So sorry for all your area and states that was touched by the intense heat and all the extra work that had to be put in to survive. My thoughts would be to cut it off so this is great info. Your garden still looks so lovely!!!
I'm in zone 5 (Chicago) so we are used to hot summers. But man was this summer hot, humid and dry. Things survived but the garden definitely took a hit. It will recover though. After this weekend of 100+ degree weather it is supposed to cool off. Looking forward to my grass recover too
Love your expertise on gardening. Out of many RUclips gardeners you give the best knowledge. Your a realist. Climate change is real and gardeners need to talk more about this because it is in our lifetime and is important to communicate about it in a gardening sense. In many areas heat zone now is more important when choosing a tree, plant ect rather then a cold zone. Thank you and looking forward to more of your videos.
Thanks for the good advice to just leave the plants alone. We suffered unusual hot weather earlier this summer on east coast but nothing like you guys . Many years ago we only had one room with A/C and we camped out in that room when temps were in the 90's. We are also having more rain in July. Best wishes to everyone.
Thank you so much for the information. You truly are worth your weight in gold. This year at the end of May , I put in about $2,000 worth of evergreens and perennials ( sounds like a lot , but the rate of inflation is depressing) . Zone 6b NY- we had a mini heat wave of mid-high 90’s temps for about 10 days in June- then rain and the temps would climb back up. Water, water, water ( my bill for last month was over $300 ). Two Soft Touch Holly didn’t make it- I suspect STILL not enough water. Luckily, I did buy insurance. Our weather patterns are changing right before our eyes. When I moved to this area - 30 years ago, our last frost date was around May 30. Now our last frost date is around April 22. We gotten 80 degree temps in March. In winter our ground doesn’t freeze like it did years ago. Debbie anyone who doesn’t believe our climate is changing , is not old enough to know.
Thanks for posting this video. I now feel better about all my plants that suffered. My hydrangeas are really burned. All the white blooms are ruined but they are putting out new flowers. My cousin put shade shelters over hers and put on her sprinklers in the afternoon and she had no hydrangea damage. My bees were all hanging outside their hive flapping their wings like mad. It was crazy.
Thank you Debbie for such a useful video. Even though we haven't so far experienced your kind of heat here in England. It does make me aware that I am watering after the heat and not hydrating the plants before expected high temperatures. So thanks to your advice l shall watch that in future. I am so sorry for those people, households and their homes that have been lost due to extremely high temperatures. And I know what it means to gardeners when they see their plants stressed. Sending love from England : )
Even though slightly scorched you have one of the most extensive and interesting garden(s)in a home owner setting that I have ever seen. So glad I found your channel not just for your garden tours but for the advice and knowledge given. I live in Lebanon Oregon and suffered some damage to my three small gardens but all will be ok down the road.
I live in the Seattle area, so I have many sad plants. This is very helpful. You are the only gardening channel I’ve found that is so close to my own growing conditions.
I am finding that many of my plants are needing more TLC after the heat wave and are wilting easier and roses burning easier. Thanks so much for all you wisdom! I even found the roses that you carry in your garden center to be very helpful in what roses to choose.
Lots of great information. I m glad your garden did suffer too much. I’m in GA and our huge oaks are dropping tiny premature acorns. I don’t think I’ve ever noticed it doing that in the past. It’s been hot but not unusually so.
Much appreciated, in the UK we also have a temperate climate similar to Zone8 in the US. We haven't just experienced a heatwave but have experienced some unseasonally warm strong winds, more prolonged periods of no rain in months we expect it and then deluges of rain ... my florabunda roses & hydrangea annabelle are not looking great at all! I did put a question to Jim Putman (not sure if he's answer) about which plants are going to standup more to the possible trends of more extreme weather.... and how the industry is moving (if at all) to develop more bombproof breeds
The plants themselves will adapt to a certain point however with deep watering and a good feeding in the Spring we can assist with that adaptation. Consumers will be looking for more heat tolerant varieties as well. I'm always keeping an eye out for new and inproved super plants as they come available too. :)
Hi! Thank you so much for posting this video! I garden in southwest Oregon, zone 8B (not by the coast). We are used to hot summers but nothing like this latest heatwave. I've been hand watering my annuals, perennials, trees and bushes. So far the fuschias are faring the worst and roses are looking good, blooming but the blazing sun scorches them! All I can say to fellow gardeners is "I sincerely hope your damaged plants come back to full glory". We are expecting a cool-down next week to the high 90's. Yay! Best of luck to you all.
