Beyond the Garden Basics

All About Basil

31 min · 1. maj 2026
episode All About Basil cover

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In this episode, we discuss the essentials of basil cultivation, highlighting the basil basics for home gardens. We cover basil soil preparation, planting, timing, and a few of the various flavorful basil varieties such as Sweet, Thai, and cinnamon basil. We include basil care tips such as watering, fertilization, and pest management. Special guest Rose Loveall-Sale from Morningsun Herb Farm [https://morningsunherbfarm.com] shares her knowledge about basil’s cultural significance and culinary uses, as well as sharing her vast knowledge of even more basil varieties. Her audio was taken from her how-to basil video on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7iIWJnXVSRc] , because this week she was busy getting ready for Morningsun Herb Farm’s annual open house day [https://morningsunherbfarm.com/pages/open-house-2026], on Saturday, May 2, an event that features speakers, vendors, crafts, demonstrations, and informational booths (including the Solano County Master Gardeners) at the nursery outside Vacaville, in the San Francisco Bay Area. More links and pictures about basil in today’s podcast transcript! ALL ABOUT BASIL - THE PODCAST TRANSCRIPT Farmer Fred: [0:00] If there’s one herb that practically begs to be grown at home, it has to be basil. The good news? It’s not fussy at all. It just wants what most of us really want. Warm weather, plenty of sunshine, and a good drink of water every now and then. Basil is happiest in fertile, well-drained soil that has lots of organic matter. Most garden soils, though, work just fine. But before you plant anything, it’s always worthwhile doing a quick soil test so you know exactly what you’re working with. Farmer Fred: [0:30] If the soil needs a nutrient boost, work your fertilizer into the top six inches. If you’re going the compost route, spread no more than one inch of well-composted material per 100 square feet. A little goes a long way here. The golden rule with basil is wait until after the last frost before planting. Cold soil is the enemy. If you’re starting from seed, basil germinates best when soil temps are between 75 and 85 degrees Fahrenheit, and you can expect the little sprouts to pop up in about 10 to 14 days. If you’re starting with transplants, we’ll give them about four to six weeks to size up and aim for a mid to late May planting. You want to sow seeds about one eighth of an inch deep. That’s barely covering the seed with perhaps some vermiculite. Cover it lightly and keep the soil consistently moist. Then, once your seedlings emerge, thin them to three to four inches apart. Then gradually work toward a final spacing of about 12 inches. Farmer Fred: [1:32] Hey, and don’t throw away what you thin out. Those little guys can be transplanted elsewhere or even tossed into your dinner salad. One tip worth remembering, basil grown in full sun develops more essential oils, and that means richer, more complex flavor. Shade-grown basil? It just isn’t the same, really. So the age-old question is, well, how much basil should I plant? Over a whole season, plan on 5 to 10 plants per person for fresh use, and maybe another 5 to 10 plants if you want to put some away for storage. That may seem like a lot, but believe me, you will go through it. The Master Gardeners of Sonoma County [https://ucanr.edu/site/mg-sonoma/basil] have suggestions for basil varieties worth trying. Farmer Fred: [2:15] Sweet basil [https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/ocimum-basilicum/] is probably the most popular. It’s a large-leafed Mediterranean variety. It’s the primary culinary basil used in Italian cuisine, and it gets up to about two, two and a half feet tall. Purple or opal basil [https://ucanr.edu/sites/default/files/2018-07/287036.pdf] is similar to sweet basil, but it has dark bronze-purple leaves and pink flowers, and that’s a welcome color contrast in the garden and in dishes, although visually it’s really not very suitable for pesto. A somewhat more tender variety, purple basil grows to about the same height as sweet basil, about two and a half feet. Lemon or lime basil [https://ucanr.edu/sites/default/files/2018-07/287036.pdf]is a smaller plant, about 12 inches tall with white flowers, and a mild citrus aroma paired with many types of food. There’s also Greek or globe basil [https://ucanr.edu/site/mg-sonoma/basil]. That’s even smaller, about 6 to 12 inches tall, with tiny compact leaves, soft stems, and a very spicy character that’s useful in salads. Its compact size makes it a good container plant, too, and its hardiness allows it to thrive in poor conditions. Another one worth trying, cinnamon basil. [https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/ocimum-basilicum/] That’s a spicy variety with a pronounced flavor, and it gets about 18 to 30 inches tall. Farmer Fred: [3:29] Thai basil [https://ucanr.edu/sites/default/files/2018-07/287036.pdf]. That can be recognized by its unusually serrated leaves and a spiciness that sort of resembles licorice. Used in Thai and Indian cooking, it grows about two to three feet tall. There are a few types of perennial basil, but all types for culinary use, those are annual basils. And for even more great basil varieties, watch the YouTube video [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7iIWJnXVSRc]mentioned on today’s podcast. It features Rose Loveall-Sale of Morningsun Herb Farm in Vacaville talking about a myriad of great-looking and great-tasting basil varieties. Farmer Fred: [4:04] How about watering basil? Well, you got to be careful here. Aim for about an inch and a half of water per week. Consistent watering keeps basil growing strong. If you let it wilt and you notice the plant starts to stress out, that’s going to slow growth and damage the roots. A drip irrigation system works beautifully for basil if you want to set it and mostly forget it. You may need to water, though, more frequently. But again, this warning, high temperatures combined with water stress will trigger the plant to flower and set seed. And when that happens, leaf production stops and the off flavors can develop. So you want to keep your basil plant happy and hydrated. Basil is a bit of a hungry plant, especially when you’re actively harvesting or growing it in a pot. Once it hits the harvestable stage, side dress with a liquid nitrogen fertilizer. About one to two tablespoons per gallon of water every two to three weeks per 10-foot row. One of my favorites is fish emulsion. Container plants appreciate a weekly feeding to help keep them thriving. Farmer Fred: [5:13] Your biggest headache with basil early on are probably going to be weeds. Basil really can’t compete with them when they’re young. So cultivate shallowly around those basil plants because you don’t want to prune out their roots. And consider laying down an organic mulch, like straw, leaf mulch, or even newspaper, to keep weeds at bay until the young plants get established. Farmer Fred: [5:36] For pests, grasshoppers and slugs and snails can chew up the leaves, but a row cover over young plants does a great job of keeping them off until they’re big enough to handle the damage from those pests. On the disease front, watch out for root rot and basal shoot blight. Both are fungal diseases, and the problem there is too much water. Good spacing, too, can help keep your plants about 12 inches apart and avoid overwatering them, and that can go a long way towards preventing any problems. Of course, the fun part of basil growing is harvesting. Once your plant has six to eight leaves, you’re ready to start harvesting. Use a sharp knife or scissors to cut leaf stems, leaving just two to four leaves on the plant. Alternate which plants you harvest from so you always have a steady supply coming in. Does Pinching Off Basil Flowers Make More Leaves Grow? The question arises, though, does pinching off the flowers make more leaves grow? Well, interestingly, according to Utah State’s horticultural extension services [https://extension.usu.edu/yardandgarden/research/basil-in-the-garden], not really. Pinching off flowers doesn’t actually stimulate new foliage. It can even cause flowers to form in the leaf axils, and that will reduce your overall yield. A better strategy is to stagger your planting every other week of the basil plants and keep the plants from getting stressed with proper water and proper light so that they’re less inclined to flower in the first place. Farmer Fred: [7:01] But I got to admit, basil flowers are pretty. And although deadheading any flowers may not help the basil plant redirect its energy to producing leaves, consider planting more basil plants than you plan to eat and let those extra basil plants begin to flower. Oh, the beneficial insects in your garden, especially the bees, will