Home
Weather Dublin
WeatherRadar
RainfallRadar
TemperatureRadar
WindRadar
LightningRadar
Weather News
Editor's Pick
Discover the app
Weather widget
Contact us
Apps
    Home / Editor's Pick /

    Winter gardening tips: How to protect your plants

10:30
24 November 2023

Winter gardening tips
How to protect your plants

frosty plant

With colder air setting in and the first widespread frost on the cards this weekend, here's how you can protect your plants.

As colder air arrives, plants, particularly tender or young seedlings, can be damaged by dramatic temperature drops. Even in autumn, or the first early winter cold snap, it can force more established plants to become dormant.

How we can help:

Keeping an eye on the weather forecast can help you to prepare for any impending cold weather.

Clear skies for example, will more likely lead to a ground frost, even when the air temperature is a few degrees above zero. This is particularly the case through winter, once the ground starts to lose its deep stored heat from the summer months.

Cloudier skies are better for protecting your plants, as clouds act like an enormous blanket overhead, preventing too much radiation to be lost back out to the atmosphere.

As for wind, calm conditions prevent air from mixing, so the denser, cold air is able to sink to the surface and make a frost more likely.

Of course low temperatures are also a key factor, but is most important in reference to the dew point.

If there is moisture present, then frost can form, but if the ground or grass temperature does not drop below the dew point, then even if it is sub-zero, it will remain frost-free and dry.

Here are a few key tips to help protect your plants from harsh weather conditions:

  • Bring some potted plants inside or move them to a more sheltered spot
  • Add a thick layer of mulch to your plant beds to act as an insulator
  • Purchase a fleece or blanket for your plants, or just simply use any fabric to drape over like a tent
  • Build a cold frame
  • Use a cloche, like a mini greenhouse
  • Water plants during the daytime; moist soil can hold more heat than dry soil

Frosts are likely to become a regular and widespread occurrence for most of us starting this week, so keep a close eye on the forecast and use our above tips to help prepare for a visit from Jack frost!

Weather & Radar editorial team
More on the topic
Marine heatwave could affect our weather too. Wetter days to come?. . . Wednesday 15 July 2026
Wednesday 15 July 2026

Wetter days to come?

Marine heatwave could affect our weather too
Severe weather spreads across Europe. Lightning, hail, gales. . . Wednesday 15 July 2026
Split image showing a dramatic supercell thunderstorm with dark rotating clouds over open countryside on the left, and a severe thunderstorm warning map on the right highlightning elevated storm risk across parts of central Europe, including northern Italy, Switzerland, eastern France, and southern Germany.
Wednesday 15 July 2026

Lightning, hail, gales

Severe weather spreads across Europe
Sea fog rolls into Pembrokeshire. Unique summer scene. . . Tuesday 14 July 2026
Thick sea fog rolling inland over a sunlit bay, with sparkling water, trees and garden in the foreground, and a hill rising above the fog under a clear blue sky.
Tuesday 14 July 2026

Unique summer scene

Sea fog rolls into Pembrokeshire
All weather news
This might also interest you
New records for England and Wales. Broken again tomorrow?. . . Thursday 25 June 2026
Temperature map of southwest Britain on 25.06 showing extreme heat across southern Wales and southwest England, with Bute Park in Cardiff highlighted at 34.2°C and Yeovilton at 36.4°C amid widespread deep red heat zones.
Thursday 25 June 2026

Broken again tomorrow?

New records for England and Wales
Flooding, gales, and heavy snow. Storm Chandra. . . Tuesday 27 January 2026
Split image showing aerial flooding in a town with muddy water covering roads on the left, and a rural road on the right blocked by heavy snowfall with vans stopped and a person walking in snow.
Tuesday 27 January 2026

Storm Chandra

Flooding, gales, and heavy snow
Turbulent weather in the Canary Islands. Storm and rain. . . Friday 12 December 2025
Weather graphic showing rain and wind fields over the Canary Islands and a central warning symbol.
Friday 12 December 2025

Storm and rain

Turbulent weather in the Canary Islands
All articles
Weather & Radar

Weather & Radar is also available on

Google Play StoreApp Store

Company

Contact us Privacy Policy Legal info Accessibility statement

Services

Uploader

Socials

facebooktwitteryouTubelinkList