Watering
From my experience, hardiness is a function of both moisture and temperature. We have had more plants perish because of heat and drought from planting them between April 1—October 15 than anything that we have planted during any difficult rainy wet or dry, cold winter between October 16—March 31. My conclusion is that, for planting purposes, having the ground be moist and the air cool and humid, before one plants, offers the very best outcomes.
We usually receive our first soaking rains the last week of October or the first week of November. At that point the temperature also drops to the 40’s and 50’s, making low plant transpiration and high humidity. At that time, any ground (which is not artificially irrigated) is finally being moistened from the top down. It often takes up to a full moth of rain for the moisture to work down deep into the rootzone of the soil. If we can put a watering tube by each plant that we install between October 16—March 31 (of the next year), and someone also makes a point of giving that plant five gallons of water per week between April 1—October 15 (of the subsequent year), the plant should ultimately THRIVE! The tube allows the water to be delivered to the deep working rootzone of the plant. This motivates the plant to continue to root down deeply, helping it to become more drought tolerant.
This is the opposite of watering the surface of the ground which, if not adequate, will not seep down to the deep root zone. This can cause the plant to root solely at the surface, becoming more dependent on surface irrigation water and not rooting deeply. Obviously, plants must be planted when it is advantageous to the human to get the job done. However, we strongly recommend against planting precisely when the temperature is above 95ºF (which is usually associated with low humidity) as this causes high evapotranspiration and often the ground is dry and hard, offering no water supply for the roots. Dry ground can also result in very difficult digging for the humans. We also strongly recommend against planting when the ground is frozen or covered with snow. Any time one plants, without a dependable automatic irrigation system, planting with a tube and watering as recommended and will give one a high possibility of a positive outcome.




