I figure I can use it outside as long as I never use it in the kitchen. To complete my test, I plunked the thermometer about an inch into the soil in a few places around my soon to be garden and waited a minute before reading it. My soil temperature is about 45 degrees. It sounds close to ready -- but then we are having an unusually warm winter here in the Pacific NW, so who knows.
After I did my soil temperature test, I decided to look up some information about how to do it accurately. I found a resource I really liked at the Weekend Gardener web magazine and took away these tips:
- Don't rely on one reading. Instead, test for several days in a row and use the average before making any decisions.
- Don't be random. Try to test at the same time of day, preferably midday.
- Test the soil at 2 inches for cool weather crops.
- Test the soil at 4 inches for warm weather crops.
- Use tape to mark exactly where 2 and 4 inches are on your probe thermometer. If you use a dial style thermometer for your soil temperature test like I did, the tape won't get in the way of your readings and will let you be more consistent from day to day -- unless you have a good sense of distance. (Not one of my gifts.)
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