35 Degrees tonight

Underground1337

Well-Known Member
Where abouts are you at ? I am in south Ontario and its getting to be around 50 tonight.
But ya it may not kill it but really stunt the growth a hell of a lot. Usually bring my plants in on cold nights.
 

mjizzle

Active Member
northern us. The thing is I cannot and will not cover them I can only hope for the best. Hope the weather man is wrong and its like 36 or 37 and ive read they can handle down to 28 degrees. Idk there close to done but could be better in a couple weeks
 

Bill.Clinton

Active Member
I saw 32-34 in my area...all I can do is hope for the best. I guess if it stays windy, the frost can't settle as well.
 

growone

Well-Known Member
you will probably be fine, doesn't help of course
if the weather gets warmer, this won't be a game changer, i'm in NY and it looks OK for most parts
 

mjizzle

Active Member
you will probably be fine, doesn't help of course
if the weather gets warmer, this won't be a game changer, i'm in NY and it looks OK for most parts
Yea in that area it looks fine, But yea its suppose to go back up to 40's at night then int othe 50's again for who knows how long.
 

growone

Well-Known Member
Yea in that area it looks fine, But yea its suppose to go back up to 40's at night then int othe 50's again for who knows how long.
that's the outside game, it's tough this time of year, it usually comes down to this
used to do outside grows, i usually overestimated the harm of frost, nature of the beast
 

poplars

Well-Known Member
yeah if it says 35 you're at risk if hitting frosts... but as long as it's not lower than 29 you'll be fine... but 2 or 3 of those frosts at that level will halt growth.

tho if you're growing sativas one frost will fuck em up...they're hella sensitive.
 

psychedelictripper

Well-Known Member
What's wrong with covering them? Afraid of condensation? Better safe than sorry. If you're in the neighborhood of a killing frost you should be making preparations right now. Would hurt to build a little greenhouse around her with grow row cover just for night time. They can take a light frost but if the temp dips just a few degrees further serious damage can occur. Not sure what temperature the killing frost is but it's in the 20's. Pick or pamper.
 

poplars

Well-Known Member
What's wrong with covering them? Afraid of condensation? Better safe than sorry. If you're in the neighborhood of a killing frost you should be making preparations right now. Would hurt to build a little greenhouse around her with grow row cover just for night time. They can take a light frost but if the temp dips just a few degrees further serious damage can occur. Not sure what temperature the killing frost is but it's in the 20's. Pick or pamper.
in my experience killing frost is about 28-26 degrees F. (depending upon strain of course.)
 

psychedelictripper

Well-Known Member
And those two temperatures can easily be had when frost warnings are given. Remember this too most weather stations are located at airports, military bases, and other urban centers. Temps in the city are generally warmer than the country. If you are in the sticks and it calls for frost, expect lower temps than what they predict. Then there is that who weatherman often times being very inaccurate thing.
 

poplars

Well-Known Member
And those two temperatures can easily be had when frost warnings are given. Remember this too most weather stations are located at airports, military bases, and other urban centers. Temps in the city are generally warmer than the country. If you are in the sticks and it calls for frost, expect lower temps than what they predict. Then there is that who weatherman often times being very inaccurate thing.
yeah I always look at the lows and automatically lower it 3 or 4 degrees...
 

Farmout

Member
Pretty scary time of year of outdoor growers, fer sure. Depends on the strain, of course, but over the years I have found most strains (especially with the density of growth on the plant) can survive mild frost, even. I use 5 gal buckets (with handles) so when I am really freakin over the threat of frost, I will nuzzle them up to other shrubs or even close up next to the house overnight for safety. If you cannot move them, (occassionally I plant right in the ground) you can use plastic grocery store bags and just cover the most exposed buds overnight. As we approach harvest (Sativa-within the next 2 weeks / Indica-another 4-5 weeks {Midwest}) everything depends on that first hard freeze date.
 
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