Thanks so much Jim! You are one of my top UA-cam personalities that deliver nothing but relevant and valuable knowledge throughout the year! Excellent video!
I'm in South Australia and overwintering is not necessary here but I watch these videos as it gives me appreciation of how different and difficult gardening is in other parts of the world. The coldest weather I have ever encounted is - 1 degrees.... Celsius very rarely. I can't even imagine coping with extreme cold weather. I hate the cold. I'm so grateful I live here x
Super Important video for me as I was wondering how to deal with an Acer palmatum I just purchased on clearance. Very nice 3 &1/2 ft. lace leaf variety in a 3 gallon container and I was doubting myself on planting it in the ground. I think I made the right choice after watching this video. Watered it well and mulched about 4 inches (none around the trunk) . 18 degree morning coming here in 7a Tennessee on Tuesday. Thanks for a great video Jim!
Very helpful, Jim. Looking forward to your recommendations for planting in ground this time of year. We are in zone 7b. Waited to plant until the drought broke. Have had some rain recently. Thanks!
Thank you so much you’re great I love the way you explained everything a really thorough I live in Wilmington area and I’ve learned a lot from you keep up the good work I think I’m a zone 7 a
I worked as a landscaper laborer in San Antonio tx . I was told that water was needed because wind chill would dry them out . Super soaked them we were told .
Here's a video idea (because so far I haven't found the answer). Are plants more or less likely to freeze if they're in the ground versus in a raised bed vs in a Smart pot vs in a plastic pot? I would think the roots stay warmer in the ground and in the center of larger beds or pots, but would get colder near the sides of Smart pots or pots or raised beds?
I’m in New Zealand. I’ve got a camellia that we cut down , poisoned, cut a cross with chainsaw in top of trunk😱and poured poison on. It still grew back. So we’ve twisted two shoots as they grew and let it grow back into a small tree that i lollipop. It’s actually lovely. It was before my love of gardening tho. Love your videos
I'm in Asheville in 6b and am so glad you made this video! I have lots of potted young trees (pawpaws, american persimmon), looking forward to doing nothing. My loropetulum I wrapped in a blanket and hope it survives. So far the lettuce, chard, and leeks seem to have made it under the row covers. One more night of 10 degree weather!
I wish I'd watched this about 3 hrs ago. I just made my husband help me haul a few dozen plants into the garage! Based on your video I'm over-doing it for sure. I won't tell if you don't! 😉
You are certainly welcome and thank you so very much for the information. What do I need to do with my potted ferns and begonias and vinca and lantana (they all are potted)
So you think I should take all off the coverings off of my Norway spruce I am in zone 4 . I put them pot to pot and covered the pots with pillow cases. And sheltered them from wind by a retaining wall ?
So I bought some very large potted boxwoods and junipers and barberries and sand cherry bushes about a week ago and I think it's too late to plant them? I am in Arkansas. What can I do to keep these plants alive until I can plant them
get a roll of rockwool insulation and cover your plants with it. It is made from rocks so it won't get destroyed by rain, though the weather does slowly makeit less flully and ragged looking.
I had to use leaves 🍁 to mulch everything. All my plants are newer this year.. so they needed protection. Here in Michigan we get in the single digits and below. Last year we had that horrible polar vortex where it dropped down to -20 degrees, it was so horrible I think it even caused damage to one of my boxwoods.
Good information! Thank you for a very detailed information. I pack my plants on the kinda north side and the garage is shielding it from wind and morning -1pm sun.. Just want to know if it's a good place or do I need to move it? Zone 7b
What about putting the plants in the garage during the heart of winter (garage ranges from 23 degrees to 40 degrees) with a grow light set for a few hours?
I live in MI zone 6. My potted plants are rated zone 5 or 6, and I located them outdoors pot to pot in leaf piles, with cotton frost bags over them, and inside a wind break wall. How often should I water the pots through the winter? Pots are sitting up on flat 2 x 4's so the water flows out from under and will not freeze to the pots. It will be below 0 degrees F in a few days for a short while. Thank you, Craig.
