From: "Jeff Rosenstiel" <jjjj4 at comcast.net> on 2004.10.04 at 00:15:08(12244)
I have to tell yea, that both the "neighbor's garage"and mine have been known to
house plants on very cool nights, or when I have been known to move way to
much out early in the spring, Makes for a easy way to put them out of
harms way for the night.
I agree with the 65 for temps, ( keeps the heating bills down) moving air,
and lights threw out the green house to make up for the lack of hours of sun, in
the dead of winter here.
Have the same problems here with living in the middle of pines and oaks
here, finding a ideal spot for the greenhouse was not possible.
Jeff
| +More |
----- Original Message -----
From:
MJ
Hatfield
To: aroid-l@gizmoworks.com
Sent: Sunday, October 03, 2004 4:38
PM
Subject: [Aroid-l] greenhouse
Folks,
I?ve
sent these questions to several of you individually who offered help before I
saw the request to post them on list.
Since
two of you asked that the answers to my greenhouse questions be posted to the
list, perhaps we should.
I
hope the other folks on this list aren?t bored with this.
Here
are some of my first, VERY BASIC, questions.
1. What temperature
range would be ?ideal? for a majority of Aroids, 65-85F?
2. Should I have a
different temperature range for night?
3. Keep the air
moving of course.
4. Humidity can?t be
too high can it?
5. Direct sun? I am
nestled in amongst trees on the east side and the north side and when the sun
sinks lower in the sky I will have some south shade as well and in the far
west I have more trees. (This was the ONLY spot level enough without trees to
even put a greenhouse and it?s in my front yard.) I think that I can put many
plants under the tables holding other plants so that they will get more shade.
I hate to think of immediately covering the inside of the greenhouse with
shade cloth but I don?t want to scorch them either.
6. I grow mostly
Amorphophallus and in the past have put the dormant tubers either in the
basement (55F) or other places in the house (65-70F) Can they stay in the heat
of the greenhouse when dormant? I would assume yes they can.
7. I also have some
Dracontiums, Pseudodracontiums, Anthuriums, Philodendrons, ferns, Brugmansias,
common ordinary house plants, cacti, and such.
I do realize a lot of
this will be trial and error for specific my site and weather and it would
have been nice to have the greenhouse up earlier than this so I could
experiment a bit. But when the plants come in they will all have to come in
due to outside dropping temperatures.
8. Do you have a
favorite greenhouse book to recommend?
Thanks to
you.
MJ
Hatfield
Ps. It may be taking
a bit longer than one week to finish up this greenhouse. Nothing ever goes
quite as planned.
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