Yep, I drive by some farms on the way toy sister's house and those young Christmas trees are completely brown! And the bigger ones, the tops were all brown. That's in Mulino Oregon!
I live in Boise ID and i covered my vegetable garden with old curtain panels and lots of fabric from my stash. I used bamboo stakes along the rows and binder clips to attach the fabric. I didn't lose any plants and most of them kept producing although much more slowly. Didn't have time to get shade cloth and was in full sun. We still are well over 100 degrees most days.
I am in SW Idaho and it's still smoking hot record breaking temps! My poor hydrangeas are crispy but have flower buds on them. Going to pamper them as much as I can.
Very thankful for your channel, Debbie. I am in Kamloops, which is neighbour to Lytton. We have had the same crazy temps and my family was evacuated on Canada Day due to a fire in the grass hill by our neighbourhood. This summer has definitely been a struggle already. My plants (and grass) are starting to recoup, although it is taking a lot of rehydrating. We are still in the 30's (celcius) with mostly smokey days, so very appreciative of any blue sky breaks! Have a great weekend Debbie and fellow gardeners.
Good to see you are back making videos. That is what I’ve done with my Hostas. I’ve cut the burnt leaves. My Arborvitae was dry at the top and loosing a lot of its evergreen needles. I soaked it really well and hopefully it will bounce back. If not I will have to try another plant. Thanks for sharing.
My yard didn't do too bad but we have a lot of shade. You can always turn the brown side of the Christmas tree to the wall. My hostas do look pretty sad.
even here in Nova Scotia the heat was unreal. I got married in our yard among our flower beds last August, and what a stressful summer to keep them looking pretty! Hoping to relax this summer lol. Sheesh.
Thank you for the video. I love your channel. I’m so sorry for all of you up there. We’re used to that kind of heat here in central California, but I can’t imagine having to go through it without an air condition! My problem is justifying the extra water during a severe drought.
100 degrees is a beautiful day in Sydney Australia. That is our average summer's day. Heat wave in Australia is above anything above 110 degrees. My hydrangea and hostas don't burn like that.on a 100 degrees day. Plants must be tougher at down under.
The heat wave came on suddenly so the plants had no time adjust. Otherwise they have survived 100 degree temps. before. Hope all is well down under. Would love to visit someday. :)
@@GardenStylenw Yes please come to Australia one day you will love it. Dont travel here in January, February and early March it's 100 to 110 degrees most days. Best time is end of March, April, May, early June, October, November and early December.
I moved as many of my potted plants into the shade and watered twice daily during the heat wave. Prune off any brown and crispy leaves and most plants will recover.
I live in the PNW and put in a new bed this year. I am not sure about watering young trees and shrubs (hydrangeas and boxwoods). I do have a drip system running to them but never really sure how much, how long and how often they need watering. I supplemented their water by hand during the heat dome. Thanks!
I found it interesting that the buds survived on flowering shrubs where the leaves did not. It appeared that the plant sent much of its water reserves there. This happened on hostas, hydrangeas, and a sweetspire. Sweetspire buds still appear healthy and the others have all bloomed. I hope with so few leaves, my panicle hydrangea can get what it needs to survive. 🤞🏻
Could you have done anything before the heat wave to help? Setting up temporary shade cloth? Anti-desiccant spray for the rhododendrons? Clay spray for fruit trees to reflect light?
We did set up shade cloths and pre-hydrated. However there is a lot of area to cover and it wasn't possible to cover all the plants. still incurred damage but most will make it.
I heard that feeding melatonin to stressed plants can help, especially if you can predict the stress and feed the plants/trees/crops ahead of time. Also, turn off unnecessary lights at night, especially bright white (blue-rich wavelength) light in the yard& garden because it suppresses essential melatonin, tricking the plant that it is daytime (blue sky =daytime).
We had 118 + degree weather. But not unusual. My cannas look just like your crunchy scorched leaves as well as other plants. But that's every summer. I leave them because it protects the ones underneath 🤔🤷♀️ should I not? Since this weather is here to stay until end of September perhaps.
Good video, thank you. Lovely garden. Would you recommend I cut the brown leaves off my regular roses or my Cecile Brunner’s rose climbers? I’m used to heat but we got clobbered in AZ 113 degrees+ for many days, we are now back to the 104 degrees now it was ridiculously 🥵 …my poor plants. So just to be sure I understood correctly, when I know the heat is coming we should get the plants watered extra before and after?
