A single experience of a low-temperature frost for living stone flowers
This article brings you the relevant experience of living stone flowers, a single experience of a low-temperature frost. Next, the editor will introduce this to the netizens.
About a week ago, after watering a batch of seedlings during the day, they were placed in the open air to dry. However, I forgot to bring them into the sunroom at night and slept soundly through the night. It was my dad who reminded me from the rooftop in the morning that the seedlings had been frozen into ice lumps. I hurriedly ran to the rooftop and my heart sank at the sight. More than ten polystyrene boxes were all frosted, with the one-year-old seedlings covered in thick white frost.
The incident happened because I was negligent. After watering nearly ten thousand living stone flowers and leaving them in the open air to dry, I usually don't go upstairs because the new sunroom is quite large, and the drying spot is on one side of the sunroom. Also, the hardware store is quite busy around the New Year, so I quickly went downstairs after closing the insulating film of the sunroom. The temperature was very good for the past few days, with no frost, but I forgot to collect them when a severe frost came that night. In the morning, my dad went to the third floor to晒 things and found that the living stone flowers were still outside. Oh, to be honest, I ran a few steps to the rooftop and found that the soft polystyrene boxes were hard, the frost was very thick, the soil was almost frozen, because the day before I watered them thoroughly with a faucet, the temperature on the rooftop is a few degrees colder than on the first floor, the lowest temperature recorded by the thermometer was minus 4, accompanied by a strong frost, all frozen into ice lumps, as shown in the picture below:
The two-year-old seedlings look almost translucent, ripe, the potting soil is all frozen, hard, and the new plants are a bit transparent after peeling off the old skin.
Hurriedly moved into the sunroom to thaw slowly, the first day was spent slowly in the sunroom. The next day, the soil was still moist, the continuous sunshine was really good, then I moved each pot out to bask in the sun and blow wind. By the end of the day, the soil surface was almost dry, then moved back into the sunroom to ease slowly. After the frost, none of the two-year-old seedlings died, and the peeling was neater than those without frost. Phew, what a relief, the comparison picture can show this.
The above is the complete content of the experience of a low-temperature frost for living stone flowers (with pictures), and green plant enthusiasts may refer to this aspect.