sensitive plants, especially young seedlings and potted plants, benefit from temporary shade using shade nets or moving pots to protected areas during peak sun hours.

Overall, less intensive care focused on stable conditions, deep watering, mulching, shade, and avoiding stressful maintenance, helps gardens survive heatwaves and recover quickly when temperatures normalize.

Read the original at N12
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