Yes! Hydrate up before excessive heat hits. You can trim off the dead flowers so your stressed roses have less to take care of and they will come back with new growth better than before. :)
If you notice a plant stressing, is it ok to slow trickle in the mid day if that's when you notice....or should you wait until the evening, Thanks for the great videos and info!
My poor trees and plants. My vine maple is scorched as well as things that get a smal amount of sun. I'm so sad. My hosts look just like yours and my ferns are horribly scorched.
How did you and friends and family make it thru this to manage? And did anyone get any sleep? Sorry for what tree farmers and the agra businesses went thru.
Wow! Things look great for the most part. Did I see a weeping atlas blue cedar? Love those so much. I am in zone 6b and I worry it might not do well. I prefer plants and shrubs down to zone 5. Are they harder than I'm giving credit for? Thank you for the video today❤
In Vancouver, WA, we had to water our landscape twice daily during the heat dome here at 114 to 116. We'll be lucky in the PNW if we only get one of these heat domes per year. The climate is so messed up. We elected the guy who wrote the book on climate change but ended up with the oil and gas millionaires. Politicians have made people afraid to talk about climate change because they know they would have to change a lot of things about our lifestyle, dependence on fossil fuels, over and mass production of animal foods, rain forest cutting (the lungs of our planet). The British and other people around the world have been talking openly about climate change for over 20 years and wonder why Americans deny it.
@@GardenStylenw thank you! The dogwood is front and center of my house so I think It should be replaced. Do you have a recommendation for a ornamental tree that looks nice all year?
This is what I was told: To promote growth and deter mold and pests such as fungus gnats, it is sometimes necessary to trim and remove dead or dying leaves from your plant. This helps the plant send energy to the healthiest leaves, as yellow and brown crispy leaves will not turn green again.
Most of the garden during a heat wave: browning and dropping leaves
Barberries: Time to invade!
Their resilience makes up for those awful thorns...
Despite the damage your garden is looking beautiful! Thanks for your input.
So sorry for all your area and states that was touched by the intense heat and all the extra work that had to be put in to survive. My thoughts would be to cut it off so this is great info. Your garden still looks so lovely!!!
I'm in zone 5 (Chicago) so we are used to hot summers. But man was this summer hot, humid and dry. Things survived but the garden definitely took a hit. It will recover though. After this weekend of 100+ degree weather it is supposed to cool off. Looking forward to my grass recover too
Love your expertise on gardening. Out of many RUclips gardeners you give the best knowledge. Your a realist. Climate change is real and gardeners need to talk more about this because it is in our lifetime and is important to communicate about it in a gardening sense. In many areas heat zone now is more important when choosing a tree, plant ect rather then a cold zone. Thank you and looking forward to more of your videos.
Thanks for the good advice to just leave the plants alone. We suffered unusual hot weather earlier this summer on east coast but nothing like you guys . Many years ago we only had one room with A/C and we camped out in that room when temps were in the 90's. We are also having more rain in July. Best wishes to everyone.
I know this heat wave has been so hard on everyone. Your garden still looks beautiful!
Thank you so much for the information. You truly are worth your weight in gold. This year at the end of May , I put in about $2,000 worth of evergreens and perennials ( sounds like a lot , but the rate of inflation is depressing) . Zone 6b NY- we had a mini heat wave of mid-high 90’s temps for about 10 days in June- then rain and the temps would climb back up. Water, water, water ( my bill for last month was over $300 ). Two Soft Touch Holly didn’t make it- I suspect STILL not enough water. Luckily, I did buy insurance. Our weather patterns are changing right before our eyes. When I moved to this area - 30 years ago, our last frost date was around May 30. Now our last frost date is around April 22. We gotten 80 degree temps in March. In winter our ground doesn’t freeze like it did years ago. Debbie anyone who doesn’t believe our climate is changing , is not old enough to know.
Put it in your calendar to show the rebounded scorched plants in your yard, in next year's videos!
Thanks for posting this video. I now feel better about all my plants that suffered. My hydrangeas are really burned. All the white blooms are ruined but they are putting out new flowers. My cousin put shade shelters over hers and put on her sprinklers in the afternoon and she had no hydrangea damage. My bees were all hanging outside their hive flapping their wings like mad. It was crazy.