Great timing on winter protection! I do have several potted plants that won't be put into the ground before they drop all their leaves. Thanks for all the helpful information. Just curious here (I am in zone 7a as well): will it be enough to protect blooming camellias on the covered porch in 29 degree weather? Do you need to give them extra cover to protect the flowers from frost? Also, I don’t have potted camellia at the moment but do have several blooming football mums, and am very interested to find out if they need to be moved inside tonight or a frost cover will do (probably will move the in before next Wednesday anyway). Thanks again for all your work!
Hey Jim - another great video, thanks! Learned a lot from these over the past year. Quick Question - I'm in Atlanta (7b) with nearly identical conditions and in the past I've lost some 1g perennials that I haven't been able to plant before winter arrives. Those peat-based mixes seem to stay too wet. Any specific advice for overwintering deciduous perennials like, say, solomon seal or asarum? Should I try and keep the rain of of them? Put them in a temporary trench planted a little high? Thanks man!
@@JimPutnam It 's a small plant so for tonight I plopped it, pot and all into a Walmart plastic bag and set it on the carport up against the house. It's an old house so it'll leak warm air like a sieve. I'll put it in the sun in the morning and repot it. TY!!
Jim im in zone 7. Can I plant shrubs in winter? I didn’t have time in fall and my spring is going to be busy busy. Also you didn’t talk about wha to do with leaves. Help!
We have some 1 1/2 foot cedars in pots still (from this year) we never planted we like to have them for next year too. We live in Canada in a Zone 3a where it can get very cold anywhere from -10 to -40 with wind chill some days and sunny days. Should we wrap burlap around them top and sides to help them survive the winter.? Or will they not even last?
Hi Jim, not sure what zone I'm in yet. I'm in NY state. From 30 degrees to 5 below 0. It's now June 27, I'm putting 2 Emerald Green Arborvitae 4 ft in a large wood planter box on concrete. Want to put pink styrofoam insulation in box. Do I need a heater for O degree weather. Can you tell me what to do?
I planted 2 gardenia tree form plants this summer in containers on my screened porch in zone 7b Georgia. They have had yellow leaves in September from all the heat and now have yellow and brown tips. I am tempted to bring them inside the house. What should I do ? The leaves look dehydrated, I water once a week .
Thanks Jim. I have just bought a bunch of potted plants on clearance and I'm going to use your pot to pot technic u mentioned. I'm concerned about to rodents u mentioned. What do u use to protect from them?
I'm not sure if I left my Callistemon Bottle Brush outside too late, since it was in the 35-40^o range when I brought it inside. The leaves are almost completely dried up but they are still attached and not totally crispy. Will it recover? I'm going to keep it until it looks totally dead, or if it doesn't start new growth in Spring I'll compost it. Any suggestions? Zone 9
I’m done 7a and have a few hydrangea in pots. One is a lace hydrangea the others are standards I inherited from my job. They were tossing them after use for seasonal decorations. So I’m not sure of those varieties. They are the usual Pom Pom type. They’ve grown really well this summer so I’d hate to let them get damaged. Can I put them under my patio awning close to the house wall? Is it also true under a tree protects from frost somewhat??
I'm in zone 8a. I have some geraniums and Thanksgiving cacus. I'm ordering hanging plant holders for the Thanksgiving cacus in the fall and winter. They were my mom's and kept in her sun room before she passed away. They are new to me. I also have cats who will try to eat them. So I found out that hanging them indoor during fall and winter is best for them. I am not sure what is best for my geraniums and supertunia. I've always left them outside and they come back each year for me.. so far. Is it best to cover their pots to keep the roots warm? Also am I correct about the Thanksgiving cactus? I have 3 and have had them since July. I learned that they turned purple due to too much sun down here.. so next year they will be on my porch with indirect sun.
