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Click on a thumbnail picture below to see the full size version. 60 Entries.
Wednesday, January 11 View Page
What is THAT??? A Pumpkin B...? No, I'd better not, lol. Here is my latest experiment. Let's hope it works to my expectations, as it will be neat-o to at least myself and anyone looking on! As of yet the seed has not sprouted, but why wait to show the mechanism... I was very lucky to find all the materials within 20 feet of me, lol---eg
 
Wednesday, January 11 View Page
This project is dedicated, without even seeing what others have done concerning it, to simply growing an AG or any seed with the capability of seeing the roots as they grow downward to perhaps an unlimited length; If you've never thought about it too much, roots go both outward and then also downward FROM the outward excursions, IMHO. Once the roots reach the bottom container, they will be able to branch OUTward to the full extent of the container - I am excited to see that occur after a 4-foot journey to the lowest point possible(!). Please read the texts within the pics to get an idea of 'how to' or at least what went into this device; A gallon Airizonuh Tea jug X 2 was my initial choice butt that is LOT of SS mix, so, I went with the OS juice containers. Amazing that I've had that clear tube for about 30 years and that the containers, both used or not, matched up perfectly with this! In fact, a gallon AT jug will fit into or be fitted with an OS 64 oz.! FYI for later...
 
Wednesday, January 11 View Page
Hoping that the texts in the pics are clear and readable as well as understandable; If not, you know how to let me know, lol--- It WAS a pain to instill the SS mix into the container, as it is very clingy and cloggy through a funnel, even a bigger, wide-mouthed one; I lernt a lot about agitation and re-grouping, even in the course of a 64-ounce container, butt it is knowledge now to be appreciated @ another time. I'm thinking: add 1/4 cup Myco, half the DRY SS mix, seal and shake, add rest of SS mix that'll fill the container, settle, add substantial water, etc. untill full and plant-capable, blah, blah, blah...It will be worth it!
 
Wednesday, January 11 View Page
Here's to my 178 Gerry '14 (492 Gerry X 1421.5 Stelts) which is very quickly-sprouting and has never failed to impress me as a seed, nor plant, in general; It has been in the SS mix for about 36 hours as of yet; Wish it luck!!! Very convenient that the label on the container was there to write on. WIll post again once the seed sprouts. Meanwhile, I'll be looking at others' experiments - I still would have done this, lol---eric g
 
Friday, January 13 View Page
The 178 I had planted in this event DID sprout butt I was impatient and although it was 'tug-tested', I knew that another one in its place would appease me more on a second try; When pulled up, it had a root on it about 1.5 inches long. I have not been willing to provide other than room temperature (72-75)F unless I were to aim a heater fan at it and well, it ISN'T cost-effective that weigh, lol. Maybe set on 'low' and with the thermostat on 'really?'...hmmm...56" tall... More to come! eg
 
Tuesday, January 17 View Page
WOW - That was quick!!! Nooooo, butt this IS a 178 of mine that blew up in '22 and I had thought that only super-top seeds would do this, as has been my experience, with let's say the 1385 H/J also, about 30 feet away; SO, it is exciting that one of my own seeds does it too! If nothing else, it's neat to see them trying to grow as fast as they can, eh? My 2nd 178 in this experiment is still in the process of sprouting - If I had only left the 1st one ALONE...
 
Friday, January 20 View Page
Well, the 178 seed sprouted, finally - I had not been giving it other than room temperature like 73 to 75 F wherever I might be, so it took a lot longer and makes me appreciate it moreso this time. I had removed the seed shell/coat/casing before H2O2/planting it and left the green sheath on - this prevents seed 'blooming'; Was gonna show it sprouted, upright and without its green sheath, butt, we all know what that looks like, lol.
 
Friday, January 20 View Page
Any of these roots at like 4-1/2 inches could be THE tap root or it could be heading downward out of sight; I'm thinking this could be a corner lamp+germination technique for those with eclectic tastes one day, lol. (*_*) eg
 
Wednesday, January 25 View Page
Well, rolling right along here at 10 inches from where I believe the roots do start; Silly me went to water it tonight and forgot about the cut corners (lol) of the upper container. A little cleanup, no biggie - I'd expect the tube with a clamp around it to be basically water-tight. It is doing well, and that is what matters. eg
 
Wednesday, January 25 View Page
Surprised they have never or I haven't seen a movie about a monster giant pumpkin plant; It'd probably scare too many little kids or something; There is a movie I wanna see called 'Little Joe', the name of the sinister(?) plant that a woman gives her son to keep him company. Yeah, it'd start like that. And then, he'd join a website and start encapsulating and viewing the roots and... lol---eg
 
Friday, January 27 View Page
Lil' Baby Doll took a tumble today; I had 'er standing up in a new spot in the living room because the seedling was growing toward the light at night and was getting misguided - Even though I gave it the 'topsy-turvy test' and had fiber board under it, it tipped over at about 10 am. Luckily, I was half awake and lept like a trooper to its rescue, lol; It had fallen with its midpoint of the plastic tube over a duffel bag and someting harder, kinking the tube slightly and allowing about a half cup of SS mix to spill out - butt NO damage to Baby Doll!!! I would say 'Tough Plant, butt more likely it was seriously LUCKY! No damage. None. Cool! Maybe the plant growing outward caused it...Ooooohhh......
 
