When is the BEST Time to Water the Garden and Why?

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  • čas přidán 28. 08. 2024
  • Watering your garden is something that you will probably have to do at some point. Here in Michigan it has been very dry and very hot meaning we have had to water a bit more than usual. When it the best time of day to water your plants, and why? That is what we will be discussing in today’s episode.

Komentáře • 366

  • @MIgardener
    @MIgardener  Před 3 lety +31

    For those who don't think water can burn leaves - Read this: Egri, A.; Horvath, A.; Kriska, G.; Horvath, G. Optics of sunlit water drops on leaves: conditions under which sunburn is possible. New Phytologist, 2010;

    • @TheSkillotron
      @TheSkillotron Před 3 lety +20

      "In sunshine, water drops residing on smooth, hairless plant leaves are unlikely to damage the underlying leaf tissue, while water drops held above leaves by plant hairs can indeed cause sunburn, if their focal regions fall on to the leaf blade."
      So for many garden plants like peppers that have smooth leaves, they found that water droplets can not cause sunburn, but plants with hydrophobic hairy leaves that can elevate drops of water above the surface may cause sunburn under some conditions. Overall I think the danger of sunburn caused by water droplets is often overstated based on those findings, but it is definitely possible for some plants.

    • @hasenafarms6448
      @hasenafarms6448 Před 3 lety +1

      @@TheSkillotron Thats very interesting.

    • @sazji
      @sazji Před 3 lety +14

      @@TheSkillotron Exactly. For all the talk of water causing burns, I’ve never seen it happen. If it were really an issue, we would see plants getting burned when the sun came out after a sudden rain shower. It doesn’t happen.

    • @bartmol05
      @bartmol05 Před 3 lety +4

      @@TheSkillotron And ofcourse that there are more ways to burn leaves by osmotic dehydration.
      I think watering on the leaves gives more problems with disease and is inefficient than that sunburn is a real problem

    • @MIgardener
      @MIgardener  Před 3 lety +12

      @@sazji it “doesn’t” happen? Shocking. I didn’t say it happened all the time. I said it could happen. Notice how I leave room for both scenarios to be true? I am letting people know the possibility of an outcome that may be damaging to their plants. It wasn’t the standalone reason, it was part of a long list of reasons. I think the criticism is highly unwarranted.

  • @donrocktheimposter912
    @donrocktheimposter912 Před 3 lety +100

    Also, that water in your hose just may SCALD your plants, IF it's been out in the sun all day, even if the sun isn't out when you water. Check the temp of that water and let it flow until it's cool enough!

    • @bamasteus
      @bamasteus Před 3 lety +4

      Thats probably the most important. Im sure watering whenever is fine(not midday) just gotta check for the hose water temp. Somedays youd think boiling water is running through it if you dont just let it run for a few minutes to cool the hose down.

    • @shirleyk623
      @shirleyk623 Před 3 lety +7

      @@bamasteus I have several empty gallon milk jugs that I use to put the hot hose water in. When the hose water is cool then I use it to water my plants. Personally I water my plants when they are wimpy and wilted. I'm in Florida and I have never boiled my plants roots. I've been gardening for over 40 years here in the same area.
      I use those milk jugs of water to mix liquid fertilizer in after the water has cooled off. Sometimes advice should be given to gardeners by regions.

    • @Ohsnapski
      @Ohsnapski Před 3 lety

      Made this mistake one time while using drip tape lines....bursted my cheap little eBay version cause the plastic wasn’t rated to that temperature 😂😅

    • @ponolovefarms3926
      @ponolovefarms3926 Před 3 lety +1

      I call it burping the hose

    • @GuitarsAndSynths
      @GuitarsAndSynths Před 3 měsíci

      yup that is what I have to do is let it cool off before watering plants

  • @hasenafarms6448
    @hasenafarms6448 Před 3 lety +54

    Can’t say I completely agree with this. There’s farmers in the southwest overhead watering crops at noon in the summer to cool them down. But I love discussing it!

    • @carlaw2661
      @carlaw2661 Před 3 lety +3

      Thank you for sharing this information!! I appreciate your help. 🌼

    • @stevehatcher7700
      @stevehatcher7700 Před 3 lety +7

      for crops like lettuce this is a good practice. You water the plants, not the soil, to cool them down and help prevent the lettuce plants from bolting to flower. Just a light to moderate overhead watering, enough to get the leaves wet but not soaking the soil. Initial watering cools things down and the heat transfer from slowly evaporating that wetness continues to keep them cooler.

    • @MIgardener
      @MIgardener  Před 3 lety +14

      They have to continually mist them. Overhead misting is highly effective but on large scale with infrastructure. Good points though!

