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#1
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#2
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Ok, now I'm really confused. Are these the same thing or are they
different? If not the same, what do each really mean. TIA for your assistance. See my post on your other thread. James |
#3
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#4
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Are these the same thing or are they different?
Climate zones is a broad term, including heat, rainfall, sunlight, & other factors. The Sunset zones could be called climate zones. Plant hardiness zones are the same as USDA zones. They refer strictly to which plants will survive the winter in different areas. Iris, Central NY, Zone 5a, Sunset Zone 40 "If we see light at the end of the tunnel, It's the light of the oncoming train." Robert Lowell (1917-1977) |
#5
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On Sun, 13 Apr 2003 23:47:43 -0400, "JNJ" wrote:
Ok, now I'm really confused. Are these the same thing or are they different? If not the same, what do each really mean. See my post on your other thread. which has a reference that pretty much explains things clearly. http://www.hgtv.com/hgtv/gl_seasonal...399487,00.html I understand Sunset has expanded its standard gardening reference to the rest (non-west) of the US -- Whoopee! I wonder if half.com has it... |
#6
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I care, thats why I asked.
Cereoid-XXX wrote: Who cares? The plant hardiness zones are only an estimation. Climate is not the same thing. John S. DeBoo wrote in message ... Ok, now I'm really confused. Are these the same thing or are they different? If not the same, what do each really mean. TIA for your assistance. -- John S. DeBoo -- John S. DeBoo |
#7
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I'm fascinated by the discussion, even though USDA hardiness zones are not
all that useful in the Land of OZ, since the whole country fits into Zones 7-10. As people have said, this is about frost-hardiness, not climate types. Arizona (the low bits) is pretty much like what we would call a semi-arid climate. We distinguish climatic zones on the basis of temperature/rainfall patterns. For example: hot summers, cool winters, winter rainfall max, dry summers annual rainfall 20-30 inches (Mediterranean type such as Perth WA, Adelaide SA)); hot wet summers, hot dry winters, around 60 inches allin about 4 months over summer (Tropical - monsoonal like Darwin NT, Cairns Qld); and hot summers, coolish winters with some morning frosts, rainfall variable, 5-10 inches (semi a-arid, temperate continental, like Alice Springs NT). But - Cereoid-XXX has a point even if presented in a fairly cavalier fashion - your own microclimate(s) could vary quite a lot from the average and greatly widen your range of plant options. I live in the coldest city in OZ - Canberra, which is cool temperate tableland country with frosts from about May to September, but I grow some frost sensitive shrubs against a darkish north-facing wall. I should translate into Northern Hemi-speak!- that would be Nov to March and south-facing. BTW, I'd be happy to share info on Australian plants with anyone whose interested - in exchange for info on your local plants of interest Cheers Ian Lester "John S. DeBoo" wrote in message ... I care, thats why I asked. Cereoid-XXX wrote: Who cares? The plant hardiness zones are only an estimation. Climate is not the same thing. John S. DeBoo wrote in message ... Ok, now I'm really confused. Are these the same thing or are they different? If not the same, what do each really mean. TIA for your assistance. -- John S. DeBoo -- John S. DeBoo |
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