Protect your plants: Spring flowers to be impacted by upcoming March cold snaps

Spring has been in the air for many weeks in large regions of the East, where flowers are in bloom, and new leaves have already grown out, but a late-season cold snap is threatening to put a halt on the springtime beauty.

A series of cold fronts that started impacting the region this workweek and which are expected to continue through the following week promise to send low temperatures to 10–30 degrees below average, which some experts say will be problematic to plants.

The USA National Phenology Network has tracked the progress of spring’s annual leaf-out process for more than a decade and said the 2023 blooming season arrived days or even weeks early in many regions. The spring bloom was some 22 days early in Norfolk, Virginia, and even 21 days earlier than normal in Nashville, Tennessee.

In some of these same regions, frost and freeze alerts are in effect and plants may be vulnerable to the unusually chilly air.

WHAT SEASON DO FRUITS AND VEGETABLES GROW IN?

The FOX Forecast Center expects temperatures to drop below the freezing mark in Atlanta, Charlotte and Raleigh, many other communities that are getting close to their last average freeze date.

Specialists at the USA National Phenology Network say to pay close attention to the 28 °F benchmark, which is considered to be the threshold between a freeze and a hard freeze.

If not protected from the cold weather, a hard freeze can significantly damage plants considered vulnerable and not hardy.

According to Erin Posthumus, an outreach Coordinator at USA National Phenology Network, the water inside plant cells can freeze, causing them to expand and rupture. Damage is usually irreversible, and plants will lose their leaves or flowers.

Typically, a plant will not produce flowers for a second time, so if blooms are killed or damaged, there may be a few gardens without the aesthetically pleasing sight of colored flowers later in the spring.

Experts say plants that survive the cold snap will recover, but it could take an extended period of time, which means leaf-out processes and pollen seasons will slow compared to the brisk start to the year.

WHEN IS THE LAST FREEZE IN MY AREA?

Before plants are exposed to the extreme cold, experts at the University of Florida say there are steps you can take to minimize exposure and damage.

The most popular method to protect plants is with a blanket or sheet. This can be easily done before temperatures reach critical levels, but experts remind gardeners not to use plastic coverings.

Plastic coverings can actually harm plants and make them more susceptible to cold.

Two other suggested methods include watering the plants and adding mulch above the roots. Mulch can help protect the ground from heat loss.

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