    • @Soilfoodwebwarrior
      @Soilfoodwebwarrior Před 3 lety +11

      Ya this is not correct. In hot dry climates plants benefit from a mid day watering on extremely hot days. Just make sure the water is not hot

    • @jtharp9265
      @jtharp9265 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Soilfoodwebwarrior thank u , I've been watering early morning an after dark .I live in Montgomery County, Texas a good 95 miles north / west of Galveston, a good 69 miles from Houston. Country ...we have had weird weather compared to the past ...lower Temps & almost all of June July , we had ran .now the heat 🔥is up & humidity is has been at 98% , just bought 2 peach 🍑 trees an 2 blackberry 2 blueberry bushes ,I unboxed them put in screen room they told me to get use to our weather an gives us time to dig & prepare ..those r for our 19yr old Daughter
      April Ann Ulrich who was k infront of us .
      I have found gardening is therapeutic but doesn't an won't ever take our pain away ...
      Thank u 4 any help about my trees ,bushes ...Josette Tharp

  • @BaroneTripcom
    @BaroneTripcom Před 3 lety +4

    I have listened to you guys who said to wait till morning to water my plants, and I watched my plants wilt. This year I tried watering when the plants need water, and many times that is during the day. The results: This has been my best year ever by far. I have not seen any of the issues you have pointed out.

  • @thomasullom9286
    @thomasullom9286 Před 3 lety +41

    My issue is that I have to be at work at 6am, which means getting on the road by 5:30. So unless I wanna stand out in my garden at 4:30 in the morning, I water when I get home in the early evening, about 5pm. I use a wand, so I’m not getting the leaves wet. It’s the best I can do, and seems to be doing ok.

    • @glenbarham797
      @glenbarham797 Před 3 lety +7

      I am in the same situation. I use almost all rain water. I do the same and keep it off the leaves. I have been doing it this way for over 25 years and will change when i retire.

    • @deanadewall8400
      @deanadewall8400 Před 3 lety +1

      I'm retired and live in Baja. I'm not a morning person, so I just water around 6 or 7pm. The nights here are really warm, so don't have to worry about getting water on the leaves. Works for me too.

    • @ecoanny
      @ecoanny Před 3 lety +2

      Same here and I don't notice any ill effects. On really hot days when everything is dry and wilting it is nice to see things perk back up.

    • @Patriotsoul
      @Patriotsoul Před 3 lety

      I just posted almost the exact thing lol. I’m not getting up at 03:30 to water.

    • @michaelmarvel9971
      @michaelmarvel9971 Před 3 lety +3

      I wrapped soaker hoses around the plants when I first put them in. Attached a timer. Turn it off if I’m expecting rain.

  • @doctorhousemd566
    @doctorhousemd566 Před 3 lety +42

    Happy gardening this fourth of july everyone!

    • @davedavey250
      @davedavey250 Před měsícem

      Hey it's the fourth of july three years later.

  • @thomaslee946
    @thomaslee946 Před 3 lety +9

    This is my first garden in about 20 years after living in Colorado. I usually water I'm the am, but have found in the south that if I lightly water around 5pm it is usually enough time for the soil to dry. I forget some mornings before work as we have 2 kids.

  • @Patriotsoul
    @Patriotsoul Před 3 lety +11

    I’m at work by 06:00. I’ve been watering in the evening for years and everything seems to be fine on my garden. I’m sure it might be better if I woke up an hour early at 03:30 or install a self watering drip system but I’m going to be honest with myself and I’m not going to do either. Watering the garden when we get off work is relaxing and a way to reduce stress. I’ll stick with the evening until I get a 8-5 job.

  • @eriatarka1983
    @eriatarka1983 Před 3 lety +43

    Watering in the evening works just fine, as long as you water at the base of the plants instead of spraying water all over the foliage like an insane person.

    • @grossliz1995
      @grossliz1995 Před 3 lety +8

      That insane person would be my bf. 😂😂😂😭

    • @katherineelloitt6101
      @katherineelloitt6101 Před 3 lety

      if you water the leaves in it helps pollination of the flower because the bugs get in it get wet and it sticks to them and also it helps the other flower

    • @lgtbtgaming6331
      @lgtbtgaming6331 Před 3 lety +1

      It's going to depend a lot on what you're watering.
      I have several beds of peas with lettuce beneath. Both like a lot of water and wet feet.
      Photosynthesis stops at a certain temperature.
      Cooling them down mid-day will turn that solar energy in to super-productivity, instead of killing the plant through dryness and heat.
      Plants sweat, too. But also take in water through the foliage.
      We just had record all-time high temperatures, abover 40C. The lettuce shouldn't even be alive, never mind growing faster than ever.

    • @AdaptiveReasoning
      @AdaptiveReasoning Před 3 lety +1

      If you live in a monster slug area do not water at night. You're just pulling out the red carpet for them.

  • @ingriddalzen6753
    @ingriddalzen6753 Před měsícem

    You have been my favorite and most informative person. And you speak very well and thank you for your researching.

  • @MissCharliechop
    @MissCharliechop Před 3 lety +9

    Its been 105° average in my area the last 2 weeks. Thanks so much for talking about this.

  • @ms.l643
    @ms.l643 Před 3 lety +3

    Plants are just like us. They love cool water on their leaves in the heat of the day. The water evaporates very quickly. I've never observed burns resulting from watering in the sun (in Florida no less). If you have to water in the middle of the day, water all parts thoroughly with cool water. Take the opportunity to cool down the whole plant. Finally, I do believe it's ideal to water in the morning. This curtails a lot of wilting and stress come mid day.

