climate change shock?
- crounds171
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- leatherback
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Note that regional variation does exist in plants and you may be unlucky that your california specimen is less frost resistent than a variety growing in northern Washington.
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- crounds171
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- leatherback
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- crounds171
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- manofthetrees
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if it was there is no problem atlas cedar are at least a zone 4 plant and can handle freezing without a problem.if you have snow burry the pot in it.it is the best way to overwinter trees .the snow keeps the roots at 32 degrees witch is not cold enough to freeze the liguid in the trees roots (the sugars in the sap lower the freezing temp of the liquid) keeping it out of the wind is a must.wind not tempurature is the winter killer
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- leatherback
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manofthetrees wrote: was this tree outside before you recieved it?
if it was there is no problem atlas cedar are at least a zone 4 plant and can handle freezing without a problem.if you have snow burry the pot in it.it is the best way to overwinter trees .the snow keeps the roots at 32 degrees witch is not cold enough to freeze the liguid in the trees roots (the sugars in the sap lower the freezing temp of the liquid) keeping it out of the wind is a must.wind not tempurature is the winter killer
Also frost-hardy trees need to adjust to cold temperatures. The internal fysiology changes as temperatures drop. If you take them from a non-frost area into deep cold winter they will die. Do NOT put a tree which you take from cool climate into cold climate winter, without a transition time. Just keep the tree frost-free until spring, unless the tree in northern California was in below freezing temps too.
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- crounds171
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- manofthetrees
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