Excellent video, made me feel so much better about my garden and the heat wave affects. Thank you!
Thank you Debbie for such a useful video. Even though we haven't so far experienced your kind of heat here in England. It does make me aware that I am watering after the heat and not hydrating the plants before expected high temperatures. So thanks to your advice l shall watch that in future. I am so sorry for those people, households and their homes that have been lost due to extremely high temperatures. And I know what it means to gardeners when they see their plants stressed. Sending love from England : )
Very educational!! I’m in PA and we’ve been in the 90’s and very humid with thunderstorms.
I am glad your garden did not suffer any severe damage. Always looking forward to your videos.
Even though slightly scorched you have one of the most extensive and interesting garden(s)in a home owner setting that I have ever seen. So glad I found your channel not just for your garden tours but for the advice and knowledge given. I live in Lebanon Oregon and suffered some damage to my three small gardens but all will be ok down the road.
I live in the Seattle area, so I have many sad plants. This is very helpful. You are the only gardening channel I’ve found that is so close to my own growing conditions.
I put up my 5 backyard umbrellas on my favorite plants when it gets crazy hot.
I am finding that many of my plants are needing more TLC after the heat wave and are wilting easier and roses burning easier. Thanks so much for all you wisdom! I even found the roses that you carry in your garden center to be very helpful in what roses to choose.
Lots of great information. I m glad your garden did suffer too much. I’m in GA and our huge oaks are dropping tiny premature acorns. I don’t think I’ve ever noticed it doing that in the past. It’s been hot but not unusually so.
I enjoy your videos so much. Looking forward to more! 👍
Suggestion on what to talk about. How to know if you need to use chelated iron, or just regular iron for chlorosis.
Much appreciated, in the UK we also have a temperate climate similar to Zone8 in the US. We haven't just experienced a heatwave but have experienced some unseasonally warm strong winds, more prolonged periods of no rain in months we expect it and then deluges of rain ... my florabunda roses & hydrangea annabelle are not looking great at all! I did put a question to Jim Putman (not sure if he's answer) about which plants are going to standup more to the possible trends of more extreme weather.... and how the industry is moving (if at all) to develop more bombproof breeds
The plants themselves will adapt to a certain point however with deep watering and a good feeding in the Spring we can assist with that adaptation. Consumers will be looking for more heat tolerant varieties as well. I'm always keeping an eye out for new and inproved super plants as they come available too. :)
Hi! Thank you so much for posting this video! I garden in southwest Oregon, zone 8B (not by the coast). We are used to hot summers but nothing like this latest heatwave. I've been hand watering my annuals, perennials, trees and bushes. So far the fuschias are faring the worst and roses are looking good, blooming but the blazing sun scorches them! All I can say to fellow gardeners is "I sincerely hope your damaged plants come back to full glory". We are expecting a cool-down next week to the high 90's. Yay! Best of luck to you all.
Your gardens are amazing and still gorgeous! Even after our heat wave. Well done!
I've never seen temps like that, even living in SC for 12 years!
Thank you - I appreciate the advice. Your blueberries look amazing.
Thank you for all this useful information!
Thank you so much for this video. Now I know why the leaves on my plants looks like that.
Fantastic garden! Thanks for sharing
Yep, I drive by some farms on the way toy sister's house and those young Christmas trees are completely brown! And the bigger ones, the tops were all brown. That's in Mulino Oregon!
Breaks my heart!
I live in Boise ID and i covered my vegetable garden with old curtain panels and lots of fabric from my stash. I used bamboo stakes along the rows and binder clips to attach the fabric. I didn't lose any plants and most of them kept producing although much more slowly. Didn't have time to get shade cloth and was in full sun. We still are well over 100 degrees most days.
Thanks for the information on perennial plants
Debbie, this was so helpful no matter where you garden.
I am in SW Idaho and it's still smoking hot record breaking temps! My poor hydrangeas are crispy but have flower buds on them. Going to pamper them as much as I can.
Much appreciated info. We hit 110 to 116 here in Medford, Oregon for multiple days and consistently at around 100 since. ☹️
Ouch! Glad it's over! :)
Very thankful for your channel, Debbie. I am in Kamloops, which is neighbour to Lytton. We have had the same crazy temps and my family was evacuated on Canada Day due to a fire in the grass hill by our neighbourhood. This summer has definitely been a struggle already. My plants (and grass) are starting to recoup, although it is taking a lot of rehydrating. We are still in the 30's (celcius) with mostly smokey days, so very appreciative of any blue sky breaks! Have a great weekend Debbie and fellow gardeners.