appreciate it. And your eyes and nose will appreciate it, too (and the flowers are edible!). How about for storing your basil? How do you go about it? For fresh basil for use in the kitchen, recut the stems and place them in a jar of water away from direct sunlight on the kitchen counter. Cover with a plastic bag and then for even longer life, refrigerate them for up to 7 to 10 days. Farmer Fred: [7:44] For dried basil, bundle the stems, hang them in a shady, well-ventilated spot, and they’ll be ready in 5 to 10 days. Pack the dried leaves in an airtight jar and they’ll stay good for about a year. You can also freeze basil leaves. They can be frozen, though they do get mushy when they thaw. For best results, freeze whole leaves in ice cube trays with water, or even better, make some pesto and freeze that into cubes. Use frozen basil within three to six months. And finally, let’s talk about the nutrition of basil. Beyond the flavor, basil is genuinely good for you. It’s rich in vitamin E, folate, and antioxidants, while being low in calories, sodium, and carbohydrates. Dried basil is even more concentrated with nutrients. So what’s not to like about this herb? It tastes great, it smells great, and it’s good for you. So plant some basil in May. For more information about even more basil varieties, including how to plant them and cook with them, here’s my friend Rose Loveall-Sale of MorningSun Herb Farm in Vacaville, California. BASIL TIPS FROM MORNINGSUN HERB FARM [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7iIWJnXVSRc] Rose Loveall-Sale: [9:02] There’s only one word that we think of in the herb business in April, basil. This is our favorite herb we grow it all the time. The botanical name, Ocimum basilica. Everyone knows the common basils, But what I’m hoping to do today is to talk to you about some of the other basils that you really need to grow in your garden During my college days a friend of mine cooked a meal for me and he said i’m making you pesto It’s the best thing you’ll ever have. Rose Loveall-Sale: [9:28] I’ve never eaten basil, and I’d never eaten pesto before. But one time, and I was hooked, using this beautiful little Genovese basil [https://morningsunherbfarm.com/collections/plants-all-perennials-amp-herbs/products/ocimum-basilicum-genovese-3-genovese-basil-3]. I took it back to my parents, and my father, who was very dramatic, said, if I had a million dollars, I’d spend it all on basil. Well, over the next 25 years, he and my mom ate pesto every week. And in the wintertime, she had to freeze enough for him and take it on vacation, take it camping everywhere. So it’s been a favorite of mine for about 25 years. and now no garden in America is complete without a basil plant. Our most common basil, our Genovese basil, is grown for our pesto making and for fresh use. There’s lots of other kinds of basils though, so I want to talk about those today. First I want to start though a little history of basil because there’s always some funny stories in the herb world. Back in the 17th century it was believed that basil would actually make you go crazy. So people didn’t want to eat basil because they thought it would make them die and go crazy. Rose Loveall-Sale: [10:28] So basil leaves were not used until really the 20th century, except by the Italians and Greeks. Now, of course, it’s used in cuisines all over the world. It’s native to North Africa, to the Mediterranean, and all over Asia, both temperate and tropical climates. Here in California, it’s grown mostly as an annual plant. It really likes warm temperatures, and it does not like cold nighttime temperatures at all. There’s a lot of really fun stories about basil. Basil is considered now the herb of love. So if you have a little pot of basil sitting on your windowsill, that means, in Italy at least, that you’re ready for a suitor. Rose Loveall-Sale: [11:06] So keep that in mind if you’re going to be putting your basil out on a windowsill this spring. It may be calling a new love into your life. Rose Loveall-Sale: [11:19] So what are all the different kinds of basils? Why do we want to grow all these wonderful basils? Besides our beautiful Genovese basil and our Italian large leaf basil, right now in these little pots they look very similar, but they have a little bit different flavor. Rose Loveall-Sale: [11:33] One of them, the Genovese, is a little stronger and the Italian large leaf is a little bit milder. These are both going to get about two feet tall and they’re going to be green plants with white flowers. Genovese basil and Italian large leaf basils [https://morningsunherbfarm.com/collections/plants-all-perennials-amp-herbs/products/ocimum-basilicum-italian-large-leaf-3-italian-large-leaf-basil-3] are our common standard basils that we grow in our garden. There’s a lot of other basils to grow. We’re going to talk about each of those and what their uses would be. So let’s talk about some of the other basils that you will want to grow in your garden. One of my favorites is called Basil Napolitano [https://morningsunherbfarm.com/collections/plants-all-perennials-amp-herbs/products/ocimum-basilicum-napolitano-lettuce-leaf-basil]. It’s got a huge leaf. Even in a little three-inch pot, the leaves are giant, and in the ground, the leaves are going to get up to four to five inches wide and long. This basil is also used a lot for pesto making. It’s a little bit milder, so if you don’t like the flavor of lots of licorice in your basil, this is a much better basil to use. It’s a little more gentle as far as its sun needs, so sometimes we plant this in a little bit of shade. It’s wonderful to use fresh, so if you’re making a hamburger, and you instead of putting lettuce want to put something more interesting, a couple of leaves of this beautiful basil are really an incredible little addition. Also, if you’re making a grilled cheese sandwich, a little bit of basil on that grilled cheese is wonderful. It’s a lovely plant to grow in the garden too. Rose Loveall-Sale: [12:59] My favorite basil is lemon. And lemon basil [https://morningsunherbfarm.com/collections/plants-all-perennials-amp-herbs/products/ocimum-basilicum-citriodora-3-lemon-basil-mrs-burns-3] is actually a different species. There are 62 different species of basil in the world. We really only grow two or three different species. This is Ocimum basilicum ‘citriadora’ [https://morningsunherbfarm.com/collections/plants-all-perennials-amp-herbs/products/ocimum-basilicum-citriodora-3-lemon-basil-mrs-burns-3]. So this is lemon basil, and I wish you could smell this. It’s a bright lemony scent. It’s just wonderful. Rose Loveall-Sale: [13:21] Oh, now this (lemon basil) is a great summertime herb, in particular because I can think of, countless different things to do with this plant. So besides making a pesto, which would be great with fresh fish or chicken, or with some sort of a pasta or maybe even vegetables like zucchini, it makes a great bar drink addition. If you’re making a little gin and tonic, or if you’re muddling up a little something extra for a martini, lemon basil is the thing to use. If you’re a teetotaler, it’s an amazing tea plant. Basil is a member of the mint family, And so like many of the other mints, it has the qualities of being a good digestive. So an after-dinner tea of a little bit of lemon basil would make a wonderful addition after a heavy meal barbecue where you’re trying to settle your stomach. It’s just terrific. Lemon basil sorbet, lemon basil stuffed into chicken, lemon basil ice cream, lemon basil lemonade. It’s just endless possibilities with lemon basil. It’s really an amazing plant. We don’t have to just have green basils though, we can have basils that have amazing colors. Rose Loveall-Sale: [14:30] Two of my favorites are the Red Rubin basil, [https://morningsunherbfarm.com/collections/plants-all-perennials-amp-herbs/products/ocimum-basilicum-red-rubin-3-red-rubin-basil-3] all purple leaves, very lovely, and a new one for us called Persian basil [https://www.rareseeds.com/basil-persian?srsltid=AfmBOoolV7YeYkfXKrGdxWWlbNkNkDBSZqStR2KcQeDMNpbo7lKhCojJ]. These are both Ocimum basilicums, and they’re wonderful additions to the garden. These are both excellent as salad additions. So we always think of basil having to be made into something, but it doesn’t have to be made into anything in particular. As a salad green, it’s terrific. This one here, we started to grow two years ago, the Persian basil. And at first I said, well, it’s pretty, but what else is so interesting about it? And then I tried it. And that’s the fun thing about these basils is to try the leaves before you actually cook with them. It’s amazing. Just a slight citrusy undertone to it, a little bit of clove, a little bit of cinnamon to it. It’s really wonderful. It makes a nice little pesto or added to a salsa. It’s wonderful in salads, super pretty, easy to grow. Rose