  • @rociosilverroot2261
    @rociosilverroot2261 Před 3 lety +144

    This is great advice, but let's face it. Most of the people out there are doing good if they water at all 😆

    • @Daddyo_farms
      @Daddyo_farms Před 3 lety +2

      Exactly why I bought a timer lol

    • @rociosilverroot2261
      @rociosilverroot2261 Před 3 lety +6

      @@gloworm6387 Or have a disclaimer: Local conditions govern! I have containers that will have to get watered 2x a day if it's extremely hot or sunny.

    • @Juanrivers2022
      @Juanrivers2022 Před 3 lety +3

      I cant even water in the morning I work early so I have to water the plants like at 4 or 5 pm

    • @sueweathers3978
      @sueweathers3978 Před 3 lety +1

      @@rociosilverroot2261I agree! We're in a major heat blast in the Pacific NW, even on the east side of the state. I water early mornings and again at night as we've been over 100 for a week now. At night I make sure none gets on the leaves tho, and the sun's been off the compost for several hours.. Don't think it's hot water going to the roots.. As I flood the containers! Ha

    • @gregorysnider448
      @gregorysnider448 Před 3 lety +7

      @@gloworm6387 he cannot cover every region of our country and still feed his family. Do some of your own research.

  • @mdlcrochet
    @mdlcrochet Před 3 lety +6

    I live in the texas panhandle, when it gets over 95 outside i do give my plants a mid day drink. Now i have mulch down which protects the ground from heating up and i use a soaker right at the plant roots and never water on the plants. They seem do love it when i do that for them when we are in heat waves. Recently we arent in a heat wave, heck temps barely get to 80 right now which is odd for my area and we have also had a lot and i mean a lot of rain and i havent watered my garden in almost a week due to the amount of rain. But anyways thats what i do and my plants love the mid day drink when we are 95 or above.

    • @judycee9263
      @judycee9263 Před 3 lety +1

      I think all of that famous TX heat is up in Oregon and Canada right now. It's been a crazy weather year. Indiana has been soggy and HUMID.

  • @charliensam
    @charliensam Před 3 lety +3

    Luke, THANK YOU so much for the YT50 seed sale the other day. I have already received my order and can't wait to get some of the flower seeds in the garden this weekend. As usual, the seeds and service at MI Gardener is excellent. Please let your staff know their hard work and dedication to our gardens is greatly appreciated. :)

    • @judycee9263
      @judycee9263 Před 3 lety +1

      I got my order too and will be finding places for some this weekend. That was an awesome sale!

  • @deniseanzaldi5316
    @deniseanzaldi5316 Před 3 lety +2

    I’m a new gardener and live on Long Island.. it’s been very hot this week and when I get home from work around 2.. my tomato plants are totally wilting. I’ve been misting the plant leaves and watering below in their containers and the perk right up in an hour. There is a lot of conflicting advice out there. I just want to enjoy the fruits of my labor and praying I get to enjoy some tomatoes 🍅 🙏🙏

  • @geraldlair2888
    @geraldlair2888 Před 3 lety +46

    I disagree about not watering at night if on drip irrigation. My plants NEVER get wet as all my emitters direct water to the base of the plants. I feel watering in the evening allows for a more deep watering as it has a chance to soak in deep over night with less evaporation then watering in the morning. Now if you are hand watering and wetting down your plants in the process (which you should never be wetting down the entire plant except for maybe washing off insects or foliar feeding), watering in the morning might be best for you.

    • @michaela.754
      @michaela.754 Před 3 lety +4

      I agree with this. As a person who lives in the desert.

    • @Nan-Elle
      @Nan-Elle Před 3 lety +4

      Two nights in this past week here in MA, we've had rain all night. Not much I can do about that.

    • @mdlcrochet
      @mdlcrochet Před 3 lety +4

      I water twice a day unless it rains. At 8am and 8pm and if the temp is above 95, texas panhandle, i water. I use soaker hoses and water for 10 minutes at 8am and 8pm and again if the temp is above 95 they get a 3 min drink and man my garden is flourishing.

    • @sueweathers3978
      @sueweathers3978 Před 3 lety +1

      @@mdlcrochet we did that too, only deeply, while living in Albuquerque.. I've never had such great tasting tomatoes and melons!!!

    • @GrowHealthTV
      @GrowHealthTV Před 3 lety +2

      I too always water the soil of my garden before sunset, but do not soak the leaves of the plants. The water is cool rainwater. Never do I have a mold problem. I grow in a humid zone 7.

  • @piapadmore430
    @piapadmore430 Před 3 lety +1

    What an education I get listening to you! So happy I found you today! 🙏🏻🦋🍃

  • @TristansMom10
    @TristansMom10 Před 3 lety +3

    I just wanted to say this is my 3rd year container gardening and your videos have been so helpful! I also purchased many seeds from you. Hopefully I can grow some from seed in the fall and next season. I was nervous to try this year and grabbed some seedlings this year. Thank you for all of the information you share for new gardeners like myself.

  • @michaelfalso3380
    @michaelfalso3380 Před 3 lety +2

    Good video!! I try to water before 9 or 10 am but sometimes life happens.
    Water is actually NOT a good conductor of heat. That's why it takes so much energy and time to bring water to a boil.