Hi Jim, I have 4 white wedding hydrangeas that I want to plant this weekend. Will they be strong enough to survive the winter or should I keep them in their containers.I am in 7b also. Thank you
@@JimPutnam Zone 7a in NJ, my problem is that I have a perfect dark place in the basement for my figs, but I will have to make sure that it is not too warm.
Hi Jim...quick question. I have two green giant arborvitae in pots. I am in zone 6. Ok to leave them out in pots? Also just got an Oakland Holly. Should I bring that in and out of my garage until I can plant?
We just put the two citrus trees in the garage along with my basil. We are supposed to freeze here in GA but then if you look at the hourly temps it doesn’t get lower than 35. I don’t get it. But I still need to make pesto so I didn’t want to chance it. I have two blueberries in one pretty large pot and not sure if I should separate them. Is it better to wait until spring for that? Or can they stay together for awhile?
Hi Jim, love the videos. I'm in zone 6a and want to over winter potted thuja green Giants of various sizes from small freshly rooted cuttings, to 1 gallon, and 5 gallon. Also 5 gallon 'hinoki cypress wells special' Both are rated down to 5a so I should be able to leave them outside. The snow piles on the small ones gets a bit messy. Is there any possible way to store some in my clear Hoophouse without murdering them? Add vents or is it an absolute no, perhaps have to add a white or shade cloth over the clear? Is there an approximate max high temp to shoot for? The hoop house is new but so far it's hitting in the 60/70s in day(30 outside) and night temps are equal to outside temp. As more leaves fall off the surrounding trees, inside temps may increase not sure. ...fine I'll be honest, I just really want to find a way to stare at some of these evergreens in the hoop house over the snowy winter, damn this terrible addiction.
I would put them in the house, but just keep the ends open as much as possible. You probably want to keep them below 60 as much as possible. The green giants do some growing during the winter in my area
@@JimPutnam ok thanks I will go for it and experiment with venting as the cold sets in. Do you think it might help to cover the pots with leaves to help with a freeze/thaw shock in the coldest months where I'm zero at night and 60+ in the day? Or am I over complicating it. Thanks so much.
Wow, I've never heard of horticultural zones. this is really helpful! Thanks for the tips! I've recently really gotten into indoor / porch gardening and have a big potted ming aralia I wasn't sure how to keep safe as the temperature begins to drop. Apparently Its a zone 11 (I'm in 6b) and will have to come inside. I read it cant survive below 50 but we're still in that limbo of most days being 60+ with sporadic nights dipping into the 40's.... Should I wait and just cover the pot and plant until that dip is more consistent?
I'm in zone 8a. I have some parsoni Juniper, a pendula weeping white spruce,and a Wilma gold crest to plant in the ground still. I should be ok still right? Also will be transferring some huechera and a sunshine ligustrum, think it will be ok?
Hi Jim, I live in Concord, NC and I purchased some Encore Azaleas that I haven't had a chance to plant yet. I plan to plant them in the next 7 days and the temperature is forecasted to dip in the 20's a few nights before I plant them. Can I leave them outside? Thanks for your videos!
@@JimPutnam One last question, I promise (I think... lol) in general, do you go one inch down or two when deciding to water or not? I did a container with lasagna planting for spring bulbs and am going two inches with them but for the other containers with regular flowers, I'm not sure if 2 inches is too much...
@@JimPutnam Awesome! Thanks a ton! I purposefully bought everything 2 zones hardier than my own this year. I'm super happy to see this video! Thanks again for your help!!
Average low? AVERAGE? 0 TO 5 degrees? That's much colder if it's an "average". That means that it occasionally can or does get even lower than that. And a place that does get that cold has longer Winters usually. Did you perhaps mean that's about as low as it only gets, if at all?
I've got two potted Cordylines in same size pots as you have those in we been having a lot of rain here I'm UK I've heard they can get stem rot, what do I do pls?
Thanks so much Jim! You are one of my top UA-cam personalities that deliver nothing but relevant and valuable knowledge throughout the year! Excellent video!
Thank you. I appreciate that
A wealth of information. Find myself back at this video every year to freshen up on best practices. Thanks!
