Some pot plants don't like the cold; in winter they may be too cold even indoors. The pots should have a (low-power) heating element to keep the plant warm.-- Ed Avis, Dec 13 2002 Per thumbwax http://www.quicktrading.com/tips16.html [DrCurry, Oct 04 2004, last modified Oct 21 2004] I like this idea, and would also like to add another possibility. I'm not a chemist, but I'm imagining that there could be some nutritional compound that will emit heat when it comes in contact with water. (similar to ice-melt pellets?) It could be packaged in a disposable drip tray or some such object. When moisture reaches the tray, the compound emits heat proportionally and fertilizes the soil as well. I guess over-watering could be a problem though, unless you also like your potatoes pre-baked?-- X2Entendre, Dec 13 2002 Plant lighting ain't hot enough?Later, after link provided by DrCurryI used to have one of Ed Rosenthal's books, heh. Purely for research porpoises, of course. Got it in 19...80 I think...-- thumbwax, Dec 13 2002 Lighting vs heated pots would depend on which part of the plant you need to heat. Lights would mainly warm the above-ground parts of the plants whereas a heated pot would warm the soil its elf, which may, in some circumstances, be preferable.It should perhaps be noted that everything I plant dies very shortly thereafter.-- angel, Dec 13 2002 They do it with reptiles why not plants?-- talen, Dec 13 2002 I have the same problem, angel. Not so much green fingers as the black hand of death.-- DrBob, Dec 13 2002 Whenver I bury a seed, I wave it good-bye because it's the last time I'll ever see it.-- angel, Dec 13 2002 yes, I put insulating material underneath my pots to reduce heat being lost to the ground
Uked-- uked, Dec 27 2002 random, halfbakery