Hi!
Never thought to use one of those things. And probably never will and you might not want to either. Do you really want to torment yourself with how hot your trees get in their pot? Because that is all that thing is going to do.
What if you think the trees are too hot? Fans? Ice cubes? What will be used to cool them down.
It's cracking me up thinking you could be out there waving a little japanese fan at your trees. Think about that one. And if you are you better be wearing the pink Keppler bonsai shorts. Panties. Thong. But floss. Get the picture?
Now I'm wishing I hadn't thought of this. I need to go wash my brain off. It feels dirty.
@Mr.Frary is right....
Ive read a little about root zone temperature and since few months now I'm using a heat mat and external probe thermometer
planted directly in the substrate of my ficus.
it make you take notes on everything...
Infrared should work I'm sure but I wanted to know the temp. of the root ball and not the surface
The ''ideal'' root zone temperature is different for every species but for tiger bark ficus around 73-75F is perfect.
In fact used 2 different thermometer, one in the tray under the tree and the other one in the substrate plus the heat mat probe, just to see the differential of temperature needed to heat the pot.
I adjusted everything to keep a constant temp. ect
But it worked great , the roots came from everywhere.
Would I have had the same result without that much care and attention? That where the endless question begin!
But I could see difference after watering even with water at room temp. so imagine with tap water.... but never thought about looking at the time it take to get it back there...!
And now I have to monitor, the pot, the tray, the mat, the time........
Can wait to do it next winter on my Acer Palmatums!!