  • @John-ob8vm
    @John-ob8vm Před 3 lety +23

    I have to disagree with both plant roots getting too warm when irrigated on hot days, and with water on the leaves causing sunburn. I work on a vegetable farm and we have been overhead irrigating on 90F and sunny days with no issues. Cool well water will objectively cool down the leaves and soil, and the water almost always will evaporate fast enough so that lensing on the leaf will not happen.
    Leaf scorching from water on the leaves is something I see people claiming all the time online because they're repeating advice they've heard, but I just don't see it in real life. Maybe you could try an experiment with your garden, Luke?

    • @starchild1198
      @starchild1198 Před 3 lety +2

      Yeah many of these are MYTHS he has picked up. I water in the heat. Never any issues .

  • @sevendeadlychins
    @sevendeadlychins Před 3 lety +38

    The best time to water is when it’s dry.

  • @practicalgardening4631
    @practicalgardening4631 Před 3 lety +7

    I’ve seen tons of counter evidence personally and scientific journal papers vs the water during the day burns the plants thing. I don’t disagree that it’s better water off hours but it’s not for that reason and if you have cool season crops in a warm zone. Day misting / watering can keep you going

  • @xBwahx
    @xBwahx Před 3 lety +3

    I guess this is recommended for best/optimal results. When I think about the fact that most of these vegetables grow in the wild without a regimented watering/irrigation system, but by relying on chance rainfall, it kind of makes me not worry about the specifics too much. Not saying to just totally neglect plant care, because obviously it also depends on your climate, but I start to not fret so much about not keeping a hard schedule.

  • @paulnchrissy4
    @paulnchrissy4 Před 3 lety +1

    Got my seeds yesterday!! So excited for planting through the garden in our next seasons 💕🍅🪴🍓

  • @Omovalley914
    @Omovalley914 Před 2 měsíci

    Thanks for the great advice!!

  • @iveo83
    @iveo83 Před 3 lety +3

    that's so crazy that that water would heat up if the soil is hot. I would think if you water it enough (deep) it would cool the soil down. I learn so much!

    • @sueweathers3978
      @sueweathers3978 Před 3 lety +1

      We water deeply, in the heat, on very black compost. The plants are surviving much better. I think if you live where the humidity is high, you need to follow his advice, but for those in super arid areas with hot evenings, we can get away with night waterings.. And the plants have all night to soak it up!

  • @aidanho1804
    @aidanho1804 Před 3 lety +2

    Ohh very helpful information!!!

  • @anumicorn1238
    @anumicorn1238 Před 3 lety +1

    I'm really glad you included wet leaf burn from the sun. I remember getting yelled at for not cutting off the lawn sprinkler on the Japanese Maples when the sun began to hit them! The leaves looked so sad & scorched until I learned better 😉

  • @GuitarsAndSynths
    @GuitarsAndSynths Před 3 měsíci

    I use straw mulch in containers that retain moisture makes life easier so can water in morning and later afternoon in summer. I usually water later afternoon if plant are dry from morning watering since does not get dark until 9pm.

  • @claressadubs
    @claressadubs Před 2 lety

    This was so informative! I've been watering my garden in the evening and my plants have really been struggling, so this was really helpful!

  • @GrowHealthTV
    @GrowHealthTV Před 3 lety +1

    Hi Luke. I always water the soil of my garden before sunset, but do not soak the leaves of the plants. The water is cool rainwater. Never do I have a mold problem. I grow in a humid zone 7, but have lots of sun and hot conditions (usually) during the summer months.

  • @nazfan01
    @nazfan01 Před 3 lety +3

    Concerning slugs / snails, Here is a trick that I use that has been working well:
    My garden consists of raised beds. First and foremost I have mulch throughout my garden area. My raised beds have mulch as well. The main purpose of doing this is that slug / snails hate rogh or sharp objects. However, even though I have mulch in my garden, I still crush eggshells to almost a fine powder but not too fine ( you want some sharp edges for those slugs/snails they hate so much) . I spread them around the lants that slugs / snails like, especially around pepper plants.
    I also have a trick to ward off moths, cucumber bettles, etc etc from all my plants. I use cayenne pappers extract and mix with water, usually
    4 to 8 Oz per one gallon of water and spray my plants. I pay close attention to the bottom sides of the leaves where insects like to hide and spray those areas well. I know someone will ask "Does it urt the platns?" - No it will not harm your plants spraying them with "hot sauce for insects" I have been doing this for quite a few years.
    It is easy to make your own Cayenne pepper mix:
    Use around 6 peppers, throw them in a blender and fill blender up with water.
    Chop the peppers as fine as you can.
    Get a large jar / container (depending how much water your blender holds) and place a filter over the top of the jar / container. A good filter to use would be a coffee filter for example. The filter will keep back any fine particles that you will not want in your sprayer.
    When ready to use, mix anywhere from 4 Oz to 8 Oz of the cayenne pepper per one gallon of water. Shake your sprayer well and spray.
    NOTE: You can start out with a 4 Oz mix of the pepper to see if it will work and is strong enough. If an insect even tries to take a nibble, they leave it alone. Simply keep an eye on your plants and if you begin to see insects again, spray again. For me, it depends on rain amounts but I am usually good for one to two weeks before needing to spray again.
    My garden is fenced off due to rabbits and deers. However, there is another benefits to the cayenne pepper sprays. I spary the outside of my fence area and it wards of raccoons, skunks, rabbits and deers. They hate the smell of hot peppers

  • @donnarichey144
    @donnarichey144 Před 3 lety

    I saw you were upset with people. I hope I didn't offend you sometimes I put a comment on here and I don't want to offend you. I am 78 yrs old and you remind me of my grandson. Love to watch you. Thanks for all you do.

