Community Corner
Frost Danger Passes In Farmington Area, Making Gardening Safe
See the average date of the final spring freeze in the Farmington area, and when to start planting the most popular items for the garden.
FARMINGTON-FARMINGTON HILLS, MI ā Inflation, the rising cost of food and the nutritional benefits of homegrown produce have cultivated a new crop of home gardeners in the Farmington area.
Whether youāre a first-time or experienced gardener, one of the most important dates you need to know as you think about your garden this spring is:
When does the danger of frost pass in the Farmington area? Itās May 6, according to The Old Farmerās Almanac, which offers a ZIP code tool to help gardeners figure out when to plant what.
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The growing season is 154 days long in the Farmington area. Looking ahead to fall, the first frost usually occurs around Oct. 8.
According to the publication, thereās a 30 percent probability of a frost occurring after May 6, as the date is determined using National Oceanic and Atmospheric historical data from 1981-2010, and is not āset in stone,ā The Old Farmerās Almanac said.
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May 6 represents the average date of the final ālight freeze,ā which occurs when the temperature dips between 29 and 32 degrees Fahrenheit. At that temperature, tender plants can be killed.
A āmoderate freeze,ā between 25 and 28 degrees, is destructive to most plants; and a āsevere freeze,ā at anything under 24 degrees, can do heavy damage to most garden plants, according to the almanac.
As the pandemicās third gardening season gets underway in the Farmington area, The Old Farmer's Almanac has another tool to help gardeners decide when to plant which crops.
In the Farmington area, itās usually best to start planting corn on May 6-20, potatoes on April 29-May 30 and spinach on March 25-April 15.
Hereās a look at other crops, and when the Old Farmerās Almanac says to begin planting them in the Farmington area.
Even before the pandemic, mental health experts pointed to gardening as a way to deal with stress.
Gardening provides physical exercise and promotes healthier eating, but it can also reduce worry among people who consider themselves perfectionists, psychologist Seth Gillihan said.
āGiven the lack of control we have, gardening can be a good antidote for perfectionism,ā Gillihan wrote in a 2019 Psychology Today blog. āNo matter how carefully you plan and execute your garden, there are countless factors you can't predict ā invasions by bugs, inclement weather, hungry rodents.ā
With so many things out of their control, perfectionism is a waste of time, he said, so gardeners may ask themselves āwhy botherā trying to be perfect.
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