I'm in South Australia and overwintering is not necessary here but I watch these videos as it gives me appreciation of how different and difficult gardening is in other parts of the world. The coldest weather I have ever encounted is - 1 degrees.... Celsius very rarely. I can't even imagine coping with extreme cold weather. I hate the cold. I'm so grateful I live here x
Glad you pointed out importance of using white vs clear plastic. A tip often overlooked
Super Important video for me as I was wondering how to deal with an Acer palmatum I just purchased on clearance. Very nice 3 &1/2 ft. lace leaf variety in a 3 gallon container and I was doubting myself on planting it in the ground. I think I made the right choice after watching this video.
Watered it well and mulched about 4 inches (none around the trunk) . 18 degree morning coming here in 7a Tennessee on Tuesday. Thanks for a great video Jim!
Very helpful, Jim. Looking forward to your recommendations for planting in ground this time of year. We are in zone 7b. Waited to plant until the drought broke. Have had some rain recently. Thanks!
Thank you so much you’re great I love the way you explained everything a really thorough I live in Wilmington area and I’ve learned a lot from you keep up the good work I think I’m a zone 7 a
Thanks for watching
It’s almost winter ‘23-‘24. Thanks Jim for this relevant vlog. Wonderful advice! Cindy, a fellow southeast gardener. 🙋🏻♀️
Thanks, super helpful. Great to learn that these upper 20 cold spells are a good thing and to not over-protect the plants.
excellent..and the magic word " roots" mentioned in the context unlike elsewhere that I have looked.. many thanks
I worked as a landscaper laborer in San Antonio tx . I was told that water was needed because wind chill would dry them out . Super soaked them we were told .
Here's a video idea (because so far I haven't found the answer). Are plants more or less likely to freeze if they're in the ground versus in a raised bed vs in a Smart pot vs in a plastic pot? I would think the roots stay warmer in the ground and in the center of larger beds or pots, but would get colder near the sides of Smart pots or pots or raised beds?
Phenomenal! Perfect, detailed. I'll sleep better now knowing my guys are safe! 🙏
Exactly what I needed to know and exactly when I needed it know it! Thank you so much!
Second time watching this one to prep for this winter!
I’m in New Zealand. I’ve got a camellia that we cut down , poisoned, cut a cross with chainsaw in top of trunk😱and poured poison on. It still grew back. So we’ve twisted two shoots as they grew and let it grow back into a small tree that i lollipop. It’s actually lovely. It was before my love of gardening tho.
Love your videos
jossy white...if you cant beatem JOINem!!! lol
I'm in Asheville in 6b and am so glad you made this video! I have lots of potted young trees (pawpaws, american persimmon), looking forward to doing nothing. My loropetulum I wrapped in a blanket and hope it survives. So far the lettuce, chard, and leeks seem to have made it under the row covers. One more night of 10 degree weather!
the loropetulum is in the planted.
I wish I'd watched this about 3 hrs ago. I just made my husband help me haul a few dozen plants into the garage! Based on your video I'm over-doing it for sure. I won't tell if you don't! 😉
That's funny. You are better off just leaving them out unless it's something marginal for sure.
@@JimPutnam Oh and thanks, this will save me a lot of work in the future!
Great info! Just in time. Thank you! 🌳🍃
Just what I was wondering about. Thank you!
That was a great explanation. Thanks.
Thanks for watching
You are certainly welcome and thank you so very much for the information. What do I need to do with my potted ferns and begonias and vinca and lantana (they all are potted)
So you think I should take all off the coverings off of my Norway spruce I am in zone 4 . I put them pot to pot and covered the pots with pillow cases. And sheltered them from wind by a retaining wall ?
So I bought some very large potted boxwoods and junipers and barberries and sand cherry bushes about a week ago and I think it's too late to plant them? I am in Arkansas. What can I do to keep these plants alive until I can plant them
This was incredibly helpful! Thank you so much.
get a roll of rockwool insulation and cover your plants with it. It is made from rocks so it won't get destroyed by rain, though the weather does slowly makeit less flully and ragged looking.