  • @grouchyoldprepper8184
    @grouchyoldprepper8184 Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you for this. (The wife and I argue just about every year about best time to water.)

  • @jackiehorsley9263
    @jackiehorsley9263 Před 3 lety +6

    That's great Luke but it's been raining for the past week here in Oklahoma so I haven't had to water it all

  • @BrickTop06
    @BrickTop06 Před 3 lety +1

    I've got my watering down despite my approach changing several times in 30+ years of gardening. But sometimes the judgement calls baffle me, particularly when it comes to rain in the forecast. For example, we're in a heatwave (Mass) and I know I need to water this morning BUT it's supposed to rain this afternoon. I mulch my garden and have soaker hoses so my plants are consistently moist. But sometimes before or after rainfall I'm not sure if I should water or not as I'm very cautious about over watering. Thanks Luke, great channel!

  • @kbjerke
    @kbjerke Před 3 lety +3

    Common sense, but some people need to be *reminded* - repeatedly, in some cases! Thanks for the video!
    And Happy Fourth!!

    • @kevinsippeljr9984
      @kevinsippeljr9984 Před 3 lety +2

      Respectfully, this advice isn't common sense. It might be common knowledge among avid gardeners however.

  • @lisabrown5976
    @lisabrown5976 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for the clarification! My husband and I were discussing this last week.

  • @MarshaMarsha885
    @MarshaMarsha885 Před 3 lety +2

    My parents in Nebraska always have to water their huge garden and they water all day long When it rains it rains at any time. Can’t say I agree with this

    • @MIgardener
      @MIgardener  Před 3 lety

      They water all day long. So that’s the point. Most people water for 10-15 minutes and are done. It’s not an apples to apples comparison.

  • @FunnySurpriseToys
    @FunnySurpriseToys Před 3 lety +2

    Great sharing dear friend!🙂 Have a nice day!👍523

  • @pamflorus2884
    @pamflorus2884 Před 3 lety +1

    You are the best!!Great explanation of how and why. Thank you!

  • @markpnw8745
    @markpnw8745 Před 3 lety +4

    I use drip hose and a timer 15 minutes in the morning every day or so depending on area. I'm using a lot of mulch this year and what a difference.

  • @TheGardenFamily
    @TheGardenFamily Před 3 lety

    Thanks for all the informative videos. One thing you may want to correct is your comment about stomata. In most plants stomata are open during the DAY while photosynthesis is occurring and closed at NIGHT. There are exceptions to this in plants that are evolved in arid conditions (google CAM photosynthesis) but pretty much all the veggie plants we grow have stomata open during the day and closed at night.

  • @ted9654
    @ted9654 Před 3 lety

    Live and learn. Just watched this at 10pm, just after watering the garden.

  • @thesayn3ver
    @thesayn3ver Před 3 lety +6

    What happens when it naturally rains during the day do you ever see leaf burn from that. Of course you don't because water won't burn the leaves. If the sun and water droplets would burn the leaves it would do it year-round not just when it was hot. It's just not and efficient use of water applying water midday in the middle of the summer. Although some farmers will run their overhead irrigation for a few minutes midday and late afternoon as a squelch to cool down the crops. If this was the case there would be no crops growing in Florida.
    Golf courses also use the Method. It's called syringing.

  • @Maybe_Crazy05
    @Maybe_Crazy05 Před 3 lety +2

    Well I’ve been doing it all wrong 🤦‍♀️😭, I have always watered in the evening… I will stop doing that and start watering in the morning. Thank you for the video

  • @lavidamia9
    @lavidamia9 Před měsícem

    I started watering my plants anywhere 10am-11sm or later in the afternoon, like 4:00pm and my plants survived and thrived. I dont water them when its super hott because like you said, one year I did that with my flower pots and the leaves burn to crisp, they died , or became spotted. I also attempted at watering my zucchini plants in the hot days and watered the leaves versus just the roots and the meldew was a huge issue right after, I stopped doing that too.
    I over watered my chili pots and the leaves began to curl so stop over watering too. Just look at your plants and get a feel if the leaves are asking for water...then water them, with love and care.

  • @ramla5928
    @ramla5928 Před 3 měsíci

    I take two buses to get to work so I do a lot of walking. I’m very tired when I get home. I take two buses back home so I take a nap during the evening and I’m Muslim so I pray 5 times a day so in this summer I have to wake up at 4:00am to pray. I take the bus to work at 7:00am. I’ll start watering at 5:30am half an hour after morning prayer. That way I have at least 1 hour to water the plants and eat breakfast and catch the bus 💜💜💜💜💜
    Thx!

