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| SteveB... |
Posted: Thu Aug 27, 2009 9:27 pm |
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I live in XXtreme SW Utah at about 3700' elevation. I'm right in those
tight bands of zone numbers. The temperatures vary from year to year.
Tomorrow, I'm going out to till up the mess that is currently the garden,
and make ready for winter. I'm going to put about 20 bags of "stuff" into
the garden. I do have a 4' tall north wall to break the wind. I am going
to run a shunt off my house water so I can water in the winter, as the ag
water is turned off when it freezes. What can be grown in the winter?
Steve |
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| Suzanne D.... |
Posted: Fri Aug 28, 2009 12:49 am |
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"SteveB" <oldfart at (no spam) depends.com> wrote in message
news:idvjm6-s2g.ln1 at (no spam) news.infowest.com...
Quote: I live in XXtreme SW Utah at about 3700' elevation. I'm right in those
tight bands of zone numbers. The temperatures vary from year to year.
Tomorrow, I'm going out to till up the mess that is currently the garden,
and make ready for winter. I'm going to put about 20 bags of "stuff" into
the garden. I do have a 4' tall north wall to break the wind. I am going
to run a shunt off my house water so I can water in the winter, as the ag
water is turned off when it freezes. What can be grown in the winter?
I'm in your area, and planting cabbage, carrots, lettuce, onions, peas,
garlic, and various cover crops. I think you can plant potatoes,
too--they'll get a nice jump start in the spring.
--S. |
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| Zootal... |
Posted: Fri Aug 28, 2009 12:50 pm |
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At your elevation, isn't a bit late for planting winter crops? When is your
first frost, and how much snow do you get up there?
"SteveB" <oldfart at (no spam) depends.com> wrote in message
news:idvjm6-s2g.ln1 at (no spam) news.infowest.com...
Quote: I live in XXtreme SW Utah at about 3700' elevation. I'm right in those
tight bands of zone numbers. The temperatures vary from year to year.
Tomorrow, I'm going out to till up the mess that is currently the garden,
and make ready for winter. I'm going to put about 20 bags of "stuff" into
the garden. I do have a 4' tall north wall to break the wind. I am going
to run a shunt off my house water so I can water in the winter, as the ag
water is turned off when it freezes. What can be grown in the winter?
Steve
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| Bud... |
Posted: Fri Aug 28, 2009 1:31 pm |
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SteveB wrote:
Quote: I live in XXtreme SW Utah at about 3700' elevation. I'm right in those
tight bands of zone numbers. The temperatures vary from year to year.
Tomorrow, I'm going out to till up the mess that is currently the
garden, and make ready for winter. I'm going to put about 20 bags of
"stuff" into the garden. I do have a 4' tall north wall to break the
wind. I am going to run a shunt off my house water so I can water in
the winter, as the ag water is turned off when it freezes. What can be
grown in the winter?
Steve
Try hear http://www.usna.usda.gov/Hardzone/index.html
or http://www.usna.usda.gov/SiteMap_USNA.html
--
signature goes here |
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| SteveB... |
Posted: Fri Aug 28, 2009 2:02 pm |
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"Zootal" <usenet at (no spam) spam.zootal.nospam.com> wrote in message
news:Pu6dnVmO1slvuwXXnZ2dnUVZ_uOdnZ2d at (no spam) giganews.com...
Quote: At your elevation, isn't a bit late for planting winter crops? When is
your first frost, and how much snow do you get up there?
Our weather varies here. Mid September is first frost. Snow varies from
none to last winter when we had 14". Usually, just a couple of dustings.
Gets down to the high teens or low twenties. Not bad winters.
Steve |
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| Gloria P... |
Posted: Fri Aug 28, 2009 2:43 pm |
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Zootal wrote:
Quote: At your elevation, isn't a bit late for planting winter crops? When is your
first frost, and how much snow do you get up there?
SW Utah around St. James, is often called the Banana Belt for its mild
climate. Of course a tiny shift in the jet stream means all bets are
off....
gloria p |
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| Zootal... |
Posted: Fri Aug 28, 2009 6:18 pm |
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"Gloria P" <gpuester at (no spam) comcast.net> wrote in message
news:7fqtsjF2mkqbqU2 at (no spam) mid.individual.net...
Quote: Zootal wrote:
At your elevation, isn't a bit late for planting winter crops? When is
your first frost, and how much snow do you get up there?
SW Utah around St. James, is often called the Banana Belt for its mild
climate. Of course a tiny shift in the jet stream means all bets are
off....
gloria p
Extreme SW Utah would be the St. George area. Hotter then blazes in summer,
two hours from Vegas and similar climate. Head NE a bit and you are going
uphill and quickly get into cooler weather.
I would say that if the first frost is only a few weeks away, it is too late
for most winter crops. At least when I plant them that late they start to
grow, it gets cold, and they go dormant. They rot, the frost/ice kills them,
but what does survive will give me nice greens and onions in the spring.
YMMV - where I live that is what happens when I plant at the end of August
or September, and we don't get a good frost until early to mid October. |
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