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The Right Plants And Some TLC Can Help Your Garden Get Through The Heat
The Right Plants And Some TLC Can Help Your Garden Get Through The Heat
Jan 17, 2024 3:39 PM

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With record-breaking heat striking many places across the country and around the world, my social media feeds are filling up with gardeners’ laments – and photos of their fallen annuals and perennials.

Although my tomatoes in suburban New York have been stalled at green for the past few weeks, my flower garden is thriving. This despite having to endure 100-degree temperatures, mainly without (I’ve watered my flower beds and borders just twice this summer, and even then, only as a precaution).

But I’m not doing anything special to turn my plants into superheroes. All I did was at planting time – and plant them with TLC.

(​MORE: How To Protect Plants And Gardens From Heat Waves)

Choosing Heat-Tolerant Plants

In extreme heat, especially when that heat is dry, soil moisture evaporates quickly, and plants turn to their own limited moisture reserves to rehydrate. This requires them to direct their energy, which should be spent on growth, flowering, fruiting and reproducing, toward cooling and hydrating. The stress often depletes them.

When plants are , they have naturally developed deep, extensive root systems that can reach distant moisture sources when the immediate area around them dries out.

Many exotics, however, including most annuals, have shallow root systems. That means they must rely on the top few inches of soil for all their water needs. , so do they.

To save water, money – and heartache – research which plants are native to your area. You might start your search with the resources at .

(​MORE: One Water-Saving Gardening Hack You’ve Never Heard Of)

In my New York region, that means perennials like bee balm (Monarda didyma), black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia hirta), purple coneflower (Echinacea purpurea), gayfeather (Liatris spicata), gray goldenrod (Solidago nemoralis), lanceleaf coreopsis (Coreopsis lanceolata), New York (Aster novi-belgii) and New England (Aster novae-angliae) asters and butterfly weed (Asclepias tuberosa), all recurring themes throughout my garden.

But I also have some , heat- and drought-tolerant perennials in my flower beds, and annuals in pots.

Mildew-resistant “Bounce” impatiens, for instance, live up to their name in my containers, bouncing back from heat wilt with a good soaking at the end of a brutal day.

Annual and perennial succulents, like sedums (also called stonecrop), are highly tolerant to dry, hot weather due to their thick, sap-filled leaves, which -- sort of like a camel’s hump – store moisture and release it as the plants need it.

Other plants that hold their own under harsh heat include angelonia, beardtongue (Penstemon spp.), begonia, million bells (Calibrachoa spp.), catmint (Nepeta spp.), floss flower (Ageratum spp.), lantana, lavender (Lavendula spp.), marigold (Tagetes spp.), moss rose (Portulaca oleracea), petunia, salvia, verbena and zinnia.

Planting Tips

When planting, I always dust root balls with powdered , which colonize roots and help plants tolerate environmental stresses, including severe heat. I also treat them to a monthly dose of a seaweed-containing fish emulsion and a vitamin-hormone-kelp product.

Seaweed, which includes kelp, has been shown to improve . I find the protocol also helps plants adjust quickly after dividing and transplanting.

Finally, a is the proverbial cherry on top of your soil. Mulch not only keeps things looking tidy, it also suppresses weeds, keeps soil temperatures even, and retains soil moisture, which can mean the difference between plant life and death when the going gets hot.

The Weather Company’s primary journalistic mission is to report on breaking weather news, the environment and the importance of science to our lives. This story does not necessarily represent the position of our parent company, .

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