I have some fairly water-hungry tree species like populus trichocarpa and acer macrophyllum which may not be as heat-durable as any of my conifers, but do seem to be evolved for Oregon's hot dry summers and which I place in the sunny zone with my conifers. During heat waves: Strong ambient light OK, dry breeze OK, ambient heat OK, but combining all of those things with bright direct sun leads to overly-rapid drying and leaf scorch for me.
In past years, during extreme heat, I've either moved those trees into alternate spaces or put up a
very large overhead shade (my only option at the time). This helped in last year's big waves where we either had humidity below 20% or temperatures as high as 47C. At the same time, the large overhead shade was awkward and also cast a lot of shade on my pines/conifers, which don't need the shade.
So this year, I started to experiment with the idea of applying "tactical shade" to single broadleaf trees that happen to be growing in my hot-bright conifer area. I've found that I don't need to shade the
entire canopy, I can get away with shading 80 to 90% of the canopy without running out of water too fast. For this, I have been using round metal tomato cages turned upside down (wide rings placed on ground) and then attaching flat rectangular shades (w/ crosshatched plastic) to those cages, with the shades positioned and angled so that they block
peak sun. This helps those trees make the journey from 10:45AM to about 4:30PM (when the sun finally dips behind some shade) without experiencing a rapid dryout.
These tactical shades look very makeshift (and so I don't want to post pics), but the "canopy 80-90% shaded at peak" idea works great, and I only need it on days that are more roasty or reach a crossover point (i.e. temp in Celcius greater than humidity percentage, eg: "33 > 25" for 33C and 25%). Maybe I can build a more attractive design for next year that looks more legit.
![Warning :warning: ⚠️](https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/26a0.png)
This is not a solution I'd use on trees that are in bonsai pots or trees that sit up on a table. These are trees in development in anderson flats / colanders / etc which don't crumple under extreme heat as fast.