Loveall-Sale: [15:34] And it gives you just a completely different look to your garden. The purple basils, again like the Red Rubin, are again lovely as a salad addition. They also can be used for a rustic pesto, so you wouldn’t want to over-process this basil. If you take this beautiful purple basil and you just chop it so that it’s still fairly rough in your pesto, you’ll keep that beautiful purple color. If you over-process it so that it’s very smooth, it becomes a bit of a muddy color. The flavor is still good, but it’s not quite as an appealing look to it. So make sure you just leave it very rustic looking. So there’s some lovely choices there with your purple basils. Now maybe you don’t have space for a big basil. All the basils we’ve talked about so far, these basils all get 18 inches, 2 feet tall. They’re pretty darn big. Sometimes you need something that’s a little smaller. And that’s where spicy bush basil comes in. Rose Loveall-Sale: [16:30] These are called piccolino basils [https://mr-fothergills.com/products/basil-piccolino-seeds?srsltid=AfmBOopHDafleStHO4saJVhicrMuO_tahmEH8sd7lJe1I0p1jvZriAEw], tiny little leaf, very small plant. It only gets 10 to 12 inches tall. This is the one in particular in Italy. They say you put a little bit of this on your windowsill, and that tells your shooters that it’s time to come calling. The great thing about these small basils is they may be small in size, but they’re really big in flavor. So why you grow this, even if you have room for a big basil, it’s the flavor. Super punchy, super strong. This basil will hold up to being... So rather than use the other basils in your sauces, you would use this beautiful little small-leafed basil because even when it’s cooked, even when it’s heated up in pizza or sauces, it maintains that wonderful basil flavor. There’s lots of small-leafed basils. This is called spicy bush basil. I really love it because it just keeps going and going all season long. You can really prune it back and it comes right back. The flavor is really amazing on this basil. Rose Loveall-Sale: [17:33] We do have a whole different class of basils, and these are called Tulsi, or sacred or holy basils [https://morningsunherbfarm.com/collections/plants-all-perennials-amp-herbs/products/ocimum-sanctum-rama-3-rama-tulsi-basil-3]. These really have a different purpose for us. It’s a whole different species. It’s called Ocimum tenuriflorum, or sanctum, and these basils are considered sacred for the Hindus. There’s many different varieties of them. We grow several. We grow a beautiful one called Kapoor. Kapoor basil [https://morningsunherbfarm.com/collections/plants-all-perennials-amp-herbs/products/ocimum-tenuiflorum-kapoor-3-kapoor-tulsi-holy-basil-3] takes on these beautiful greenish leaves, heavy clove flavor. It’s a wonderful medicinal. It’s also a great one to use for cooking if you’re doing Asian cuisine or curries. This one here is called Rama [https://morningsunherbfarm.com/collections/plants-all-perennials-amp-herbs/products/ocimum-sanctum-rama-3-rama-tulsi-basil-3], and this is our most important medicinal basil. Rose Loveall-Sale: [18:17] So I mentioned that basils are good for digestion, but also this particular species of basil, the Ocimum tenuiflorum [https://morningsunherbfarm.com/collections/plants-all-perennials-amp-herbs/products/ocimum-tenuiflorum-nicobar-3-5-nicobar-tulsi-holy-basil-3-5], this one is also excellent as an adaptogen, meaning this basil you can actually use every day as a tonic in a tea form or a tincture and it helps reduce stress. So we can all use a little bit of this in our life every day. So it’s a great stress reducer. It’s good for bringing our bodies back into balance. Really a wonderful herb. These basils here, those tulsis, the sacred basils, these are used often as a sacred plant that every Hindu family grows at their front door. They have it somewhere in their home. It’s part of their tradition. And so here in the United States, we do grow it for medicinal and we also grow it for cooking as well. Rose Loveall-Sale: [19:07] Also, we have Thai basil [https://morningsunherbfarm.com/collections/plants-all-perennials-amp-herbs/products/ocimum-basilicum-thai-3-thai-basil-3]. And Thai basil is that classic basil that we use in Thai cuisine. Rose Loveall-Sale: [19:16] Super, super heavy licorice, clove scented, almost a little bit of spiciness to it. Very beautiful to look at. It’s a fairly small basil, and it goes to flower very quickly. So you’re always pinching it back to keep it from flowering too much. Rose Loveall-Sale: [19:33] You’d use this in really heavy cuisines and Thai cuisine. Rose Loveall-Sale: [19:41] All the basils I’ve shown you so far are annual basils that we grow from seed, but there are some amazing new basils out there that you should be growing in your garden. This one is called Pesto Perpetuo [https://morningsunherbfarm.com/collections/plants-all-perennials-amp-herbs/products/ocimum-pesto-perpetuo-pesto-perpetuo-basil]. It is so wonderful. Notice that variegated leaf? This is a basil that is a Genovese-style basil, so it’s perfect in your garden. To use for pesto making, but it has one particularly wonderful quality about it. It does not bloom, so you never have to pinch back the blooms on this basil. It’s wonderful in a container. It’s great in a pot. It’s a little more cold hardy, so it can actually take a little more cold temperatures. Usually here in California, it will stay in our gardens until November, and if you live somewhere like Santa Barbara, it will overwinter with no problem. This is a beautiful, beautiful specimen plant to have in a container. It’s lovely. Even if you don’t like basil for cooking, it is a wonderfully pretty plant to grow in the garden. Now, the opposite of that are basils that we actually want to flower in the garden. These kinds of basils are sterile hybrids. It’s my favorite. Rose Loveall-Sale: [20:54] Well, after lemon basil, this is my favorite. This basil is called Wild Magic [https://morningsunherbfarm.com/collections/plants-all-perennials-amp-herbs/products/ocimum-basilicum-wild-magic-basil-fairytale-wild-magic], and notice it’s blooming. We let this basil bloom on purpose. It gives lots of nectar to honeybees, but it doesn’t produce any seed. So you can let it bloom. It doesn’t produce seed and die like your other annual basils do. It gets about 14 inches tall. It is amazing looking in the garden, just beautiful. Rose Loveall-Sale: [21:23] ‘Wild Magic’ tastes great. It has a wonderful basil flavor, perfect for pesto making, wonderful to cook with. It’s very cold hearty. Here in California, in Northern California, we actually grow this one out in the garden usually until Christmas time or even later. It’s lovely to have in the garden, and it’s a beautiful plant to include even just with your perennial bed. So it will bring in lots of wonderful pollinators. We also like small little basils that will bloom in the garden. This one’s called Red Ball. It’s a gorgeous little specimen plant. It only gets about 12 inches tall, has that great purpley look to it, and a pink flower later on. Again, this one is another sterile specimen, so you can let it bloom. It’ll bring wonderful pollinators into the garden. It doesn’t change the flavor, unlike the other annual basils I showed you earlier, that once they start to bloom, you really have to get rid of those flowers quickly. So again, gorgeous, gorgeous, maybe lining your bed. Instead of annual flowers, why not put in something that’s yummy and helpful to bring in pollinators into your garden? Very pretty specimen plant. One of our most popular ones is a basil called Magic Mountain [https://morningsunherbfarm.com/collections/plants-all-perennials-amp-herbs/products/ocimum-basilicum-magic-mountain-basil-fairytale-magic-mountain]. Rose Loveall-Sale: [22:43] So this basil (‘Magic Mountain’) looks very familiar to a basil that people are familiar with called African blue. The difference is that African blue tastes like camphor, which is not anyone’s favorite flavor usually, but this one, mild sweet basil flavor for this magic mountain basil. This is about a two-footer. Again, this one will bloom, but it’s sterile, so it never produces seed. We only grow it from cuttings. Isn’t that a lovely specimen plant? Rose Loveall-Sale: [23:12] Finally, we also grow one called Ajaka [https://morningsunherbfarm.com/collections/plants-all-perennials-amp-herbs/products/ocimum-basilicum-ajaka-basil-fairytale-ajaka]. This has a big pink flower, and this plant tastes very similar to our Thai basil. So this has a punch to it. This one, spicy, heavy clove. This one you want to use for all your Asian cuisine. It’s really delicious. Lovely in the garden. It can get about two feet tall. Again, it’s going to last until November. It’s a lot more cold hardy. So all of these basils that I’ve just shown you, These are wonderful to have in