
Extend Your Harvest Season: Protect Your Mirliton Vine on Frost Nights.
The old tradition of cutting back your mirliton vine in November was based on old weather patterns. The weather is changing, and we need to change with it. Intensive summer rains, fall heatwaves, and droughts have delayed flowering and fruiting. As soon as the vines start to fruit, a frost comes along and wipes out the vine. You don’t have to let that happen. With a little preparation, you can beat the frost and harvest fruit all the way through December.
In horticulture, this is known as extending the season, which involves using techniques to prolong the growing season beyond its natural limits. In 2024, several people used tenting and heating methods that allowed vines to produce fruit all the way through December.
All that it takes to protect your vine from an early frost is to temporarily tent your vine with a FEMA tarp or a clear plastic sheet. Secure the bottom of the cover with weights to trap the ground heat and prevent the cover from blowing off. That will trap enough ground heat to prevent most frost damage.
If you use a tarp, you will need to take it down the next day when the temperature warms up–the vine needs sunlight. Clear plastic is much better because you can leave it up for a day or two, but loosen the bottom so that airflow is maintained and the vine doesn’t overheat. Keep the ground below the vine clear of debris and moist to enable the soil to absorb daytime heat, which will radiate into the tent at night.
This tenting technique requires some extra effort — watching the weather forecast and putting up and taking down the cover — but it will extend the harvest season by several weeks.
We can get a damaging frost anytime the temperature is forecast to fall below 42°. So use that as a sign to cover the vine.
Tarps and 6-mil plastic will trap enough ground heat to protect a vine from frost at temperatures in the low 30s. Make sure you seal the bottom with bricks to keep the wind out and the heat in. If you add a small space heater on nights, it will protect the vine at temperatures below 32 degrees, and you can probably harvest fruit in January–and have a vine with a full canopy ready for a spring harvest.
Here are the tools to use to extend the growing season. Buy them now so you will be prepared:
6-mil plastic sheeting
Portable Heater (electric, propane, or heat lamp)
A remote thermometer is not absolutely necessary, but it can be useful for monitoring the temperature inside the tent.

Deb Sepulveda’s tented vine

Nancy Wolfe’s camping tent enclosure.

Paige Dyer’s 6-mil plastic tent.

Lee Segrura’s tented vine with pipe frame.

Melissa Minevielle’s tented vine with heater.

Walter Livaudais’s tarp frost cover.

John Dauzat’s Tent of pipe frame. He encloses the entire vine and heats it.