  • @JradIronman
    @JradIronman Před 3 lety

    Thank you Luke, I did learn from this video. I just installed an automatic drip system and now I know when to have it turn on

  • @veggiequeen2738
    @veggiequeen2738 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks to Mother Nature I haven’t had to water my garden at all this summer 😊🌱🍅

  • @michaelneumann2634
    @michaelneumann2634 Před 3 lety

    Last year I experimented with watering times and in my garden the plants loved being watered at 3am to 5am vs any other time.
    I tried watering at 9pm and had slugs everywhere. thanks for all your videos luke

  • @BrightestBlessings7899
    @BrightestBlessings7899 Před 3 lety +1

    Hey Hun, great video! Heads up on those cute white butterflies, they are probably Cabbage moths!
    We have had 102°F - 118.2°F, in the Canadian Mountains! Craziness!
    I have been watering at night , but our nights have not been cool. I have also been watering in early mornings too. And we have a passive drought protection, in most of our gardens.

    • @renea8724
      @renea8724 Před 3 lety

      I just saw some of those monsters in my garden. They are trying to eat everything 😫

  • @tammygreen9635
    @tammygreen9635 Před 3 lety

    Thank you for the advice! And thank you for taking the time to explain why! It makes so much sense!

  • @lolly2222aa
    @lolly2222aa Před 3 lety

    Excellent. Makes sense. Thank you

  • @CaroleHaddon
    @CaroleHaddon Před 3 lety +1

    Yup, boiled my eggplants last year!
    And yes, so much rain here in Flint, Mi!

    • @judycee9263
      @judycee9263 Před 3 lety

      Here too in northeast Indiana. My new rhubarb was practically floating, so I moved it to a raised bed. I don't think that I moved it in time though, because all of the leaves are brown. 😢

  • @simpleman806
    @simpleman806 Před 3 lety +1

    I try to water between 5 and 6am, sometimes earlier, sometimes later. Here lately in the texas panhandle, I haven't needed to water. I've only watered once in the past week. The cooler weather and rain has been nice

    • @Shanehudson27
      @Shanehudson27 Před 3 lety

      I'm in central, from east. This weather has been amazing!

  • @jamestboehm6450
    @jamestboehm6450 Před 3 lety

    As a container gardener I've found quart Gatorade bottles with a pinhole in the bottom water just fine after work. Forces deep roots and my plants don't mind damp feet at night. Most other problems are circumvented also. PS keep tomato leaves trimmed up the stem 10-12".

  • @sbrumfield95
    @sbrumfield95 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for the info.....I’ve been doing this all wrong.

  • @willitine
    @willitine Před 3 lety

    This is great to know. I sometimes water at night but now having second thoughts about that. Good pointers and advice.
    Thanks, Luke!

  • @VomitYou
    @VomitYou Před 3 lety +2

    I always water my potatoes at high noon. It's an easy way to boil them up. Have a nice bbq and let the kids dig up the cooked spuds.

    • @sueweathers3978
      @sueweathers3978 Před 3 lety +1

      That's a great idea!! Saves a lot of work! 🤣😂

  • @communityservicesnetworksd2370

    Very good video. Thank you.

  • @popandbob
    @popandbob Před 3 lety +1

    While I agree watering during the morning is best - watering at any time of day is better than no water at all. In the heatwave I am in at the moment and my poor soil (its a new garden) I’ve had to water 3-4x per day to prevent leaf loss or death due to drying out.
    Fortunately I live in a dry climate so no wet leaf issues (they dry in 15 min tops) and much to my surprise I haven’t had any leaf scorching due to the watering in full sun either.

  • @kat6084
    @kat6084 Před 3 lety

    we use soaker hoses & water at night- well, early evening like 7pm cuz we have the time to do it then. works for us & garden is flourishing.

    • @MIgardener
      @MIgardener  Před 3 lety

      Soaker hoses are good and don’t get leaves wet. So that doesn’t really apply to what I was talking about in this video which was overhead watering.

  • @darrinseelye2091
    @darrinseelye2091 Před 3 lety

    Great info you are putting out. I think you were spot on with everything, watering in the morning solves many issue. You should touch on feeding I'm very specific. I only feed at night old legends. Also I'm only growing in pots, so I could see how feeding at night could be completely different for a garden.

  • @jackbusby9602
    @jackbusby9602 Před 3 lety

    My brother had always been watering at night. He has been gardening much longer than I have and is usually more successful than I am. One evening I was at his house and he asked me to come talk to him while he watered. I had seen a similar video to this and told him about it. He grinned politely because he has always been better at practical things than I and always had more "common sense" than I have. But I could tell he couldn't dismiss our watering conversation.
    Later he called me and told me he had checked into when to water and that I was right. He waters in the mornings now.

  • @jodygrant1255
    @jodygrant1255 Před 3 lety

    I received my seeds from your store today. Thank you so much, God bless.