your garden just to give more color for one thing, to include in their garden that’s going to go into the fall. Some people do bring these indoors and use these indoors during the winter if they have enough light. And you can let them bloom, except for your ‘Pesto Perpetua’, which of course will never bloom. And so that’s its best quality is not having to pinch it back. Rose Loveall-Sale: [24:07] These are wonderful new basil additions that people are just becoming familiar with now and growing in their gardens. How to Plant a Basil Rose Loveall-Sale: [24:16] So now you’ve decided you have many more basils to choose from. How are you going to plant those basils? There’s a couple little tricks to planting basils so that you have a long harvest and so that your plants look good throughout the season. So we’re going to talk a little bit about how you’re going to grow your basil under the best conditions possible. So you’ve decided to plant all these different basils in your garden. What can you do to make sure that you have a success growing them? I’m showing you here how to grow basil in a raised bed. Now you can grow basil in a raised bed. There’s a benefit to that because you can raise it up if you have a bad soil, like a really heavy clay soil. It’s also a benefit because it warms the soil a little earlier in the season, so you can actually get root growth a little easier. And of course, it helps because it’s lifted up, so you don’t have to sit down so far. You don’t have to be on your knees to harvest. So if you have a raised bed, you wanna make sure you have soil that’s very usable and good. So here, we use a soil booster. Rose Loveall-Sale: [25:16] And we use a soil that we purchase in that has lots of organic matter, lots of earthworm castings, a little bit of bat guano. It also has some organic slow-release fertilizer. You can see it’s fairly light. It’s not really sandy, but it’s not this heavy clay. So you don’t want to use native soil if you’re in a raised bed. Now, if you’re just growing in the ground, then you would add this kind of a mix at a rate of about 30%. or if it’s a heavy clay, even up to 50%, you would mix into that top foot of soil where you’re going to be planting. This will give you really good drainage because basil doesn’t want to be really in a hard, heavy soil. So it wants very good, rich soil. So there’s a trick to basil also that you don’t really talk about with the rest of the herb. Basil likes water and it likes fertilizer. It’s incredibly different than rosemary or sage or lavender or any of those other herbs that we are so familiar with. So when you plant it, you want to add some fertilizer. I’m going to add some Sure Start. I like to use an organic fertilizer, and we only use organic fertilizers for our culinary plants. This particular one has some microbes in it that I really love to use. You don’t need to use much. We’re going to add in just about a teaspoon. Rose Loveall-Sale: [26:37] And so here we have our four-inch plant. I’m going to take where I’m going to plant it, and you notice I’ve spaced these out. Some of these plants are very close together because they’re small, and some of them, like the Genovese basil, I’ve moved way back because it’s going to be a much larger one. This is the Red Ball basil that we just talked about. It’s a small, short basil. We actually let it bloom. I’m going to mix in that fertilizer, and then I’m going to go ahead, pull it out of its pot. Rose Loveall-Sale: [27:06] The roots are pretty good. They don’t have to be pulled apart. They’re not overly close together here. You don’t need for the plant to be any deeper than the soil it came in, so you want to make sure it’s just even. Rose Loveall-Sale: [27:19] And there you’ve got your first plant in the ground. It’s got a little bit of fertilizer right up against the root system. Later on, and in the case of basal, later on means once a month, we’re going to be adding more fertilizer. You can add a slow-release fertilizer. You could add a liquid fertilizer, such as a fish emulsion, with a little bit of sea kelp in it. Either of these can be used on a monthly basis. If you’re growing in a little container, or you’d be fertilizing with this every two weeks. But in a raised bed or in the ground, once a month is enough. We’re also going to plant so that we can water this in. I’m not gonna water it now, but once I get my bed all planted in, we’re gonna water it heavily. And this is gonna be watered during a hot, sunny day, probably every other day or every third day. If this was planted with lavender and rosemary, we’d be watering once a week at the most. So very different watering techniques. Now if you don’t water and fertilize enough, you end up with a basil that looks something like this. So notice it’s kind of yellow, and this is a cinnamon basil here. Notice it’s actually getting ready to bloom. Right up here you can actually see that little blossom start. So people tend to take that blossom, and they might just pinch it off just like that, And that’s great. How to Keep a Basil Plant Young and Spry Rose Loveall-Sale: [28:41] Except that pinching off the basil flower is not going to really reprogram that plant back to being a juvenile. So the idea with basil is you want to keep it young and spry. And that’s why we fertilize and water it a lot. Go ahead and use that for your cooking unless it’s a little bit too bitter. The second these little basils start to put on seeds or flowers, they start to get bitter. You’re going to cut that much off that basil. And then you’re going to fertilize it with either liquid or the slow release, and you’re going to make sure it stays nice and moist. You can see as I pull it out of the pot here, This is a fairly dry plant right here. So when it dries down, it thinks, oh no, I don’t have enough food. Then it really thinks, oh no, I’m gonna die. I better have babies. So that’s why it sets flowers and seeds. Rose Loveall-Sale: [29:27] And in these kinds of basils, your main goal is to stop that from happening. Now remember some of these other basils we grow, like this one here, our Wild Magic [https://morningsunherbfarm.com/collections/plants-all-perennials-amp-herbs/products/ocimum-basilicum-wild-magic-basil-fairytale-wild-magic]. This one’s sterile. So you can let this one bloom. You don’t have to prune it. This one’s actually wonderful to allow it to bloom for pollinators, and it won’t change the flavor at all. If it does start to look a little tired looking though, you would actually just come in and actually pinch off. See if I can actually pinch it here. You would actually pinch off. You’d actually remove that much of the plant. Rose Loveall-Sale: [30:02] Fertilize it, water it, and that way you’ll get a nice full plant again. Very edible. And remember, if you have a culinary herb that you can eat the leaves, you can eat the flowers. So basil flowers are wonderful and you should eat them. So what do they taste like? They’re going to taste like basil, only a little fruitier and a little more rounded. Here’s a few in my hand here. Wonderful to add to a salad or if you’re doing even something simple like deviled eggs to put on top. A nice edible garnish. Very yummy. Kids love it. Super flowery flavor to it. So still basil, but sweet. So after about a month, make sure you come back in. You’re gonna fertilize heavily. You’re gonna add your fertilizer again. And then you’re gonna make sure you’re watering a bed like this about every other day. We have a few basils that we’ve been growing for a while. This is that beautiful ajaca. Rose Loveall-Sale: [30:58] So you can see how once it starts to fill in, it’s a gorgeous plant, not just for cooking, but in the garden as well. So maybe in another month, we’ll come back. Some things will be blooming happily. We’ll add a few tomatoes. And in the end, we’ll have this beautiful garden of basil that we can use for everything from cooking, medicine making. We can use it for crafting. We can use it for edible flowers, even nice bouquets we can use it for. And we can make a nice after-dinner cocktail or glass of tea. Beautiful. I love it. I love basil. Farmer Fred: [31:35] That was Rose Loveall-Sale of Morningsun Herb Farm in Vacaville. If you want more basil information and more info about all the herbs and the videos that Rose grows, visit their website, morningsunherbfarm.com [https://morningsunherbfarm.com]. Beyond The Garden Basics is a reader-supported publication. To receive all the new posts and support my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber. Fred Hoffman is also a University of California Cooperative Extension Master Gardener [https://sacmg.ucanr.edu/] in Sacramento County. And he likes to ride his bike(s). This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit gardenbasics.substack.com/subscribe [https://gardenbasics.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

