Time to paint your roofs black to stop this!!!!!!!!!!!
http://www.uticaod.com/archive/x1175994993/May-to-go-out-under-a-freeze-watchLocal gardeners may want to take special measures to protect their plants this evening as a frost advisory has been issued for much of New York state, including Oneida County.
The advisory issued by the National Weather Service remains in effect until 8 a.m. Monday.
Temperatures are expected to fall into the mid-to-low 30s overnight, and a hard frost is likely as temperatures in colder areas approach freezing.
Brad Alcott, owner of Alcott's Greenhouses in Waterville, said the possible frost may catch some gardeners off guard.
"Memorial Day has always been the rule of thumb for planting in the garden. So June 1 is definitely late," he said.
Alcott offered these suggestions for protecting plants from a late frost:
* Move planters and container gardens inside overnight if at all possible
* Tomatoes and other sensitive plants can be covered with 5-gallon buckets or specially-designed "water towers" to trap heat around them.
* Other plants should be covered with cloth sheets
* Avoid covering plants with plastic sheeting. "Frost will go right through it and burn the plants where it's touching them," Alcott said.
Alcott said frost damage also can be mitigated after it happens by pouring water over plants in the early morning. Removing the frost this way before the sun hits the plants will make the damage less severe, he said.
Alcott said the lastest frost he remembers in our area occurred on June 6. He also said the last frost of the spring is historically associated with a full moon, which this year falls on June 7.
The region’s low temperature for today is expected to be about 36 degrees, which also is the record low temperature for May 31, according to WKTV meteorologists and weather archives.
The record was set in 1966.
A low of 50 degrees is expected for Monday.
The record low for June 1 is 31 degrees, which was set in 1945, according to weather archives.