Posts Tagged: frost damage
Bundle Up! Winter's Coming! - Preparing for Frosty Temperatures
It's time to get ready for cold winter temperatures and to start preparing protection for citrus trees and other frost-sensitive plants. Depending on where you live in Contra Costa County, your first frost date may be as early as Halloween. However, November 15 is often thought of as a first frost date in much of our County, with slightly earlier in the eastern portion and later in the more temperate West County areas. Because significant climate variation can occur, it's good to start thinking of frost protection early, before you need it.
Frost can start to occur when the temperature gets below 36°F and is sure to happen at 32°F. When temperatures drop below 32°F, it becomes a freeze, and if it drops below 28°F, it's a hard freeze.
Protecting plants when temperatures drop in the Bay Area can be done using three simple elements:
Water: It may seem counter intuitive, but water can provide protection from freezing temperatures. When dry soil freezes, moisture is pulled from the roots, causing damage. If the soil is moist, it can freeze without harming roots. Wet soil also holds more heat than dry soil. When the forecast calls for 32°F or below at night, water the ground around your plants lightly in the late afternoon or early evening. The exceptions to watering plants before frosty temperatures are succulents. They need to be kept dry when a freeze is expected if you can't move them into a warmer spot.
Frost Covers: Protect tender plants and trees with frost covers either purchased or homemade. Sheets, blankets, tarps, or burlap can be used, but these need to be propped up above the leaves and removed in the morning. These materials can become wet with dew and damage sensitive leaves. Commercial frost cloth comes in several weights and can provide up to 4°F protection (find it at your local nursery or home and garden store). It can float over the top of the plants and can be left on for several days since light can pass through it. For very sensitive plants, make sure the cover goes all the way to the ground. If very cold temperatures are forecast, also wrap the trunk of a young citrus tree with cardboard to protect the bud union and above.
Covering or tenting should be done in the late afternoon or early evening when freezing temperatures are predicted, then removed in the morning after frost has thawed to allow for healthy air circulation and to allow the soil to warm in the sun.
Heat: Moving potted plants indoors, into a greenhouse, or even grouping them together under a tree or house eaves to conserve heat will give enough protection for many plants. A light bulb (100-watt designed for outdoor use) or Christmas lights (old-fashioned incandescent type lights—LED lights do not emit enough heat to help) under a frost cover can add additional heat. Make sure you use extension cords and lights rated for outdoor use.
If plants have suffered damage from frost, wait to prune until spring. Frost-damaged areas on plants can add protection to parts below if there is another freeze. You also don't want to stimulate the plant to put out new tender growth that would surely be damaged in another frost.
Following is a link to a UC publication titled Frost Protection for Citrus and Other Subtropicals: https://anrcatalog.ucanr.edu/pdf/8100.pdf
Help Desk of University of California Master Gardener Program of Contra Costa County (SEH)
tomato thumbnail
Frost and Frost Protection
You wanted to know all about Frost, well it's all here. Emeritus Rick Snyder put it together over the years and it's at your finger tips.
English Frost Protection Training Units (videos)
Spanish Frost Protection Training Units (videos)
When to Turn Sprinklers On and Off for Frost Protection
FP001 Quick Answer—This quick answer provides information on using a psychrometer or temperature and dew point data to determine when to start and start sprinklers for frost protection.
Predicting Temperature Trends during Freeze Nights
FP002 Quick Answer—This quick answer gives a method for predicting the change in
temperature during a calm, radiation freeze night.
A Simple Method to Measure the Dew Point Temperature
FP003 Quick Answer—This quick answer provides information on how to measure the dew point for use in estimating minimum temperature and for starting and stopping
sprinklers for frost protection.
Sprinkler Application Rates for Freeze Protection
FP004 Quick Answer—This quick answer provides information on the sprinkler
application (precipitation) rates needed to protect crops from freezing.
Principles of Frost Protection
Frost Protection Training Units (videos) on measuring temperature, frost protection with water, frost protection with wind machines, and passive protection. Traning units are availble in English and Spanish .
FP005 Quick Answer—This quick answer provides information on the general principles of well-known frost protection methods. A PDF file of the WEB page can be uploaded from this Quick Answer. In addition, a shorter version is available.
Programs for Estimating Frost Night Minimum Temperatures and Temperature Trends (new 7 Mar 2007)
The FFST Excel application programs FFST_E.xls and FFST_M.xls are available from this link. The FFST application helps users to determine an empirical equation for estimating minimum temperatures during radiation frost nights. Note that the program will provide good estimates if there is little or no wind, no significant cold air drainage, and no clouds.
The FTrend Excel application programs FTrend_E.xls and FTrend_M.xls are available from this link. The FTrend application program is used for estimating changes in air and wet-bulb temperatures during a frost night. The application is useful for predicting when to start sprinklers for frost protection and for other methods as well.
Estimating Risk of Frost Damage from Climate Data (new 8 Jul 2006)
One of the programs included with the book Frost protection: fundamentals, practice, and economics. Volume 2, which is available from the UN FAO is the Frisk program. Information on how to obtain the book is presented above on this web page. Based on reader feedback, some improvements have been made to the Frisk application since the book was published. Updated versions of the application are made available to the public here. The Frisk program is an MS Excel application that is designed to help growers to make decisions on the risk of frost damage in a particular location. The user inputs the local climate data and a critical damage temperature, and the application computes the probability of temperature falling below the critical temperature on each day of the year. These data are then used to estimate the length of the growing season relative to the critical temperature by presenting a graph of the probability that the growing season will be less than a specific number of days. The application also computes the certainty that no air temperature will fall below the critical damage temperature after a selected date in the spring or before a selected date in the fall for design periods of 5, 10, …, 30 years. This certainty of no events is equivalent to the risk of having one or more events during the same time period. Although Celsius temperature was used in the example application programs, the program works equally well using Fahrenheit temperature. To obtain a copy of the application, click on FriskNH.xls for the northern hemisphere or FriskSH.xls for the southern hemisphere. Note that metric units were used in the Frisk application sample data.
frost damage leaves
Recognizing and Caring for Frost-Damaged Plants
Plummeting winter temperatures often lead to frost damage in plants. The damage occurs when...
Brown stippling of grapefruit rind caused by frost, Jack Kelly Clark, UC IMP Program
Frost Protection for Citrus
Freezing temperatures damage plants by causing ice crystals to form in their cells. ...
Recognizing and Caring for Frost-Damaged Plants
Plummeting winter temperatures often lead to frost damage in plants. The damage occurs when ice...