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episode Home Weather Station Setup for Gardeners artwork

Home Weather Station Setup for Gardeners

Today’s newsletter podcast is a special treat for readers and listeners of the Beyond the Garden Basics newsletter/podcast who might also be weather nerds…and what gardener isn’t? It’s an interview with climate scientist Daniel Swain, who, besides being a University of California Ag and Natural Resources employee at the California Institute for Water Resources, is well known on social media. Swain runs the Weather West website [https://weatherwest.com/] as well as his frequent presentations talking about extreme weather conditions in California and the west on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@WeatherWest], Bluesky [https://bsky.app/profile/weatherwest.bsky.social], and other social media outlets. The interview focuses on how gardeners can measure weather conditions more accurately in their own yards. We discuss the limits of simple thermometers and the value of weather stations [https://amzn.to/4v63kLC]that measure temperature, humidity, wind, rainfall, soil temperature, and other variables, emphasizing that equipment placement is important for getting readings that reflect actual garden conditions. Swain explains that temperature measurements depend heavily on location. A thermometer in direct sun, near asphalt, dirt, or a house wall can read much hotter or colder than the standard shade temperature used by weather services. He says the official comparison temperature is usually taken about two meters (78 inches) above the ground, in shade, and that exposed thermometers can produce misleading highs and lows. The conversation then turns to frost protection in gardens and orchards. Swain says the relevant temperature depends on the plant and its height, because vertical microclimates can differ significantly within a few feet. He explains that cold air can settle near the ground, while higher air may be warmer, and that this matters for citrus, vineyards, tomatoes, and fruit trees. He also notes that irrigation and soil moisture can change daytime and nighttime temperatures. Discussing wind measurement, Swain says rooftop-mounted wind sensors often do not measure ambient wind well because the house creates turbulence and eddies. He explains that spinning-cup anemometers are vulnerable to dirt, rust, and wear, while sonic anemometers have fewer moving parts and can be more reliable. For wind, he recommends placing sensors away from tall obstacles and in open areas. Among the main points in the podcast: * Don’t rely on a thermometer mounted outside your kitchen window; it won’t reflect real conditions in your garden or orchard, which can differ by 6–8°F or more. * Test any temperature sensor in several yard locations before committing to a permanent spot; look for where it runs coldest and where it gets the most sun. * Keep thermometers out of direct sunlight and off dark, heat-absorbing surfaces (asphalt, concrete, bare dirt). These cause false highs by day and false lows at night. * For frost/freeze protection on citrus, hang the sensor at the height you’re actually trying to protect (e.g., ~2 feet, in the canopy shade), not high on a wall or pole. * Remember that a few feet of vertical height can matter more than many feet of horizontal distance, since cold air pools near the ground at night (temperature inversion). * If protecting a ground crop vs. a citrus tree, measure separately near the canopy top and under the canopy. Conditions differ significantly. * Use inexpensive multi-sensor stations (one indoor display, several remote probes) to monitor several yard zones at once rather than a single point. * Consider planting on gentle slopes or hillsides when possible. Cold air drains downhill, giving lower spots more frost risk and slopes a degree or two of protection. * Irrigated soil and plant tissue hold heat longer than dry soil, so damp areas will show a different (often milder) temperature swing than dry ones. Factor this into sensor placement and expectations. * Don’t mount wind gauges (anemometers) on the roofline. House edges create turbulent eddies that produce inaccurate, artificially chaotic wind readings. * For accurate wind data, mount the anemometer on a freestanding pole away from buildings, trees, and other obstacles, as high as practical. * If your station combines wind and temperature sensors in one unit, know that the ideal siting for each conflicts. Consider separating sensors and placing them independently. * Favor sonic anemometers over spinning-cup types if buying new. No moving parts means less error from dust, spiderwebs, or rust, and prices have dropped into the hundreds of dollars. * Clean and periodically recalibrate wind and temperature sensors. Even good instruments degrade and drift with age and grime. * Before designing a garden layout, spend a year observing your yard’s actual sun, shade, drainage, and temperature patterns month to month rather than guessing. Paid subscribers get extra editions of Beyond the Garden Basics, as well as access to over 300 previous editions of this podcast and newsletter. Home Weather Stations Podcast Transcript (originally aired on the Garden Basics with Farmer Fred podcast in May 2025) Farmer Fred: [0:00] If you’re a longtime gardener, well, you just might be a weather nerd. You may want to know what’s happening, especially around your garden area and greenhouse, about many things, such as what’s the high temperature, what’s the low temperature, what about humidity, wind, soil temperature, rainfall, evapotranspiration rate, chill hours, growing degree days, heat index, UV radiation, and a lot more that can be affecting you and your plants. And your meteorological equipment right now may be as simple as a thermometer hanging outside your kitchen window, which may not be the best idea. We’ll have more about that in a minute. Or it could be as complex as a really nifty weather station that set you back $1,000 or $2,000 that sends a myriad of data to your computer or phone or your in-house monitor. So if you’re considering upgrading your backyard weather equipment, you also need to consider the placement of those various devices in your yard to get more accurate readings about what is really happening in your garden area, especially near your food crops. Today, we’re going to get some answers to those questions from Daniel Swain. If that name sounds familiar, you may know him as the man behind weatherwest.com [http://weatherwest.com]. He’s a climate scientist focused on the dynamics and impacts of extreme events, including droughts, floods, storms, and wildfires. Daniel holds joint appointments as a climate scientist within the California Institute for Water Resources, within the University of California Ag and Natural Resources, the Institute of the Environment and Sustainability at UCLA. And he’s a research fellow at the NSF National Center for Atmospheric Research. He’s an alumnus of Davis and Stanford, and he completed postdoctoral work at UCLA. And again, his Weather West blog [http://weatherwest.com] is excellent reading wherever you might be on social media, especially Twitter, Blue Sky, and YouTube, where he does presentations all the time about upcoming weather events. I’ve been a fan of his for years. Daniel, I’m finally glad to be able to talk to you in person. Welcome to the Garden Basics podcast. Daniel Swain: [2:15] Yeah, so thanks for the invitation to be here today. It’s great to be on the show. Farmer Fred: [2:19] All right, let’s talk about, I’d be curious about your own home weather setup. What’s that like? Daniel Swain: [2:26] Yes. Well, you know, today where I live, I actually am based physically in Boulder, Colorado these days because of that NCAR appointment, despite the primary one with the University of California. So we don’t own a home here. So I’m somewhat limited when I can personally install on this side of the Rocky Mountains. But back in California, I actually, back when I was in high school, believe it or not, installed a weather station on my parents’ home in the North Bay. And that is something that I have maintained over the years on their roof. It’s still there. It still gets maintained. And I’m still trying to use, to the best extent possible, best practices for meteorological station siting on that one. Farmer Fred: [3:08] I understand completely. I think when I bought my first large parcel of land, I got myself a Davis Instruments weather station, which was at the time one of the best you could buy. And that let me know a lot of things like wind direction, the high temperature, the low temperature, rainfall amounts, things like that. But it has gotten so much better over the last 20 or 30 years. And the data is much easier to comprehend as well because of either in-house monitors or the data is shot straight to your phone or your computer. It makes it a lot easier. As they say in the computer world, garbage in, garbage out. So where you put that home station, no matter where, what kind it is, where you put it in your yard is very important, isn’t it? Daniel Swain: [3:55] Oh, it’s incredibly important. And this is actually something that I think is not always as obvious for a lot of folks as it might be to some meteorologists, although perhaps not even to all the meteorologists in the world who haven’t worked a lot with, actual physical instrumentation. And I think this is because, you know, as you say, exactly where you put these devices and where they are relative to other things that might be, in the immediate vicinity can make a huge difference into the numbers of the data you’re actually seeing in front of you. And, you know, as you mentioned, there’s any number of different ways. Companies that manufacture weather instrumentation or packages of weather stations. For my part, just as was the case with you, the one I installed was indeed, I think it was one of the Davis Vantage Pro stations, sort of the best consumer grade ones that they offered for many years. And it’s still there. It’s still chugging along. It’s been recalibrated a couple of times over 20 years at the factory. But it is still the same original hardware from 20 years ago, and it’s still going strong with that careful maintenance. But the bigger issue, I think, is indeed where we put it. And the main reason for this is think about what you’re actually measuring, for example, with something as simple as a thermometer. You’re measuring, technically, the temperature of a small increment of air immediately surrounding that thermometer device. Whatever the device is, if it’s an electronic one or an alcohol-based thermometer or a digital one, whatever the particular mechanism is, you’re measuring the immediate environment of that thermometer, right? So imagine two different scenarios, the same parcel of land, the same home, you know, two thermometers within, say, five feet of each other. So there’s not really a meaningful meteorological difference between the temperature across those five feet under normal circumstances. So the numbers should be the same. But imagine that one of those thermometers is just sitting out there in direct sunlight. You’ve mounted it on a pole above, say, a dirt field or a concrete or asphalt parking lot. That thermometer is going to read some awfully high values in the daytime and potentially some awfully low values in the nighttime. And that’s