Friday, January 27 View Page
This pic came out so well I didn't even edit it. It's a view from down on Earth as the Monster Pumpkin Invaders look over their new root zone, lol. Hey, if I can walk and yet tip over maybe they can tip over and therefore walk. I did look for pumpkin monster movies and there are a few that I'd watch for laughs and maybe 1 or 2'd be scary; The rubber bands on the top container came in REALLY handy to direct the plant's initial growth! Later---eric g
 
Saturday, January 28 View Page
Well, it happened AGAIN; I was opening a front window curtain that has not been opened all winter because I had just fixed a rolling cart that I could now move to another room...for more room, lol and the movement of me stepping back to admire THAT through the floor boards caused 'er to tip over again. NO damage, except to my pride in what USED to be common sense! There'll be NO 'third time's a charm' because now, it is LEANED up against a wall with default stuff (a thermostat) in the weigh of that ever happening. Oyyy, getting it out of my (sy)stem, I hope! The GOOD news is that I could not take a second dash of SS mix on the carpet, so, I went nuts and vacuumed three rooms! Almost forgot about the SS Mix until I saw it again, lol---eg
 
Friday, February 3 View Page
So, January 27th, a week ago, I last posted and had had a tip-over experience and my roots have ostensibly only grown an inch since then, so, no need for a picture of that; I'm debating if what's up top dictates what's going on below so if the plant is only a seedling, maybe the roots don't grow beyond what is needed to support that. If this was in a warm, well-lit and real-life situation I might have seen roots by now in the bottom container. Hmmm...26 inches to go, I think. No problem - I watered it thoroughly yesterday and I make less of a mess as I go along and I could feel where the water was getting down to with my hand holding the plastic tube. I shoulda noted that depth,, lol--- Maybe that second shock has something to do with it. I have other experiments...eg
 
Saturday, February 4 View Page
My next experiment - To grow a plant in total water immersion of the root system. Here, the 178 Gerry seedling is at about1 week old but I think it was started 1-20-23. No heat other than random heater fan; In any event, its root system was robust and just right for the project.
 
Saturday, February 4 View Page
This is Howie DeWitt. There COULD be that guy, lol--- Keeping the water at the very edge and turning about 4 times enabled somewhat-gentle SS Mix removal.
 
Saturday, February 4 View Page
I kinda think that this was sprouted in SS Mix that HAD Myco in it, butt I had sterilized it with H2O2 and it foams up the SS Mix dramatically; The Myco was probably killed in the process as I had read that that would happen. As the plant grew after a 5-day or so germination, it was slow going with possibly NO living Myco; Hence, I thought I'd put Myco in the water anyway and did so with a tablespooon of it. Let's watch:
 
Saturday, February 4 View Page
So, plain H2O up above the stem of the plant and inoculated with Myco at 1 TBSP. Those tap rootS looked eager to hit that bottom-dwelling oasis!
 
Saturday, February 4 View Page
See???
 
Saturday, February 4 View Page
I won't drag it out - The Myco APPEARED to have no effect and the granular substrate never dissolved. I was expecting BLOBS of fungus feeding my little seedling, but no, perhaps not without a soiled and airy environment. It may have helped - who knows? This is the plant at about one week after 'submergence'; today, in fact; A far as I can tell and with the purpose of this experiment mostly fulfilled, I will never worry about plants' roots not getting enough oxygen; I wasn't to begin with and I have had plants IN SS Mix that have been submerged in plastic cups that grew VERY well and I could have planted out but were 'just' mid-winter experiments, so...
 
Saturday, February 4 View Page
Sorry for this pic butt it's what I took and I thought I was alllll done, lol. I decided that the cloudiness was not good and it did not smell BAD but it was not fresh, rooty water like I expected, so I replaced it (no Myco) with Miracle-Gro 10-52-10 at 3/4 Tbsp./gallon H2O, ??% stronger than the recommendation for indoor plants, but this is an AG! So, nice, blue water for it from now on. WIll report!!! I had feared the roots to have been soggy and falling apart as there was one that appeared broken, but only that one fell off and the rest were as strong as ever. Later---eric g
 
Monday, February 6 View Page
I'll bet ol' Ronald never thought that those little dimples in a soda lid would be used for sprouting seeds, but leave that to me! Here are 4 178 Gerry seeds that were placed into the dimples on 1-30-'23 @ 6:20 PM; Using a Stanley, serious box cutter with the tip set on halfweigh, I poked it though each of them downward after pushing the dimples in also. It is very dangerous to one's fingers, so be CAREFUL if you do this.
 