I had to use leaves 🍁 to mulch everything. All my plants are newer this year.. so they needed protection. Here in Michigan we get in the single digits and below. Last year we had that horrible polar vortex where it dropped down to -20 degrees, it was so horrible I think it even caused damage to one of my boxwoods.
That is real cold. Good luck with everything.
Good information! Thank you for a very detailed information. I pack my plants on the kinda north side and the garage is shielding it from wind and morning -1pm sun.. Just want to know if it's a good place or do I need to move it? Zone 7b
Excellent info- thanks Jim!
What about putting the plants in the garage during the heart of winter (garage ranges from 23 degrees to 40 degrees) with a grow light set for a few hours?
I have 2 azalea shrubs in tall planters on my deck. How would I winterize them? Would I cover them with burlap...in zone 6.
Very helpful. Thank you so much.
I live in MI zone 6. My potted plants are rated zone 5 or 6, and I located them outdoors pot to pot in leaf piles, with cotton frost bags over them, and inside a wind break wall. How often should I water the pots through the winter? Pots are sitting up on flat 2 x 4's so the water flows out from under and will not freeze to the pots. It will be below 0 degrees F in a few days for a short while. Thank you, Craig.
I'm in zone 8 Alabama close to Fla. .....when do I cut back knockout roses in planter box?
Great timing on winter protection! I do have several potted plants that won't be put into the ground before they drop all their leaves. Thanks for all the helpful information. Just curious here (I am in zone 7a as well): will it be enough to protect blooming camellias on the covered porch in 29 degree weather? Do you need to give them extra cover to protect the flowers from frost? Also, I don’t have potted camellia at the moment but do have several blooming football mums, and am very interested to find out if they need to be moved inside tonight or a frost cover will do (probably will move the in before next Wednesday anyway). Thanks again for all your work!
Hey Jim - another great video, thanks! Learned a lot from these over the past year. Quick Question - I'm in Atlanta (7b) with nearly identical conditions and in the past I've lost some 1g perennials that I haven't been able to plant before winter arrives. Those peat-based mixes seem to stay too wet. Any specific advice for overwintering deciduous perennials like, say, solomon seal or asarum? Should I try and keep the rain of of them? Put them in a temporary trench planted a little high? Thanks man!
I have a Brown Turkey Fig in a pot. Should I transplant it in a 5 gal bucket with drainage holes? I'm not ready to plant yet.
A bigger pot will help and yes all pots need to have drainage holes
@@JimPutnam It 's a small plant so for tonight I plopped it, pot and all into a Walmart plastic bag and set it on the carport up against the house. It's an old house so it'll leak warm air like a sieve. I'll put it in the sun in the morning and repot it. TY!!
Jim im in zone 7. Can I plant shrubs in winter? I didn’t have time in fall and my spring is going to be busy busy. Also you didn’t talk about wha to do with leaves. Help!
We have some 1 1/2 foot cedars in pots still (from this year) we never planted we like to have them for next year too. We live in Canada in a Zone 3a where it can get very cold anywhere from -10 to -40 with wind chill some days and sunny days. Should we wrap burlap around them top and sides to help them survive the winter.? Or will they not even last?
Thanks Jim! I needed this video
Hi Jim, not sure what zone I'm in yet. I'm in NY state. From 30 degrees to 5 below 0. It's now June 27, I'm putting 2 Emerald Green Arborvitae 4 ft in a large wood planter box on concrete. Want to put pink styrofoam insulation in box. Do I need a heater for O degree weather. Can you tell me what to do?
Excellent info. Thanks so much
I planted 2 gardenia tree form plants this summer in containers on my screened porch in zone 7b Georgia. They have had yellow leaves in September from all the heat and now have yellow and brown tips. I am tempted to bring them inside the house. What should I do ? The leaves look dehydrated, I water once a week .
Thanks Jim.