because, of course, you have the sun, when it’s sunny, is going to be directly shining on the thermometer, heating the thermometer itself because the sunlight is actually landing on the device itself. It’s also going to be warmer because you’ve put it in an environment that is itself a bit artificially warmer than it could be. You’ve got your own local heat island effect if you’re near that parking lot or that dirt field because that sun is also heating the ground there more than it would if it were, say, grass or some other. Daniel Swain: [7:01] Surface that weren’t so solar radiation absorptive. So that thermometer is going to read a very high value on a hot day, say, you might even get a value of 120, 130 degrees on that thermometer. And does that tell you that the ambient air temperature is actually 120, 130 degrees? Well, yes and no, because assuming the thermometer is correct, it is reading correctly the temperature of something in that environment. But as we define the surface temperature, for example, whether we’re talking about, the temperature at two meter height, so right around the top of my head, since I’m a little over six feet tall, that’s kind of a standard meteorological temperature measurement that’s used not just in science, but also for practical purposes and in agriculture and any number of applied purposes, that temperature is actually supposed to be a shade temperature. So the temperature of the air at about six feet off the ground where you don’t have any direct sunlight. Daniel Swain: [8:08] So if you’re measuring a temperature, you know, out in your dirt field or near the asphalt parking lot or in direct sun even, even if you’re over grass or something, what you’re measuring is something different than the number that you’re actually comparing to everyone else’s numbers. So when you go to the weather service website and get a temperature forecast or you look at observations from official weather service certified meteorological stations, the temperatures you’re actually seeing are the two meter or the six foot height shade temperature. And if you’ve put your thermometer in one of those settings we were just talking about, what you’re measuring is something else entirely. You’re measuring essentially however hot a thermometer gets if you put it in direct sunlight over a very absorptive surface. Likewise, at night, the opposite can happen where those places get a bit colder than the two-meter temperature correctly defined because they tend to radiate a lot of that energy back out to space if it’s a clear sky. And so you’re going to get a colder surface than one that has a little less variability day to night. So you might read a bit too hot or maybe a lot too hot in the daytime and potentially too cold at night. So your range is wider than the actual range of the temperature that we might define officially. And this is just for one specific, simple atmospheric variable, right? We’re just talking about the temperature. Things get even more complicated, and we start talking about things like precipitation or wind, and then things get just really, really complicated. We can dig into the details, but I just wanted to offer just how tricky it can be when we talk even about perhaps the simplest to measure atmospheric variable of temperature. And it’s why, for example, when you look at the temperature on your car thermometer, when you’re out on a hot, sunny day, or the bank thermometer, You might see it on the side of the road. Those will read values that might seem kind of patently ridiculous. And the reason is those are often thermometers that are sitting there in the direct sunlight on someone’s rooftop or in the case of your car thermometer, right on the hood of your car. And think about how uncomfortable it would be if you tried to put your hand on the hood of a car on a hot, sunny day in the Central Valley. It’s a lot hotter than the air, I’ll tell you that. Farmer Fred: [10:25] For gardeners who may have only invested in maybe a remote thermometer that they can read indoors, and those units are widely available even at the big box stores. They sell for $20, $30, $40 or so. A practical application that they’re looking for is, well, how cold is it under my citrus trees? Do I need to put a frost cloth over them? Do I need to protect them in some way from temperatures? And if all you have is a thermometer, as I use in the example, outside your kitchen window, you’re not getting an accurate temperature of what Farmer Fred: [10:56] is happening out where your citrus trees are. So to protect that sensor, that thermometer sensor that is in your yard, would one strategy be to hang it six feet up in a citrus tree? Daniel Swain: [11:10] Well, I think, you know, the key is it depends on what you’re trying to measure. If you are trying to do, for example, frost or freeze protection, then it really does matter what the temperature is at the level of the plant that you’re trying to protect. And the example of a citrus tree, it could be very different. The height of where you’re worried about frost on the leaves or blossoms or fruit of a tree, as opposed to, a ground crop or even something like vineyards, which are often below head height at their highest point, you get what’s known as a microclimate, especially in the vertical direction. So I mentioned that going, you know, five, five feet, six feet horizontally probably doesn’t affect things very much most of the time. But going five feet vertically actually can make a pretty big difference, particularly at night when you have what’s known as a temperature inversion, when temperatures actually increase, with height instead of decreasing as they normally do in the lowest layer of the atmosphere. Sometimes that inversion can be noticeably important even within the first few feet off the surface of the ground. And that can matter if you’re talking about the top of a tomato plant or the top of your grapevines versus the top of a fruit tree or a nut tree or something. So you’ve got to measure exactly what you need to know in that case. How high are you actually measuring? Is it under the canopy or is it on the top of the canopy? All of that can matter a lot for something as subtle as, you know, making sure you’re not falling below a particular temperature threshold. Might it be good enough if you only need to get within a couple of degrees for your purpose, you know, in any of these locations? That might be fine. But if you really care which side of 32 degrees Fahrenheit the temperature is at a particular height, you probably got to measure it as close to that height and location as you possibly can because you have these huge variations. In fact, a lot of the frost protection systems that are used, in larger-scale agricultural settings are really based on the knowledge that you do have these huge variations. Think about when people historically have used things as wild as helicopter downdraft, rotor downwash to sort of mix up the air during freeze events in orchards or fans or windmills that mix the air. Daniel Swain: [13:47] These aren’t hundreds of thousands of feet tall towers that are doing the mixing. A lot of them are just a few tens of feet tall, and yet mixing the air from 30, 40 feet up to the ground, can give you enough of a difference to prevent a freeze in a case where there’s a huge difference between the very cold air right at ground level and the slightly less cold air 10, 20 feet up. So sometimes, you know, frost protection is even... Leveraging the fact that these vertical microclimates exist it’s why you see vineyards for example on on steep slopes on some of the hills in in any place where you grow wine grapes part of that is because that cold air tends to kind of drain downhill into the the valley below or even the the culverts and the rivulets below it doesn’t even need to be a big valley so even just, planting on a slope that’s you know five ten fifteen feet above the lowest point on the land, gets you that extra degree or two of insulation. So a long way of saying that you got to measure what you actually want to measure. And if it’s something as sensitive as frost or freeze protection, you got to pinpoint exactly the height and the location where you’re trying to protect against that condition. Farmer Fred: [15:02] So if I’m a gardener listening to this, it sounds like, well, if I’m really concerned about frost protection for my citrus trees, I’d want to hang that sensor a little bit lower in the tree, maybe only two feet off the ground, but in the shade of the canopy. But at night, that’s not that big of a concern, the shade from the sun. But there sure is a big difference if all you have is a thermometer hanging on the wall of your house outside. And what may be happening 10, 20, 30, 40 feet or more away in your yard where that tree is growing. In my own amateur experimentation with that, I’ve seen as much as a six to an eight degree difference where it’s warmer on that thermometer near the house than it is actually out in the orchard. Daniel Swain: [15:47] Yeah, I can believe it. Part of that, you know, it’s, as we were talking about, there are genuine microclimates that can vary over that kind of distance. But it’s also because your house, for example, might actually be warmer. Presumably, if it’s a cold night, you have the heater on inside. And so some of that’s going to bleed outside a little bit near your house if you have it hanging on a wall or an eave somewhere. Even a tree, for example, is going to exert perhaps a bit of a warming effect. Because if you have the thermometer under the leaf canopy, for example, you are actually, that leaf canopy itself is going to be both absorbing and radiating some of its own infrared wavelength energy that is keeping things a little bit warmer than it would be if it were just out in a bare dirt or, an asphalt field with nothing above you, going out into the, clear, cold winter sky at night with less moisture around too. This is whether or not you’ve irrigated. Most people who are farmers or gardeners know that once you put water in the soil, once you put water on the plants, once you irrigate, you both, you kind of dampen the range of temperatures that you’re going to experience. So you have less hot afternoons because more of the sun’s energy is going into evaporating water or water transpiring through the plant’s leaves. But at night, even if you have less transpiration or evaporation, that water is still maintaining some thermal inertia in the tissues of the plant or in the soil because it has retained it from the daytime. And so it takes longer for damp soil, for example, to cool down than dry soil. So by having moisture in some places more than others, you’re also going to actively, in some cases, create a temperature differential that’s different than, you know, where you might be measuring at your house or out on the driveway or something else. Farmer Fred: [17:43] This is a tip we’ve passed along for years to people who are who have an orchard or citrus trees or whatever is basically. Test that sensor out in various locations to see where perhaps the coldest temperature might be. What’s nice is there are some inexpensive units that are available that will have multiple sensors that you can hook up to one indoor monitor that can tell you the various temperatures at various points in your yard. And that’s not a bad plan for any gardener before they plant anything is figure out, A, where