What is the climate of the Garden
Respuestas a la pregunta
Observing the existing gardens gives a fairly clear idea of which specimens can be planted in that region
Microclimates, on the other hand, are the conditioning of each specific plot of the garden. In general, the same three factors must be taken into account, but in this case they are affected not by the general characteristics of the region but by particular garden issues: if there is a shade tree, more humid places, a wall or Hedges that cut or reduce the wind, the shadows projected by nearby buildings, etc.
Depending on the climate, the most suitable species should be chosen for each region. A very simple but effective trick is to walk around the area where you want to make a garden, to check the existence of other gardens and to know which specimens inhabit them. Of course, these gardens do not have to include all the possible species of the region, but they will provide a representative idea. Then you have to keep in mind the microclimates of the garden itself to know how to distribute these species.
Respuesta:
Plants have evolved all over the world, adapting over the course of time to local conditions, whether temperate or tropical, wet or dry, loamy or rocky, sunny or shady. Plants that failed to find a niche became extinct and vanished. These days, we bring plants from diverse climates and communities into our gardens. Even when we try to design with native plants, we know that they, too, have diversity in their history. Their seeds may well have been brought to the region hundreds of years ago by animals, water, wind, and native people. Each plant species has a range of conditions under which it will thrive, other conditions under which it will merely survive, and unique limitations that will cause its death in hostile conditions.
Temperature
Heat and cold influence plant survival. Understanding temperature in your garden will help you find the varieties of plants that can thrive for you, especially those plants that normally live for more than a year. Conditions in your garden are influenced by your region's climate, including frost dates, and your garden's unique exposure. Plants can be grown outside their natural climate if you provide warmth to tropical plants in winter (for example, growing a lemon tree in a greenhouse in Massachusetts) or cold to plants from temperate climates in winter (for instance, treating tulip bulbs with weeks of refrigeration before planting them in Georgia). Consider both heat tolerance and cold tolerance before your select your plantings
Explicación:
hope it helps you