  • @thecyclingcouple4438
    @thecyclingcouple4438 Před 3 lety

    This is a great and very helpful video. Learned something today and thank you. I usually and always water in the evening cuz thats the only time I have but after watching this video, I will try to start watering my plants in the morning. I have lots of slugs and snails so i hope this will help. Thanks Bro for sharing your knowledge. 👍

  • @RBrownPs
    @RBrownPs Před 3 lety

    Yes! Good reminder, Good point. 🤔

  • @MissouriCrookedBarnHomestead

    I am glad you made a point of this. There is a very famous gardening channel out there that countered a point I made when he was watering in the heat of the day by saying it doesn't matter when you water, when it needs water. Watering during the heat of the day will kill your plants, especially when the sun is beating down on them. Experience is the best teacher sometimes.

  • @rachiez9068
    @rachiez9068 Před 3 lety +6

    I always thought that you could water in the late afternoon (after the heat ebbs) or early morning, but now I see morning is the clear winner!

    • @ecoanny
      @ecoanny Před 3 lety +1

      I water in the late afternoon and have no issues. It is the only time I can water so I figure some water is better than none.

  • @deborah820
    @deborah820 Před 3 lety

    I love your knowledge and truly appreciate you sharing it with us!!

  • @mushtaqahmad3129
    @mushtaqahmad3129 Před 3 lety

    Masha Allah very nice video and very interested God bless you

  • @chrisvanbrackle8537
    @chrisvanbrackle8537 Před 3 lety +14

    Water droplets acting like a magnifying glass is a huge myth. Otherwise, plants would be heavily damaged every time it rains. My skin doesn't burn when I get out of a pool or the ocean or if I sweat a lot.

    • @Jason608
      @Jason608 Před 3 lety +10

      Seriously, I have massive respect for MIGardener but he keeps repeating this myth. :/
      Also, it's easy to test the claim that watering hot soil will steam the roots to death. Stick your finger in the soil and then pour water on it. I haven't tested it over 100°F because it doesn't get that hot here, but 100% of the time the water feels cool to my fingers under the soil.

    • @sueweathers3978
      @sueweathers3978 Před 3 lety

      @@Jason608 I do notice that happening on big cabbage leaves unless we shake it off but not on other plants

    • @MIgardener
      @MIgardener  Před 3 lety +3

      Not true. Egri, A.; Horvath, A.; Kriska, G.; Horvath, G. Optics of sunlit water drops on leaves: conditions under which sunburn is possible. New Phytologist, 2010;

    • @Jason608
      @Jason608 Před 3 lety +8

      @@MIgardener Read your own source very carefully. They were able to sunburn leaves of hairy, hydrophobic leaves in a controlled experimental setting but there's a very important part in there you're ignoring: However, spheroid water drops (Fig. 4a) easily roll off highly hydrophobic leaves which are tilted or shaken by wind, practically eliminating the possibility of sunburn.

  • @wooohoo2
    @wooohoo2 Před 3 lety +3

    i wont have to water my garden for a while in Indiana..We had flooding rains and the ground is nice and soaked.If anything we need some sun!

    • @staceystrukel1917
      @staceystrukel1917 Před 3 lety +1

      Same here in Illinois! Our yards and gardens are a jungle!

    • @judycee9263
      @judycee9263 Před 3 lety

      I'm in Indiana too. I planted a new rhubarb and checked on it after a couple of days and it was practically floating. I moved it to a raised bed with drier soil, but too late I fear.

  • @rainepanda
    @rainepanda Před 2 lety

    It's so bright and hot here in texas and I have noticed sunburning on my younger plants so I definitely try to keep the water off the leaves. I should probably wake up early to beat the heat.

  • @bluestarrbeauty
    @bluestarrbeauty Před 3 lety

    Hope your garden is okay. Mine just got destroyed from a big storm with hail. That hail lasted like 20
    minutes! I'm across from Detroit in Canada.

  • @barnburner2475
    @barnburner2475 Před 3 lety

    Great information Luke. Thank you!

  • @ellia0david
    @ellia0david Před 3 lety

    Another great video from the MIgardener 🌱💧

  • @geaizee9204
    @geaizee9204 Před 3 lety

    Thank you for giving a time line of when to water. I kept hearing and seeing "early morning" so I kept thinking if it was after 6am it was too late.

  • @daveversion2.2
    @daveversion2.2 Před 3 lety +3

    110 w/15-25% humidity. I water with a wand frequently.

  • @LightTapStomp
    @LightTapStomp Před 3 lety +1

    Another cool video. I'm curious as to what effect some small solar lights in a garden would have as far as bug attracting.

  • @Juanrivers2022
    @Juanrivers2022 Před 3 lety +1

    Its hard for people that can't water early morning if they have jobs that early like city folk but for homesteaders it might work. I cant do it in the morning

  • @kermitefrog64
    @kermitefrog64 Před 3 lety

    Rain! What rain? We live in the South end of the San Joaquin Valley but your information is good to know. We have had repeated days of over 100 F and no rain to speak of since late April.

  • @junidhaniff6360
    @junidhaniff6360 Před 2 lety

    Great video..grow BIG

  • @BrilliantLove2
    @BrilliantLove2 Před 3 lety

    I just watered my garden and tomatoes at 9:30 pm, 🤦🏼‍♀️ wish I would have seen this sooner…oh well, now I know, thank you!!!