I have just bought a bunch of potted plants on clearance and I'm going to use your pot to pot technic u mentioned. I'm concerned about to rodents u mentioned. What do u use to protect from them?
Saved and shared!
I'm not sure if I left my Callistemon Bottle Brush outside too late, since it was in the 35-40^o range when I brought it inside.
The leaves are almost completely dried up but they are still attached and not totally crispy.
Will it recover?
I'm going to keep it until it looks totally dead, or if it doesn't start new growth in Spring I'll compost it.
Any suggestions?
Zone 9
Thank you very much. What do you do with Fuji Apple and Red Delicious Apples? Also, what about out door Aloe Vera plants in zone 7? Thank you again.
I’m done 7a and have a few hydrangea in pots. One is a lace hydrangea the others are standards I inherited from my job. They were tossing them after use for seasonal decorations. So I’m not sure of those varieties. They are the usual Pom Pom type. They’ve grown really well this summer so I’d hate to let them get damaged. Can I put them under my patio awning close to the house wall?
Is it also true under a tree protects from frost somewhat??
So helpful!!! Thank you!!!!
I'm in zone 8a. I have some geraniums and Thanksgiving cacus. I'm ordering hanging plant holders for the Thanksgiving cacus in the fall and winter. They were my mom's and kept in her sun room before she passed away. They are new to me. I also have cats who will try to eat them. So I found out that hanging them indoor during fall and winter is best for them. I am not sure what is best for my geraniums and supertunia. I've always left them outside and they come back each year for me.. so far. Is it best to cover their pots to keep the roots warm? Also am I correct about the Thanksgiving cactus? I have 3 and have had them since July. I learned that they turned purple due to too much sun down here.. so next year they will be on my porch with indirect sun.
Hi Jim, I have 4 white wedding hydrangeas that I want to plant this weekend. Will they be strong enough to survive the winter or should I keep them in their containers.I am in 7b also.
Thank you
Those won't even know it's cold. Go for it.
I have tall grasses in pots. How do I protect in winter? I’m in zone 5.
Jim is finally wearing some long sleeves . lol
How do I overwinter my rhododendron in pot ?? Do I wrap the pot in blanket ? Do I need to water it during winter ? I’m in zone 5. My pot is 20inch
In zone 5, would you store most plants in pots on the north side to prevent freezing and thawing?
Yes, for sure. They need to thaw occasionally. That might involve a clear piece of plastic in the sun for a few hours with caution.
best tutorial, Thanks.
Good info! Thanks!
JIm, how about figs in containers?
Depends on where you live. In zone 7 where I am they need serious protection in containers. In a cold frame is best
@@JimPutnam Zone 7a in NJ, my problem is that I have a perfect dark place in the basement for my figs, but I will have to make sure that it is not too warm.
@@rauljimenez8132 Most of the winter isn't to cold where you are. They can be outside any night above 30
Great video! You answered my questions!!😁
Hi Jim...quick question. I have two green giant arborvitae in pots. I am in zone 6. Ok to leave them out in pots? Also just got an Oakland Holly. Should I bring that in and out of my garage until I can plant?
The Oakland holly needs protection for sure.
We just put the two citrus trees in the garage along with my basil. We are supposed to freeze here in GA but then if you look at the hourly temps it doesn’t get lower than 35. I don’t get it. But I still need to make pesto so I didn’t want to chance it. I have two blueberries in one pretty large pot and not sure if I should separate them. Is it better to wait until spring for that? Or can they stay together for awhile?
They would probably be fine staying together, but it doesn't matter when you separate them. I've never had cold damage on blueberries.
Hi Jim, love the videos.
I'm in zone 6a and want to over winter potted thuja green Giants of various sizes from small freshly rooted cuttings, to 1 gallon, and 5 gallon. Also 5 gallon 'hinoki cypress wells special'
Both are rated down to 5a so I should be able to leave them outside.
The snow piles on the small ones gets a bit messy. Is there any possible way to store some in my clear Hoophouse without murdering them? Add vents or is it an absolute no, perhaps have to add a white or shade cloth over the clear?
