Artificial grass can get very hot in full sunlight
Q: I have three trees in my backyard that are showing some branches dying. I recently had my lawn replaced with artificial grass and was wondering if it was because of that.
A: Hard to say what the reason might be. It could be numerous. If you are using artificial grass (products I looked at), all are safe to apply to the top of the soil.
Artificial grass does have some downsides: a limited replacement life, debris cleanup, overheating, petroleum and health problems, environmental chemicals washed into the soil (think Teflon) and safety concerns.
One widely publicized concern is “heating up” when in full sunlight. In our Mojave Desert environment, most artificial grasses get over 165 degrees any time when in full sunlight and air temperatures are over 100 degrees. A 20 percent reduction in temperature, which some providers claim, makes it 132 degrees. As a reference point, hot spas have water temperatures from 100 to 104 degrees.
One of the reasons artificial grass was developed was because of poor light problems in domed sports fields. Artificial grass doesn’t need light.
It is best placed in shaded or partially shaded areas. It does well in landscaped areas under patio covers and sun sails.
Water-saving programs, which grant rebates for turf removal, may not accept artificial turf as a replacement and require a minimum of plants. Be sure to ask.
Other problems may include ash decline disease if the trees are indeed ash trees. Adding extra water to the tree roots with a sprinkler during the spring once a week may answer the question of whether the trees are suffering from ash decline disease.
Q: I have a rose garden. During the fall, how much should I be watering them? They are all on a drip system. They are watered three times a week, four minutes each day. I’m also worried about the coming winter. How often and how long should they be watered on a drip system? And, of course, I am worried about spring and summer.
A: Sounds like you need a watering schedule for roses. Their roots are about 12 to 18 inches deep depending on their height; the taller they are, the deeper their roots. Watering three times a week for four minutes doesn’t tell me much.
I can drink lots of lemonade in four minutes when I am thirsty. Other people sip at it and one glass can last a long time. I prefer to talk in gallons of water they get rather than minutes of water.
If your roses would fit in a 5-gallon container, then give it 3 to 5 gallons of water each time. If they are bigger and would fit in a 15-gallon container, then give them 8 to 15 gallons of water each time.
Just don’t give them a sip when you water them. Wet the soil around the roots with enough water to wet most of their roots each time.
With roses (which are mesic in their water use and not xeric because they don’t come from a desert somewhere), they should be watered just as your water purveyor suggests. Right now it is about twice a week because its cooler.
Always give woody plants like roses at least one day without watering during the summer.
Winter (December and January) no more than once a week
Spring and late fall (February, March, late October and November) once a week
Early summer and warm fall months (April, May, September and early October) twice a week
Summer (June, July, August) three (or maybe four times if it’s really hot) a week
By the way, roses like improved soil. They won’t like desert landscapes a few years after planting. Cover the soil around them with woodchips or rake the rock away from them once a year and lightly sprinkle compost or wood chips on the surface of the soil. Water it in. Then rake the rock back as soon as you’re finished.
Fine woodchips combined with water improve the soil for root growth and make fertilizers more available. Fertilize them three times a year (February, May and October) with your favorite iron fertilizer added in the February application.
I suggest the iron chelate called iron EDDHA rather than EDTA or DTPA chelated iron. You can get EDDHA online or from Viragrow in North Las Vegas.
Q: Have you added any more recommended fruit trees to the list you developed at the University Orchard in North Las Vegas?
A: Adding recommended fruit trees to a list takes years. The recommended list developed at the University Orchard in North Las Vegas took five years of observation, tasting and recording. The fruit trees were scored after blind tasting and taking in production considerations (pruning, longevity, flowering, fruit production, etc.).
I planted about 3,000 fruit trees at The Orchard at Ahern (near Rancho and Clarkway drives) and have some new recommendations. I did not have the same time to record all the observations I would like but did meet the five years of observations I like to have. This recommended list is beyond my recommended list in 2009.
Peaches: Desert Gold, Earligrande, Red Baron, Evas Pride, Arctic Supreme, O’Henry, July Elberta, Indian Free and Gold Dust.
Do not use Citation as a rootstock for any peaches. Other types of fruit trees (apricots) are OK for Citation (semi-dwarf) as a rootstock.
Nectarine: Heavenly White.
Apricot: Goldcot, Tomcod and Leah Cot.
Asian pear: Tennosui is a top performer, but watch out for fireblight disease.
Plum: Catalina.
Pluot: Flavor Grenade.
Pomegranate: Sharp Velvet, Grenada and Parfianka.
Q: I would like to move a Bearss lime and a Moro blood orange from 15-gallon nursery pots to half oak barrels. Is it too late to do this? If not, are there any precautions I should be taking? What is the best soil mix to use?
A: No, you are not too late, but it is getting close. After leaf drop sometime from mid-November to mid-December, it is too late for best results. Watch your weather apps. They give you about 10 days of good predictions. You want a couple of good weeks for root growth and your plant to get established before the soil gets chilly.
Soil temperature usually lags behind air temperature. Fifty degrees is the magic soil temperature when many plant roots stop growing. Usually after that, soil temperatures get cold, and the plant roots stop growing until it warms up again in spring.
The south and west sides of your landscape (in full sun) will have warmer soils than the east and north sides. It is OK to put your containers there to warm up the soil but watch your weather app closely for freezing temperatures. Both your lime and blood orange will start freezing when temperatures are cold enough.
As far as the soil mix goes, weight has to do with how much you need to move it. If you must move it a lot, then the weight of the soil and water is important, and it should be as light as possible. Those light-weight soil mixes can be expensive.
Use at least ⅓ of the soil as perlite or vermiculite to keep the soil light. Peat moss is not as light when wet but can aid in making a light soil mix. An example of a lighter soil mix would be ⅓ or more perlite, ⅓ peat moss, ⅓ or less sand.
Some people will hate me for saying this, but a sterilized or sanitized soil is important for growing seed and cuttings. If you are careful with watering, then sanitation isn’t as important as much if plants are established.
Garden soil is an acceptable part of a heavy soil mix if it is free of nematodes, other disease agents and weeds. An example of a heavy soil mix would be ⅓ or more sand, ⅓ or less peat moss and ⅓ or less garden soil.
Bob Morris is a horticulture expert and professor emeritus of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Visit his blog at xtremehorticulture.blogspot.com. Send questions to Extremehort@aol.com.