previous
  • Perfect Edges for Your Beds and Borders
    Perfect Edges for Your Beds and Borders
  • How to Grow Raspberries
    How to Grow Raspberries
  • Friendly Ways to Battle Garden Pests
    Friendly Ways to Battle Garden Pests
  • 15 Deer-Resistant Plants
    15 Deer-Resistant Plants
  • 10 Perennials Easily Grown from Seed
    10 Perennials Easily Grown from Seed
  • The Only Shrubs You Need to Grow
    The Only Shrubs You Need to Grow
  • Viburnums are Versatile Shrubs
    Viburnums are Versatile Shrubs
  • Lilacs: Time for a Fresh Look
    Lilacs: Time for a Fresh Look
  • Video: Make a Straw-Bale Garden
    Video: Make a Straw-Bale Garden
  • Make Your Own Hypertufa Container
    Make Your Own Hypertufa Container
  • Soil Testing is Worth the Effort
    Soil Testing is Worth the Effort
  • Cool-Season Annuals
    Cool-Season Annuals
  • Building a Compost Bin
    Building a Compost Bin
  • Celebrate Spring with Cool-Season Containers
    Celebrate Spring with Cool-Season Containers
  • Find the Perfect Tomato
    Find the Perfect Tomato
  • How to Start a Vegetable Garden
    How to Start a Vegetable Garden
  • A Gardener's Checklist for Early Spring
    A Gardener's Checklist for Early Spring
  • All About Starting Seeds
    All About Starting Seeds
  • Enchanting Japanese Maples
    Enchanting Japanese Maples
  • Variegated Plants Create Drama
    Variegated Plants Create Drama
  • Design an Engaging Entryway
    Design an Engaging Entryway
  • Sweetly Scented Tulips
    Sweetly Scented Tulips
  • Backyard Makeover Game
    Backyard Makeover Game
  • Garden Catalog Collector
    Garden Catalog Collector
  • Spectacular Spring Bloomers
    Spectacular Spring Bloomers
next

Frost protection on wheels


Click to enlarge image Photo/Illustration: Michael Gellatly

Living in the mountains of West Virginia, I have to be prepared for late-spring and early-fall frosts. My solution is to keep several pieces of insulating plant fabric in a garbage can with wheels. When frost threatens, I quickly wheel the garbage can full of fabric around my acre of gardens and cover my tender plants. If the cold weather lasts for several days, the plant fabric will breathe and allow moisture to get to the plants. When the weather warms up again and the fabric has dried in the sun, I wheel the garbage can around the garden again to collect the fabric.

Celeste Makrevis, Lewisburg, WV

From Fine Gardening 89, pp. 14