  • @johnnyelectric4844
    @johnnyelectric4844 Před 3 lety

    Mulch !! i mulch with straw and wood chips the wood chips seem to work the best for me ! i can soak the soil without the mud splashing , and my soil stays moist far longer and my soil temps are far more consistent through the day and night

  • @thetommantom
    @thetommantom Před 3 lety

    You can water mid day as long as the soil is absorbent enough and if you water enough I usually flood it twice wait an hour or so and flood it twice again the droplets on the leaves are actually the opposite of magnifying glass sometimes I'll spray the edges a tiny bit to purposely burn grass

  • @thetommantom
    @thetommantom Před 3 lety

    I usually add to the rain sometimes its only cloudy and barely rains

  • @pierreshasta1480
    @pierreshasta1480 Před 3 lety +10

    You're right, the best time to water your plants is in the morning. According to scientific articles published on “researchgate”, the time when plants absorb the most nutrients is in the morning (between 6 and 11 am.).

    • @Eddi3Pwns
      @Eddi3Pwns Před 3 lety +3

      From what I've read evening time, a few hours before sunset, is best since plants grow and repair themselves at night. The few hours before allows any water droplets to evaporate before nighttime comes, and allows more time for water to remain and go deeper into the soil.

    • @pierreshasta1480
      @pierreshasta1480 Před 3 lety

      @@Eddi3Pwns In fact, the best way to irrigate plants, is to use a drip that will water them several times (4 to 5 times) a day (morning, afternoon, evening) to keep the soil moist and fresh all day. Plants don't like to receive water all at once, so drip irrigation is the best solution for watering, but not everyone can use it, so as a compromise, morning is still the most acceptable solution.

    • @Eddi3Pwns
      @Eddi3Pwns Před 3 lety

      @@pierreshasta1480 I'm not sure about that, that sounds like the soil would be too wet constantly, and shallow watering wouldn't promote good root growth. Plants should slightly dry out between waterings too so their roots don't drown and produce one type of root.
      With a good drip and garden setup, they're designed to save water, at that point though I guess it doesn't really matter when if a nice mulch layer is in place.

    • @pierreshasta1480
      @pierreshasta1480 Před 3 lety +2

      @@Eddi3Pwns Irrigate several times a day, this is the conclusion of several scientific studies, which show that the results are much better by proceeding in this way, it also avoids the water stress.
      Of course, it also depends on the climate you have (sometimes mulching is not enough) or what you are growing, you will not irrigate a young tree or a lettuce in the same way.
      If we take the example of strawberry plants, their roots are not very deep, they like to have a cool soil and a humid atmosphere all the time, because it is a plant that grows naturally in the woods. A drip irrigation several times a day in addition to a mulching is beneficial especially when the weather is hot. We can of course obtain good results by doing otherwise, but here I am talking about the optimal way.

  • @dutchleussink156
    @dutchleussink156 Před 2 lety

    Thank You Sir 👍

  • @susanjordan2130
    @susanjordan2130 Před 3 lety

    Thank you. I needed to hear this.

  • @thirionj
    @thirionj Před 3 lety

    Soaker grid on a timer set to about an hour prior to sunlight. If the soil is drying out below a couple inches for more than a couple days I switch to every 12 hours.

  • @lindapetersen1800
    @lindapetersen1800 Před 3 lety

    Luke more or less water on the ground a drip line have it go on a morning drip like 6 am !!! Lost out on walking for 1 month so garden is just getting put in there. Got the cabbage plants in different pots but just got some tomato plants put into pots!!! got cucumbers and zucchine growing and going around the garden so I think it is doing it's own !!!

  • @dorothyalai2671
    @dorothyalai2671 Před 3 lety +1

    Tell me about it. In the west part of Canada it hasn’t dropped below 30 degrees centigrade for over a week.

  • @daniele.f.2963
    @daniele.f.2963 Před 3 lety

    Thanks, great and needed advice.

  • @rezyness
    @rezyness Před 3 lety

    Ideally morning is probably best but I don't always have time due to work

  • @foreveronamission
    @foreveronamission Před 3 lety

    Wow! What great info! I love how you give a detailed explanation of why to do things a certain way. I always wanna know the why before I'm convinced of anything 🤣 Btw 85 sounds refreshing. We're having highs over 100 pretty regularly lately here in North Dakota. AND hardly any rain, so I'm having to water our garden all the time 🙄

    • @MetalSqueak05
      @MetalSqueak05 Před 3 lety

      That's what I'm saying!!! A nice dry 80 degrees sounds sooo good right now. I'm down in nature's sauna, aka Florida, sitting at 96% humidity with thunderstorms every afternoon. Luckily the temps are reasonable but man the humidity is killer!

  • @matthewkheyfets1309
    @matthewkheyfets1309 Před 3 lety +3

    I don't exactly agree if you're growing plants in pots. In pots, the soil tends to dry up way faster so if you growing something and it starts wilting, like you have no choice but to water. Also, I've watered in the middle of the day before and haven't gotten burns. So idk about that part.

  • @raymondkyruana118
    @raymondkyruana118 Před 3 lety

    This is the video that I needed!!!! Thanks