Good to see you are back making videos. That is what I’ve done with my Hostas. I’ve cut the burnt leaves. My Arborvitae was dry at the top and loosing a lot of its evergreen needles. I soaked it really well and hopefully it will bounce back. If not I will have to try another plant. Thanks for sharing.
My yard didn't do too bad but we have a lot of shade. You can always turn the brown side of the Christmas tree to the wall. My hostas do look pretty sad.
Thank you! Your information was very helpful.
even here in Nova Scotia the heat was unreal. I got married in our yard among our flower beds last August, and what a stressful summer to keep them looking pretty! Hoping to relax this summer lol. Sheesh.
Thank you..it does help.
In Michigan when it gets below zero, and frosts in May and my Japanese maples die, I don't say its climate change, I say damn it, that was expensive.
those wind currents can do wonders.. its almost like it comes and goes with the wind...
Thank you for the video. I love your channel. I’m so sorry for all of you up there. We’re used to that kind of heat here in central California, but I can’t imagine having to go through it without an air condition! My problem is justifying the extra water during a severe drought.
100 degrees is a beautiful day in Sydney Australia. That is our average summer's day. Heat wave in Australia is above anything above 110 degrees. My hydrangea and hostas don't burn like that.on a 100 degrees day. Plants must be tougher at down under.
The heat wave came on suddenly so the plants had no time adjust. Otherwise they have survived 100 degree temps. before. Hope all is well down under. Would love to visit someday. :)
@@GardenStylenw Yes please come to Australia one day you will love it. Dont travel here in January, February and early March it's 100 to 110 degrees most days. Best time is end of March, April, May, early June, October, November and early December.
I moved as many of my potted plants into the shade and watered twice daily during the heat wave. Prune off any brown and crispy leaves and most plants will recover.
Love your channel ❤️❤️
Could you please use a stabilizer on your camera and consider microphoning up? 👍🏻👍🏻❤️❤️❤️
Great info
I live in the PNW and put in a new bed this year. I am not sure about watering young trees and shrubs (hydrangeas and boxwoods). I do have a drip system running to them but never really sure how much, how long and how often they need watering. I supplemented their water by hand during the heat dome. Thanks!
I found it interesting that the buds survived on flowering shrubs where the leaves did not. It appeared that the plant sent much of its water reserves there. This happened on hostas, hydrangeas, and a sweetspire. Sweetspire buds still appear healthy and the others have all bloomed. I hope with so few leaves, my panicle hydrangea can get what it needs to survive. 🤞🏻
Could you have done anything before the heat wave to help? Setting up temporary shade cloth? Anti-desiccant spray for the rhododendrons? Clay spray for fruit trees to reflect light?
We did set up shade cloths and pre-hydrated. However there is a lot of area to cover and it wasn't possible to cover all the plants. still incurred damage but most will make it.
Sorry you had such a heat wave. The mushy hosts leaves can rot the leaVes below them
Hi Debbie. Where did you get your garden beds. Love your channel. I thought my 10a got hot weather but nothing like what you are getting this year.
The raised beds are from "Lifetime" found them by googling them. Very easy to put together. :)
I heard that feeding melatonin to stressed plants can help, especially if you can predict the stress and feed the plants/trees/crops ahead of time. Also, turn off unnecessary lights at night, especially bright white (blue-rich wavelength) light in the yard& garden because it suppresses essential melatonin, tricking the plant that it is daytime (blue sky =daytime).
We had 118 + degree weather. But not unusual.
My cannas look just like your crunchy scorched leaves as well as other plants. But that's every summer. I leave them because it protects the ones underneath 🤔🤷♀️ should I not? Since this weather is here to stay until end of September perhaps.
So sorry for so much stress to humans especially, plus all the plants and trees.☹️
At 6:10 into the video where'd you get the tiki head planter. Great video. Thanks
I carried them at the nursery and hope to have more by next spring. They were a hit and fun to place in the garden.
