Posted by Todd Hagenbuch, Routt County Extension
As I closed my website
search engine the other day, a pop-up read, “Click Here to see what you can grow in your area!” It came from a
reputable, long-time purveyor of seeds and plants so I thought, “I wonder what
they think I can grow in Routt County?” I clicked on the link and was fascinated
by the results.
Immediately I was taken to a site that said, “Top
plants for your zone” and “Phippsburg, Colorado is in zone 5a.” 5a is a USDA
hardiness zone. Hmmm…my faith in the
company was fading.
As a brief reminder, USDA hardiness zones are
based on the average extreme minimum temperature an area will see in the winter
months. The numbers are designed to help gardeners determine what perennials
will survive the winter, which is not
necessarily the same as what will grow in
the summer in your neighborhood.
Another concern is the zone it had us pegged
for. Zone 5a has an average extreme minimum temperature range of -20 to -15. While
some areas of Routt County are in this zone, Phippsburg is in zone 4b. But I went
on, wanting to see what plants the company recommended.
Many of the plants recommended for zone 5a were appealing. Spinach and summer squash are great choices. But the next items, including popping corn and Fuji apples? We simply don’t get enough growing degree units (or heat) to grow them well here.Some of the items recommended for Phippsburg
(identifying characteristics removed to protect the guilty)
Every plant needs a certain amount of Growing
Degree Units to move from one phenological stage to the next. As you can
imagine, our mountain valley does not accumulate many growing degree units in
our short season. Plants like spinach don’t need many units, and does well
here; popping corn, however, needs heat and would not produce well here at all.
In fact, the notes about it on the site indicate it needs a minimum of 105 days
to mature, many more than our average 59-day growing season.
My biggest concern about this list is that most
of the plants listed as ‘popular’ in my area were annuals. Since USDA Hardiness
Zones are all about how likely perennials are to survive the winter, there was
no connection between the annuals the site is selling and USDA zones. More than
that, it confuses the issue of winter hardiness vs. growing season.
Sites like these are why I regularly get calls from
people wanting to know what variety of apples, apricots or even peaches will
grow here. Even if the plants are going to survive the winter months, that does
not mean they will produce here. You can probably plant a zone 4 apple tree and
expect it to live here; just don’t expect it to be a big fruit producer.
As for garden company catalogs and websites, use them as a guide but do your research before you order. Know what will thrive in your location, not just survive. You’ll be a happier gardener and save a lot of money in the long-run, too.
Thank you, Todd, for the Hardiness info. As a newbie gardener it opened my eyes Really Wide! As an added bonus, could you list some resources for the "thriving" part since the Hardiness map takes care of the "surviving" part???
ReplyDeleteFollowing. I was thinking the same thing about which ones do thrive..
DeleteThanks for the great info on Growing Degree Units. I like to grow from seeds & have found the 'days to maturity' info inadequate. Where can we learn more about this topic and plant- specific requirements?
ReplyDeleteNice article! The other thing I've learned (the hard way) is that plants marked Full Sun do not need full Colorado sun! Especially July sun. A little bit of shade can go a long way even for plants that don't normally need it. I tend to test things out in different spots to see what a plant really likes here.
ReplyDelete