Not intending to hijack this thread, but I have a question about recovering, heat- and water-stressed plants. Okay, assume:
- It's been hotter than Hades, the plants wilt daily, then perk back up in the evening, the existing flowers drop, and torrential rains arrive at least twice a week, but I've kept my plants alive, What steps should I take to restore them to tip-top shape and back to flowering and producing fruit like gangbusters? They really don't need any more moisture, but would they benefit from an extra shot of a liquid nitrogen-heavy fertilizer, given the late point in the growing season, to kick-start the flowering process once it cools down? Or let nature take its course.
- Assuming the answer to the above is let nature takes its course, will I be hurting my plants if I do choose to kick-start pod production?
Just prior to the current trend of raining 2" every other day, I had fed the plants a liquid balanced meal (the first feeding since planting with worm castings and 10-7-7 Marine Cuisine), but that night, it rained 1.5", along with another nearly 1" the next day. Has that meal been washed down the pipes and should I repeat the feeding, or could it still actually be doing the plants some good?
Thanks for any insight into how to handle keeping plants healthy in the new normal
weather patterns.