Should you bring your mum in if it drops to freezeing ?
Related Discussions
GNATS - How to get rid of them?
Somehow my house and garden got tiny gnats that killed my fuchsia plant and fly everywhere. I have tried ALL the Web recommendations - soap and oil dishes, sand in th... See more
Marigolds growing! Should I pinch the buds?
My marigold plants are growing. I heard that pinching the buds until Autumn will allow them to grow without killing the plant. Is this true?
Growing garlic
Growing our first garlic, should we wait until the leaves are drying out before we pick it? Husband picked first one today along with our first potatoes.
How to keep mice out of your garden?
Hi everyone, I have mice in my garden destroying my vegetables and I have also noticed them in the barn and shed. Please can someone tell me how to prevent them from ... See more
What's the best flower/plant to grow in Texas?
I know that opinions vary, but what's your opinion?!I have great luck w Rosemary plants. Green all year long.
Squash Plants Large and Healthy and no Squash Growing?
2nd Season in a ROW! Squash plants growing large and healthy leaves and the stems near the roots are looking healthy and turning dark green, getting flowers that grow... See more
Trail of dead grass mystery?
Trail of dead grass appeared two weeks ago that starts in neighbor's yard and goes to the sidewalk, then continues past the sidewalk in a line into the grass into my ... See more
In general, mums are hardy zones 5 through 9. The lowest minimum temperatures mums can survive are around 20 degrees below zero Fahrenheit so they should be okay.
probably safer to do so...if it is smallish, or if large, spray with water to melt off the frost..the dew turns to frost..before the sun hits it..that is what kills plants, the rays of the sun on the frost ...I save many a tomato plant in September doing this..course, it means having to get up real early in the morning..
Could not resist answering this. I thought it was a joke, and my reply was " Yes if you love her"🤣🤣🤣 we can all learn something new on this board.
Mums are really outdoor perennials and honestly the sooner you get them in the ground the better chance they will root well and be able to survive winter months and come back another season. Once they die back you cut off the stems leaving about 1"; new will come again next spring. When 8" tall or so, trim back 2x's at least before Sept. for a more compact flowering.
Yes you can go on and plant the mum in the ground. .it will come back each year. .don't wait until the ground gets to hard. . It will be to hard to dig a hole. .
Yes. But, unless you have some hybrid variety, they're not perennials and won't usually grow back in spring. Although there have been cases where that has happened. Mine grew back two years in a row, so far. But they were unusually mild winters here in the northeast. Good luck!
I have grown these in Zone 6 South Eastern ,PA and still have them growing, The places you buy these will not state them as perennials for reasons?
What I do is in the winter when they all turn brown I cut the bush down to about 3" above ground and cover them with leaves or what ever you wish to use and then in the spring check them for new growth then uncover them and when the start growing up to about 6 to 8 " I will trim all around the whole head of plant and then every 6"or less keep trimming all the way till about some time in July or near the end what this does is send out more branches and make a bigger plant and more flowers when it time for the flowering in September. I also make a multi color plant out of the cuts from different Mums.