Is there an approximate max high temp to shoot for?
The hoop house is new but so far it's hitting in the 60/70s in day(30 outside) and night temps are equal to outside temp.
As more leaves fall off the surrounding trees, inside temps may increase not sure.
...fine I'll be honest, I just really want to find a way to stare at some of these evergreens in the hoop house over the snowy winter, damn this terrible addiction.
I would put them in the house, but just keep the ends open as much as possible. You probably want to keep them below 60 as much as possible. The green giants do some growing during the winter in my area
@@JimPutnam ok thanks I will go for it and experiment with venting as the cold sets in. Do you think it might help to cover the pots with leaves to help with a freeze/thaw shock in the coldest months where I'm zero at night and 60+ in the day? Or am I over complicating it.
Thanks so much.
Great information!
Wow, I've never heard of horticultural zones. this is really helpful! Thanks for the tips! I've recently really gotten into indoor / porch gardening and have a big potted ming aralia I wasn't sure how to keep safe as the temperature begins to drop. Apparently Its a zone 11 (I'm in 6b) and will have to come inside. I read it cant survive below 50 but we're still in that limbo of most days being 60+ with sporadic nights dipping into the 40's.... Should I wait and just cover the pot and plant until that dip is more consistent?
I'm in zone 8a. I have some parsoni Juniper, a pendula weeping white spruce,and a Wilma gold crest to plant in the ground still. I should be ok still right? Also will be transferring some huechera and a sunshine ligustrum, think it will be ok?
Oh yeah. They are all better off in the ground. I might transplant the heuchera in the ealry spring.
Could you elaborate what you mean by "pot to pot"? Is that just placing the pots close to each other to lessen cold air circulating between them?
Disregard, you answered my question by the end of the video :)
We're in the same zone 7B
THANK YOU!
should I plant or leave in container
Hi Jim, I live in Concord, NC and I purchased some Encore Azaleas that I haven't had a chance to plant yet. I plan to plant them in the next 7 days and the temperature is forecasted to dip in the 20's a few nights before I plant them. Can I leave them outside? Thanks for your videos!
Looking at this next Wednesday temperature. You may want to put them in the garage on that low twenties night and then plant them
Thx jim
I was planning on watering my container plants every 2 weeks throughout the winter.... too much?
I just check them. You will find some need water that much, but others less.
@@JimPutnam One last question, I promise (I think... lol) in general, do you go one inch down or two when deciding to water or not? I did a container with lasagna planting for spring bulbs and am going two inches with them but for the other containers with regular flowers, I'm not sure if 2 inches is too much...
@@ShayLaRae75 That's perfect
@@JimPutnam Awesome! Thanks a ton! I purposefully bought everything 2 zones hardier than my own this year. I'm super happy to see this video! Thanks again for your help!!
How would you protect bulbs in pots? Can you leave them outdoors?
Most would be fine in southern areas. The pot needs to stay cold to keep them dormant, but it wouldn't be good to have it frozen solid for weeks.
@@JimPutnam Thank you 💚 I'm in Alabama.
Cool
Average low? AVERAGE? 0 TO 5 degrees? That's much colder if it's an "average". That means that it occasionally can or does get even lower than that. And a place that does get that cold has longer Winters usually. Did you perhaps mean that's about as low as it only gets, if at all?
👏👏
Jim 'Dormant' Putnam
👍
I've got two potted Cordylines in same size pots as you have those in we been having a lot of rain here I'm UK I've heard they can get stem rot, what do I do pls?
I thought zone hardiness was rated for plants in the ground.
It is, but generally if it is much hardier than your area it is fine with limited protection in a container.
Who do ya know speaks of of overwintering in 5a
👍❤️😊
"Water is an insulator" 😂 since when?
👋😃
Болтовни много, как и везде, одна болтовня, за много лет разведения ни одного конкретного показа, как горшки укрыть.
Too much talking, showing us nothing