Plan Your Garden to Create Perfect Microclimates

, written by Benedict Vanheems gb flag

Growing cabbages in the shade of beans

No-one has a perfect garden, but you can at least create perfect microclimates – areas of the garden tailored to suit specific crops that may otherwise struggle without your intervention.

Whether it’s casting midsummer shade for cool season crops like lettuce, making the best use of heat-absorbing walls for warmth lovers such as tomatoes, or offering shelter from the worst of the wind so plants don’t get battered, there’s a lot we can do to tinker around the edges of the growing conditions we’re dealt with.

Warming Soil for Early Planting

For the ever-busy gardener, the year really starts with those first sowings of the season. But while you’re sowing the earliest crops indoors or under cover, now’s also the time to prepare the planting areas they’ll go into. In most cases this means warming up the soil by a few degrees, effectively cheating the seasons to create a snug reception for your new plants. Plastic works very well – either clear polythene tunnels or dark-coloured plastic laid directly onto the ground. Plastic also has the advantage of helping the ground to dry out a little – not a bad thing in regions with wet winters.

“Plastic-covered
Covering beds with plastic helps dry out and warm up soil

When it’s time to plant out, a layer of horticultural fleece will ensure an easy transition from the cosseted conditions the young plants will have been accustomed to, while offering peace of mind against any rogue late frosts.

Using Thermal Mass to Create Warmer Microclimates

Walls, paving and anything else with good thermal mass – that’s the ability of a material to absorb heat – can be used to create warmth. The temperature against a sun-facing wall will be consistently warmer during the day and, crucially, a few degrees warmer at night too. In more temperate regions this can be of huge benefit, speeding the ripening of vegetables from balmier climes – think tomatoes, capsicum and eggplant.

Clearly it’s easier to take advantage of existing structures such as garden walls, but consider adding additional temporary thermal mass around tender crops at planting out time. Drinks bottles refilled with water can act as effective heat stores; start collecting them now! Place three or four bottles around each plant to create a wall of thermal mass that releases heat at night-time, helping new transplants establish quicker.

“Water-filled
Water-filled plastic bottles will absorb heat during the day and release it at night

Providing Shade for Cool-Season Crops

In hot climates the relentless heat of summer can have a depressing effect on cool-season crops such as salad leaves. It doesn’t take long for once-luxuriant leaves to wilt then wither. Adequate watering is essential but a little shade will go a long way too.

Companion plants offer many benefits, from attracting pollinators to adding trace nutrients to the soil. Another benefit for some crops is the shade they cast. Tall crops like sweetcorn or climbing beans will offer a cooler microclimate for more sensitive souls living in their shadow.

Vegetables welcoming shade in the middle of the day include lettuce, spinach, radishes, carrots, cabbage family plants, peas and broad beans. Shade-casters to join sweetcorn and climbing beans include any vining or climbing crop such as tomatoes, sprawling varieties of squash trained up supports and, in warmer climates, sweet potato. Sunflowers also cast cooling shade while contributing a little cheer to the vegetable garden.

“Beans
Grow cool-season crops in the shade of taller plants

Sheltering Tender Plants from Wind

Wind can be a tricky customer during the growing season. Young plants, or crops that catch the wind and act like sails – a row of tall-growing beans, for example – are easily damaged by strong gusts. But even the windiest locations can be tamed.

The solution is carefully positioned windbreaks. Living windbreaks, such as shrubs or a tall, forgiving vegetable like Jerusalem artichoke, can help to slow prevailing winds to a softer speed. Artificial screens such as woven netting are highly effective and can be used to shield permanent living windbreaks as they establish. Woven screens and hurdles made from willow or hazel look beautiful too, though you’ll need either time or money to set lots of them up.

“Wattle
Windbreaks made from willow or hazel filter harmful gusts

Creating microclimates within your garden needn’t be a difficult or worrisome process. Consider each plant’s needs and plan accordingly – a little lateral thinking will keep everything thriving. Do you create microclimates to make the most of your garden? Tell us how you do it the comments section below.

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Comments

 
"I like to use straw bale walls. One side sunny, one shady, windbreak and great perch for my cats. I can make whatever height or angle is needed and even plant in them. At the end of the season I till in the straw to amend my horrible red clay soil."
Martha Keller on Tuesday 3 July 2018
"That's a brilliant technique - such a clever idea! Thanks for sharing."
Ben Vanheems on Tuesday 3 July 2018
"Adding solid fencing such as wood, and evergreens (bushes or trees) around your property will also help to keep the heat in if you are in a colder climate. "
janna on Wednesday 15 September 2021
"That's very true Janna. Stopping this bone-chilling winds can have a huge effect on temperature."
Ben Vanheems on Thursday 16 September 2021
"Thanks for sharing this easy to follow guideline. As a garden coach, I love to find article to pass on, that are easy enough for the most beginning gardeners to understand, making it more likely they will follow along. It can be overwhelming to them and when written with just enough information to help them be successful, it helps build in them the confidence they need to take it to the next level. "
DiAnn on Saturday 16 December 2023
"Hi DiAnn. I'm so pleased you've found this article useful. We try to keep things as simple and precise as possible, so it's great to read that you've found it so. :-)"
Ben Vanheems on Monday 18 December 2023

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