@@GardenStylenw thank you
Good video, thank you. Lovely garden. Would you recommend I cut the brown leaves off my regular roses or my Cecile Brunner’s rose climbers? I’m used to heat but we got clobbered in AZ 113 degrees+ for many days, we are now back to the 104 degrees now it was ridiculously 🥵 …my poor plants. So just to be sure I understood correctly, when I know the heat is coming we should get the plants watered extra before and after?
Yes! Hydrate up before excessive heat hits. You can trim off the dead flowers so your stressed roses have less to take care of and they will come back with new growth better than before. :)
That was so helpful, thank you!
On the Hostas, do I cut back burned leaves from the bottom of stem?
Yes!
If you notice a plant stressing, is it ok to slow trickle in the mid day if that's when you notice....or should you wait until the evening, Thanks for the great videos and info!
Mid-day or anytime is just fine to take the stress off and hydrate them.
@@GardenStylenw Thanks!!! Thats what I did :-)
What are the beautiful light colored grasses in a circle at the end of the video?
Those are Carex feather falls. Did a video on grasses a while back. :)
My poor trees and plants. My vine maple is scorched as well as things that get a smal amount of sun. I'm so sad. My hosts look just like yours and my ferns are horribly scorched.
How did you and friends and family make it thru this to manage? And did anyone get any sleep? Sorry for what tree farmers and the agra businesses went thru.
Wow! Things look great for the most part. Did I see a weeping atlas blue cedar? Love those so much. I am in zone 6b and I worry it might not do well. I prefer plants and shrubs down to zone 5. Are they harder than I'm giving credit for? Thank you for the video today❤
The cedar should do great in your area. I encourage you to try it! :)
In Vancouver, WA, we had to water our landscape twice daily during the heat dome here at 114 to 116. We'll be lucky in the PNW if we only get one of these heat domes per year. The climate is so messed up. We elected the guy who wrote the book on climate change but ended up with the oil and gas millionaires. Politicians have made people afraid to talk about climate change because they know they would have to change a lot of things about our lifestyle, dependence on fossil fuels, over and mass production of animal foods, rain forest cutting (the lungs of our planet). The British and other people around the world have been talking openly about climate change for over 20 years and wonder why Americans deny it.
We got up to 115 in SW WA. Awful!
Yep... in my neighborhood in SW WA, the closest personal weather station to me read 117F on the hottest day. 🥵
@@StormWarningMom it was awful! Our dashboard read 117 at one point when we ran into Kelso. So glad it’s over!
Looking stunning as u also🌷🌷
I have a Kousa Dogwood that flowers beautifully, but the leaves curl every year. Is that normal? It looks so sad that I want to replace it. Roy, Wa
Very typical for Dogwoods to look sad. Mine does that too! They love cooler temps. By keeping them hydrated they will be fine.
@@GardenStylenw thank you! The dogwood is front and center of my house so I think It should be replaced. Do you have a recommendation for a ornamental tree that looks nice all year?
@@amberkay521 coral bark maples, flowering plums or crabapples have muti- season interest. Hey good topic for a video. Lol
@@GardenStylenw that would be an awesome video!! I will be looking forward to seeing that one for sure!
Were those tall puscha flowers phlox as well as the ones in front of the bird bath?
Yes! My favorite!
@@GardenStylenw I'm in love with Phlox & Hydrangeas & most anything that flowers!
What are the shrubs to your back left in the intro?
Those are Rose glow Barberry. :)
What is the grass that is around the blue atlas cedar?
Carex silver falls. :)
The vast majority of the scientific community state that the world is heating at a pace and to a degree which is unprecedented.
Is it too late to be planting pumpkins and winter squash?
No! Go for it!
Why not trim the dead off the edges of the hosta leaves?
The cut edges will continue to turn brown. Best to relieve the plant of the whole leaf.
This is what I was told: To promote growth and deter mold and pests such as fungus gnats, it is sometimes necessary to trim and remove dead or dying leaves from your plant. This helps the plant send energy to the healthiest leaves, as yellow and brown crispy leaves will not turn green again.
STUPENDOUS
Why does it sound like you are skirting past the reality of climate change?
I believe our climate is changing. Question is..how much?
Hopefully you’re not getting political (fake climate hysteria). If so, I will be disappointed. 😞
A reasonable, even apolitical person would ponder exactly what she pondered.
Its real. Living it in Napa County. fire on the mountain. What would happen if people accepted reality?
Prove the climate hysteria is fake, Mark, so we can join your side. Waiting for proof. Neither I nor anyone else wants to have this worry.