most of the sun is if you really truly do need full sun, and also where the coldest parts is. So I always advise people, before you plant a garden, live with your house, live with your yard for a year and notice where the sun goes, where the shade goes and where the temperatures go on a month-to-month basis before you do anything. I’ve noticed with people who buy, we’ll say the mid-range weather stations that have temperature, rainfall and wind, a lot of these units, especially the wind part, is mounted on a rooftop. And I’ve often wondered, Well, is that really accurate or not? Daniel Swain: [18:54] Well, when it comes to wind, you know, the answer is unfortunately often going to be a pretty flat no. It’s not accurate. And there’s a number of reasons for this. One is that, first of all, commercial-grade wind sensors are very finicky. You know, there are different ways you can measure wind. Most familiar, you know, is probably the spinning cup anemometer. So all wind gauges are anemometers, by the way. That’s the technical term. But the spinning cup variety, you know, it’s exactly what it sounds like. It’s usually three plastic or metal cups that are sort of rotating along a vertical axis. And the stronger the wind, the faster the cups rotate. They’re sort of like mini ice cream scoops that sort of get caught by the wind and spin faster, the stronger it gets. And that gets converted into a wind speed based on the number of rotations per unit time. The tricky part with these is that, you know, they’re highly susceptible to getting dirty or to becoming degraded over time. So anything from spider webs to dust to bird droppings to just good old rust will really affect that kind of sensor, really bias its wind speed kind of probably low. So you’re estimating winds that are too low relative to real winds. And honestly, some of the ones, especially the lower to mid-range ones that come straight out of the manufacturers from the warehouse, they already aren’t doing so well. So there is a challenge here where it’s actually pretty difficult to measure wind correctly, even if you’ve sighted the instrumentation correctly, because of the inherent challenges with getting that kind of physical instrument to operate and be fully calibrated correctly. Sometimes at the higher end of the consumer grade, as you get into the professional grade instrumentation, there are other forms of anemometers, of wind gauges, things like sonic anemometers, and those are becoming more common. Those are a little bit more resilient to that particular problem of friction, essentially, with the spinning cups, because there are no moving parts in a sonic anemometer. It’s essentially the instrument is actively sending out sound waves between receivers, and it’s measuring the distortion of those sound waves between two relatively nearby points. So there are no moving parts. And if it’s calibrated correctly, that can be a decent option because it’s a little more impervious to things like, you know, you still got to clear the spiderweb off occasionally, but dust isn’t going to affect it as much rust, you know, and there’s no spinning wheel to spinning ball bearing situation that you have to worry about. So that can be, you know, an improved option, although it’s usually more expensive. That’s not what you’re getting on your typical consumer-grade station. But then there is the problem of sighting. Even the very best professional anemometer is going to be in error if you put it in the wrong place. And the wrong place, as you mentioned, it could be the roof line. Now, a lot of people put anemometers along the roof line because it’s really just the most convenient spot. And I get it. You know, sometimes you do the best that you can. But the problem with putting it along the roof line is that if you have a gusty wind, for example, and you’re measuring it along the edge of a surface, think about what happens if, you know, if you were standing up on the roof on a windy, stormy day, you probably don’t want to stand too close to the edge because you get buffeted by all of these gusts and these eddies, these swirling, turbulent features. Because if you think about it, if the wind is hitting the side of your house. Daniel Swain: [22:31] Hopefully it’s not going through your house unless you’re inside of a tornado or something. Instead of going through your house it’s hitting the side of the house and you know the, the air has mass and it has force and it has to go somewhere so where does it go but it goes up once it hits the side of your house it can’t go down to the ground it can’t go through your house unless you have all the windows open hopefully not so it’s going to go up, and so now all of a sudden you’ve artificially generated wind in a different direction than the ambient wind you You have upward force of that wind, and as it approaches the edge of your roof, now all of a sudden there’s no barrier anymore, and so it’s going to start to, move back in the direction that it wanted to go originally. It’s going to go back horizontally, but now you’re going from an upward wind to a 90-degree change to a horizontal wind again, and that induces rotation or swirls or random turbulent eddies. So what I’m getting at is that if you have an anemometer mounted on the side of your house, whether or not it’s a spinning cup or a sonic anemometer or something else, it’s going to be really measuring all the turbulent eddies that your house produced rather than the ambient wind speed. And so you’re going to be measuring, again, something other than what you actually want to measure. So ideally, what you’d do if you really want to know what the ambient winds are in a given location, is you’d essentially mount your wind gauge, your anemometer, on a stick, on a post somewhere that’s as far from vertical obstacles as you possibly can. So out ideally in an open field somewhere and far enough above the surface that you’re sort of getting away from the surface friction layer. Daniel Swain: [24:09] There’s actually formula based on the height of the nearby objects or vegetation you want it to sort of be above that but in general you know we often talk about two meter or ten meter winds ten meters is kind of tall that’s like a 30 plus foot, tower that is unrealistic for a lot of folks. But ideally, if you can mount it, you know, in an open field or, you know, even in an open lot, here there’s less sensitivity than temperature, for example. So it’s a little bit less of a problem if there’s, you know, a paved surface or a dirt surface or water nearby, because you’re not trying to measure the temperature necessarily, you’re trying to measure the wind. And here what you’re trying to optimize is the radius around the sensor where there’s no tall vertical obstacles that could induce artificial turbulence or either artificially enhance or reduce the ambient wind speed. So here, unlike thermometers where you’re trying to minimize the unwanted solar radiation exposure or the exposure to anomalously damp or heated or artificially cooled areas, here you’re trying to avoid proximity to tall objects that could cause eddies or reduce the speed of that wind. So the challenge is if you have one unit where these sensors are integrated into the same physical object, these can be kind of goals that are in opposition to each other. But ideally, what you might have are sensors that you can physically separate and potentially even put them in different locations, because it might be the optimizing for your most accurate sighting for your wind gauge is different than optimizing for your most accurate sighting for your thermometer, for example. Farmer Fred: [25:49] And for those gardeners with a nice chunk of land where they can accomplish that, probably their first thing they’ll do is go to Amazon and see what’s available. And there’s a lot of those sonic wind measurement devices available at fairly reasonable prices in the hundreds of dollars, not the thousands of dollars. And that sounds like a much more reliable way to measure the wind other than spinning cups. Daniel Swain: [26:13] Yeah, it certainly can be. It used to be the case that they were incredibly expensive, as you say, were the very cheapest ones from the thousands. But I think this is another place where technology has the technological curve mass adoption has made them a lot cheaper than they used to be. So they’re still not trivially inexpensive, but they’re also not nearly as financially out of reach as they once were, I think. So if I were, you know, if I were buying a new one right now, I would probably do just that and look for a sonic anemometer because they have, you know, in general, you can imagine fewer moving parts, fewer problems. Farmer Fred: [26:46] Exactly. And again, on YouTube, it is Weather West, just as it is on all your social media outlets that you use, which is wonderful. And you have become America’s meteorologist. Daniel Swain: [26:58] Well, you know, there may be some colleagues on the Weather Channel who would disagree with that one. Although I do occasionally, I sort of am a recurring guest on a Weather Channel segment called The Weather Geeks. And, you know, it’s kind of full circle for me in the sense that, you know, I was that weather geek. Like I, you know, when we would be traveling and, you know, we get the cable television and motels all around the West on road trips, I’d turn on the weather channel and watch it. And now I, you know, I get to have some conversations on air with some of those very same people that I was watching myself, you know, 30 plus years ago. So it’s kind of a fascinating experience to sort of be enmeshed in the weather world day to day in this moment in particular. And then to have the opportunity, you know, through my new role with UC ANR, which I’m really excited about, by the way, to expand the scope of these conversations even more. Farmer Fred: [27:53] And we’re glad you’re there. @WeatherWest is where you can find him on Blue Sky [https://bsky.app/profile/weatherwest.bsky.social], on X or Twitter, as well as YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@weatherwest]. He is now with the University of California Ag and Natural Resources as part of their California Institute for Water Resources. Daniel Swain, climate scientist. We’ve had a lot of great information today. And believe me, this is going to be very helpful for gardeners, especially when they start getting sunscald on their tomatoes and peppers this year. Daniel Swain: [28:22] Oh, yes. Well, hopefully it isn’t too bad. But, you know, it’s always best to be prepared. And so hopefully I can help folks out in that regard. Farmer Fred: [28:29] Daniel Swain, thank you so much. Daniel Swain: [28:31] Thanks again for having me. Thank you for also listening to the original Garden Basics with Farmer Fred podcast [https://gardenbasics.net/], with over 400 podcast episodes available for your listening pleasure. Find it wherever you get your podcasts. Fred Hoffman is also a University of California Cooperative Extension Master Gardener [https://sacmg.ucanr.edu/] in Sacramento County. Promotional support comes from Smart Pots [https://smartpots.com/pages/fred] and Amazon [https://amzn.to/4boexQv]. And he likes to ride his bike(s). Especially downhill. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit gardenbasics.substack.com/subscribe [https://gardenbasics.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

