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#1
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Sauve quit peut!
Just looked at the 5 day forecast and brought the pot with the lemon tree
into the dining room inside the patio door. It can keep the zonal perlagonia company. It has lived outside for the last 3-4 years but this weather is extreme. It is still looking O.K. so far but the newish growth at the tips of the branches is starting to wilt. Next problem will be when to return it to the wild. Cheers Dave R |
#2
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Sauve quit peut!
"David WE Roberts" wrote in message ... Just looked at the 5 day forecast and brought the pot with the lemon tree into the dining room inside the patio door. It can keep the zonal perlagonia company. It has lived outside for the last 3-4 years but this weather is extreme. It is still looking O.K. so far but the newish growth at the tips of the branches is starting to wilt. Next problem will be when to return it to the wild. Depends how warm and cosy it is in the Dining Room? -- Regards Bob Hobden W.of London. UK |
#3
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Sauve quit peut!
On 2010-01-03 22:28:05 +0000, "David WE Roberts" said:
Just looked at the 5 day forecast and brought the pot with the lemon tree into the dining room inside the patio door. It can keep the zonal perlagonia company. It has lived outside for the last 3-4 years but this weather is extreme. It is still looking O.K. so far but the newish growth at the tips of the branches is starting to wilt. Next problem will be when to return it to the wild. Cheers Dave R When the danger of frost is past! As long as it doesn't get too hot or you don't water it too much - which you won't - it will be fine. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com Shrubs & perennials. Tender & exotics. South Devon |
#4
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Sauve quit peut!
"Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2010-01-03 22:28:05 +0000, "David WE Roberts" said: Just looked at the 5 day forecast and brought the pot with the lemon tree into the dining room inside the patio door. It can keep the zonal perlagonia company. It has lived outside for the last 3-4 years but this weather is extreme. It is still looking O.K. so far but the newish growth at the tips of the branches is starting to wilt. Next problem will be when to return it to the wild. Cheers Dave R When the danger of frost is past! As long as it doesn't get too hot or you don't water it too much - which you won't - it will be fine. Too hot might be an issue - the patio door is south facing - but I have limited frost free storage space at the moment. |
#5
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Sauve quit peut!
On 2010-01-04 11:16:28 +0000, "David WE Roberts" said:
"Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2010-01-03 22:28:05 +0000, "David WE Roberts" said: Just looked at the 5 day forecast and brought the pot with the lemon tree into the dining room inside the patio door. It can keep the zonal perlagonia company. It has lived outside for the last 3-4 years but this weather is extreme. It is still looking O.K. so far but the newish growth at the tips of the branches is starting to wilt. Next problem will be when to return it to the wild. Cheers Dave R When the danger of frost is past! As long as it doesn't get too hot or you don't water it too much - which you won't - it will be fine. Too hot might be an issue - the patio door is south facing - but I have limited frost free storage space at the moment. I know it's a faff but put it out on sunny days and bring it back in at night and on cold, gloomy days! -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com Shrubs & perennials. Tender & exotics. South Devon |
#6
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Sauve quit peut!
"Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2010-01-04 11:16:28 +0000, "David WE Roberts" said: "Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2010-01-03 22:28:05 +0000, "David WE Roberts" said: Just looked at the 5 day forecast and brought the pot with the lemon tree into the dining room inside the patio door. It can keep the zonal perlagonia company. It has lived outside for the last 3-4 years but this weather is extreme. It is still looking O.K. so far but the newish growth at the tips of the branches is starting to wilt. Next problem will be when to return it to the wild. Cheers Dave R When the danger of frost is past! As long as it doesn't get too hot or you don't water it too much - which you won't - it will be fine. Too hot might be an issue - the patio door is south facing - but I have limited frost free storage space at the moment. I know it's a faff but put it out on sunny days and bring it back in at night and on cold, gloomy days! Hmmm....even when the sunny day is still sub-zero? Arctic conditions here at the moment. |
#7
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Sauve quit peut!
On 2010-01-04 17:15:01 +0000, "David WE Roberts" said:
"Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2010-01-04 11:16:28 +0000, "David WE Roberts" said: "Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2010-01-03 22:28:05 +0000, "David WE Roberts" said: Just looked at the 5 day forecast and brought the pot with the lemon tree into the dining room inside the patio door. It can keep the zonal perlagonia company. It has lived outside for the last 3-4 years but this weather is extreme. It is still looking O.K. so far but the newish growth at the tips of the branches is starting to wilt. Next problem will be when to return it to the wild. Cheers Dave R When the danger of frost is past! As long as it doesn't get too hot or you don't water it too much - which you won't - it will be fine. Too hot might be an issue - the patio door is south facing - but I have limited frost free storage space at the moment. I know it's a faff but put it out on sunny days and bring it back in at night and on cold, gloomy days! Hmmm....even when the sunny day is still sub-zero? Arctic conditions here at the moment. Our Meyer's Lemon is in the ground in an unheated greenhouse and has no watering but survives intermittent temps down to -6C. So far, it's gone to -3C at night and today never got above freezing. It's right beside a door with a large window pane missing, so effectively it's getting the treatment I thought of for yours. But you know your own garden's temps, so is there a sunny spot that would be less arctic than other places in the garden? And how about swaddling it and making sure it's raised so that it drains well if it rains? Would that keep it going? It's a puzzlement because normally it would be 'leave the doors and vents open in the daytime' but that would make your house freezing and of course, insecure. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com Shrubs & perennials. Tender & exotics. South Devon |
#8
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Sauve quit peut!
"Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2010-01-04 17:15:01 +0000, "David WE Roberts" said: "Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2010-01-04 11:16:28 +0000, "David WE Roberts" said: "Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2010-01-03 22:28:05 +0000, "David WE Roberts" said: Just looked at the 5 day forecast and brought the pot with the lemon tree into the dining room inside the patio door. It can keep the zonal perlagonia company. It has lived outside for the last 3-4 years but this weather is extreme. It is still looking O.K. so far but the newish growth at the tips of the branches is starting to wilt. Next problem will be when to return it to the wild. Cheers Dave R When the danger of frost is past! As long as it doesn't get too hot or you don't water it too much - which you won't - it will be fine. Too hot might be an issue - the patio door is south facing - but I have limited frost free storage space at the moment. I know it's a faff but put it out on sunny days and bring it back in at night and on cold, gloomy days! Hmmm....even when the sunny day is still sub-zero? Arctic conditions here at the moment. Our Meyer's Lemon is in the ground in an unheated greenhouse and has no watering but survives intermittent temps down to -6C. So far, it's gone to -3C at night and today never got above freezing. It's right beside a door with a large window pane missing, so effectively it's getting the treatment I thought of for yours. But you know your own garden's temps, so is there a sunny spot that would be less arctic than other places in the garden? And how about swaddling it and making sure it's raised so that it drains well if it rains? Would that keep it going? It's a puzzlement because normally it would be 'leave the doors and vents open in the daytime' but that would make your house freezing and of course, insecure. It is in a sheltered south facing nook normally, up against the wall. However the current weather (predicted two weeks below freezing) is allegedly the worst in 19 years so I am concerned that the poor thing will have a nervous breakdown ;-) I don't think it is a good idea to chuck it outside again at the moment, even with a fleece. One temperature change is bad enough. My plan is to keep it indoors for a couple of weeks until this cold weather eases then 'harden it off' again and leave it outside unless we have even more unusual weather. I would like to bring it into a shed to keep it cool but frost free; however my shed is full, as is my garage. Thank you for all your advice - even though I am ignoring some of it :-) Cheers Dave R P.S. you should have some snow by now. |
#9
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Sauve quit peut!
On 2010-01-05 17:06:11 +0000, "David WE Roberts" said:
"Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2010-01-04 17:15:01 +0000, "David WE Roberts" said: "Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2010-01-04 11:16:28 +0000, "David WE Roberts" said: "Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2010-01-03 22:28:05 +0000, "David WE Roberts" said: Just looked at the 5 day forecast and brought the pot with the lemon tree into the dining room inside the patio door. It can keep the zonal perlagonia company. It has lived outside for the last 3-4 years but this weather is extreme. It is still looking O.K. so far but the newish growth at the tips of the branches is starting to wilt. Next problem will be when to return it to the wild. Cheers Dave R When the danger of frost is past! As long as it doesn't get too hot or you don't water it too much - which you won't - it will be fine. Too hot might be an issue - the patio door is south facing - but I have limited frost free storage space at the moment. I know it's a faff but put it out on sunny days and bring it back in at night and on cold, gloomy days! Hmmm....even when the sunny day is still sub-zero? Arctic conditions here at the moment. Our Meyer's Lemon is in the ground in an unheated greenhouse and has no watering but survives intermittent temps down to -6C. So far, it's gone to -3C at night and today never got above freezing. It's right beside a door with a large window pane missing, so effectively it's getting the treatment I thought of for yours. But you know your own garden's temps, so is there a sunny spot that would be less arctic than other places in the garden? And how about swaddling it and making sure it's raised so that it drains well if it rains? Would that keep it going? It's a puzzlement because normally it would be 'leave the doors and vents open in the daytime' but that would make your house freezing and of course, insecure. It is in a sheltered south facing nook normally, up against the wall. However the current weather (predicted two weeks below freezing) is allegedly the worst in 19 years so I am concerned that the poor thing will have a nervous breakdown ;-) I don't think it is a good idea to chuck it outside again at the moment, even with a fleece. One temperature change is bad enough. My plan is to keep it indoors for a couple of weeks until this cold weather eases then 'harden it off' again and leave it outside unless we have even more unusual weather. I would like to bring it into a shed to keep it cool but frost free; however my shed is full, as is my garage. If they have absolutely no heating, they're no good to you anyway. Thank you for all your advice - even though I am ignoring some of it :-) Quite right, too. You know your conditions, we don't! When you start to put it outside again, it will need to be re-acclimatised,. Cheers Dave R P.S. you should have some snow by now. Oh, groan. We had snow this morning for a very brief 20 minutes or so, then we've had rain and sleet. Now it's dry. Tomorrow's lanes should be such fun...... -- Sacha |
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