3. juli 202628 min
episode More Heat-Beating Garden Tips artwork

More Heat-Beating Garden Tips

You may recall a couple of weeks ago on June 12, the Beyond the Garden Basics podcast featured myself and America’s Favorite retired horticulture professor, Debbie Flower, talking about protecting your outdoor plants in containers from the searing summer heat. That conversation was recorded during a live presentation at the 2023 Harvest Day festivities, put on by the Sacramento County, California Master Gardeners at the Fair Oaks Horticulture Center. Today’s podcast is the rest of that live presentation, where we discuss tips for saving Time Money and Water in the garden. Meanwhile, in this week’s newsletter, we have more advice for dealing with extreme heat in the garden this summer. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit gardenbasics.substack.com/subscribe [https://gardenbasics.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

26. juni 202637 min
episode Controlling Starthistle, Summer's Most Evil Weed* artwork

Controlling Starthistle, Summer's Most Evil Weed*

Today’s newsletter is all about starthistle, and all the ways you can control this summer weed…organically. If you want to read about chemical controls for starthistle, check out this University of California Ag and Natural Resources publication, “Yellow Starthistle [https://ipm.ucanr.edu/home-and-landscape/yellow-starthistle/#gsc.tab=0]”. In today’s podcast (above), America’s Favorite Retired College Horticulture Professor and I talk about the chemical side of weed control products, including all the different formulations of Roundup that are on the market, but they all have very different tasks; some can even sterilize your soil, making your garden unavailable for weeks, months, - or according to Flower - years. We offer tips for using herbicides, as well. We mention a University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture publication about the different Roundup formulations entitled, “UPDATE ON ROUNDUP-BRANDED HERBICIDES FOR CONSUMERS [https://uthort.tennessee.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/228/2024/05/Update-on-Roundup-Branded-Herbicides.pdf]” that can help you decide. One national database for insecticide/herbicide/miticide labels is the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s webpage, “Pesticide Product and Label System [https://ordspub.epa.gov/ords/pesticides/f?p=PPLS:1].” It’s not the easiest site to navigate, but be persistent. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit gardenbasics.substack.com/subscribe [https://gardenbasics.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

19. juni 202634 min
episode Your Garden vs. Summer Heatwaves artwork

Your Garden vs. Summer Heatwaves

We tackle how to help your garden cope with the late spring and all-summer heat waves coming our way in today’s podcast and newsletter. In the first part of the podcast (above), America’s Favorite Retired College Horticulture Professor, Debbie Flower, and I, concentrate on helping your plants in containers stay cooler in the summer. The second part of today’s podcast features a September 2022 chat with Sacramento County Master Gardener Gail Pothour, who had specific tips for helping your vegetable plants manage the heat. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit gardenbasics.substack.com/subscribe [https://gardenbasics.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

12. juni 202623 min
episode Other Vegetables That Love the Heat artwork

Other Vegetables That Love the Heat

Today’s podcast features Sacramento County Master Gardener and vegetable expert Gail Pothour, extolling the virtues of growing okra in the summer. Gail’s encyclopedic knowledge of this warm weather crop will amaze you. Perhaps it’s her South Carolina heritage that adds to her love of okra. Sometimes disdained for its mucilanginous flavor (aka “slimy”), okra is a plant of many uses, including its leaves and flowers. What? Plant in June or early July? Yes, indeed. Many popular home garden crops - melons, squash, sweet corn, popcorn, and okra - get off to a stronger start when the soil is very warm (70’s-80’s), and the same is true for June-purchased transplants of these vegetables. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit gardenbasics.substack.com/subscribe [https://gardenbasics.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

5. juni 202610 min