Monday, February 6 View Page
I snip my seeds reliably, depending on my mood and well, I pretty much do it to ALL seeds, regardless of their value; I use TOEnail clippers, starting from the TIP itself and all the weigh around the seed. There is a blueprint right on the seed of where this can be done, like seeing a crop circle or ancient civilization's imprint from way above. It CAN enable the seed to get out of its shell much more easily, like 9 of 10 times and yet, there will always be a random couple that coulda been better. It has become a habit. We all want a seed coat to stay in the soil, but when one comes up anyway and I'd otherwise be killing the seedling trying to remove it, this is very handy and I've always been glad I did it. Anyway, 'THE ONE' is obvious, lol.
 
Monday, February 6 View Page
YAY!!! I have never had one sprout into or on top of nor even NEAR just plain water before, so this was really exciting; Terrible picture, butt ya gotta take the bad with the good! The sprout is at about 3-1/2 days of partial submergence, meaning that just the tips are in the spring/tap water all the time; The temperature has been random (55-75) butt I had no reason to not put it right in front of a heater fan. One time I moved the whole thing and it was definiitely bathwater-warm, so, like 105*F? Wherever I am, these are nearby. lol. Toasty! And not! As the water evaporates and falls to below the tips, I can resort to simply swirling the WaWa to rejuvenate the hydration of them.
 
Monday, February 6 View Page
'Mr. Gerry, you have QUADRUPLETS!!!' Gotta go get more cigars, I guess. Four. Of Four. I'll show YOU what FOUR, lol. PS---Once the seeds are stuffed into the dimple slots and I've found the points at which they do not try to pop back out nor in, they really stay put, thankfully! I figured the seedlings would be slowly cut in half or another tragic mishap would occur. Not yet and I'll describe more stuff next! Ohhh, goody, goody!!!
 
Monday, February 6 View Page
Okay, from left to right, #2 and #4 have full-length roots happpening (#4's is offa the right of your screen), whereas #1 is growing a little club-rooty and #3 is actually growing butted up against the side of #2. Like a nest of birds, each is its own, individual little bugger! So, what I think is gonna happen is the leaves' growth will push the root assembl(ies) outta the seed coats and potentially, the seedlings could actually drop off, but be submerged, into the water; Not sure yet why they are growing SIDEways, butt, in due time, lol. Probably like a new jellyfish - but straight downward. It'd be funny to find that the seedlings float; Some plants populate new lands by doing just that! Oh, by the way, this will be known in my corner of the world (I thought it is round?) as 'Hydrosprouting' an AG seed. I have just minutes ago Hydrostarted seeds that will otherwise NOT sprout(?)... More to come!!!---eg
 
Tuesday, February 7 View Page
Couple thoughts (not like the ones at Couseling, lol): 1. It almost seems like the roots are avoiding the H2O; 2. The sideward growth growth may be (and almost definiteley is, now that I think it) because the stems 'see' the light and wanna bend toward it and in doing so, not the plant butt the root moves because it is free to do so. Wow...maybe... It's like 'Ya see this?' (right fist) 'Poommm' - 'Watch out for THAT!' (left fist)... I prolly don't wanna FULLY remember THAT lesson, lol! eg
 
Wednesday, February 8 View Page
So, there I was, minding my own business and doubling my root system, when... Nnyyeeaahh, just a little 2-day progress; They seem to be likin' this treatment. Can't wait 'til they come outta their shells; Will they?
 
Saturday, February 11 View Page
In having fallen out of or dropping from the lid into the water, I wonder, if this had been in the soil, or just in general butt we don't see it, could this prybar action of the seed occasionally help it out of its shell? This IS the one I had snipped all the weigh around and that had the smallest roots of the 4. Odd or coincidence? It also did not sink like a rock - Air bubbles in the roots kept it afloat and I had to do a bit of swirling to get 'er done. Err, down.
 
Saturday, February 11 View Page
So, what I had not thought of happening is that the rounded tips of the seeds are stuck in the mainly-dry seed coats and would be stuck there forever without being hydrated and so, the seed leaves' tips turned white and were brittle, as they had never been intently moistened to begin with. Pardon the many 'tense errors' there; As was seen, the one snipped seed got around this. However, the stems on the remaining 3 are elongating and I'm sure that Nature would have seen them go on to be Great Pumpkin plants in any event.
 
Saturday, February 11 View Page
Just thought this was funny as I did not know what the three 'stumps' were in the background. Bah-Dum-Bump-Domp-Daaahhh (The McDonald's Golden Arches) Ha---eg
 
Saturday, February 11 View Page
Not even sure yet if it'll be OK with the plant butt this AGAR is @ about 120 degrees that I'd not wanna have to soak in; I'll need to let it cool to the point where it is like Jell-O pudding (go figure) so that I can place the seedling into it and have it stand on its own. I am marginally successful, lol---
 
Saturday, February 11 View Page
Removing the seed coats was pain - probably nothing compared to that had by the seedlings(!); I ended up breaking the rounded tips of each one but they will be fine after a few days. Of course, it is like removing a seed coat from a dry seed to study it. Would be careful with a Top Seed ferr sherr! Hey, what works here will work on any AG seeds. These plants are gonna be so AGAR-avated!
 
Saturday, February 11 View Page
Worthy of note: After that last pic I didn't have any additional AGAR made so I just stuck the seedlings back into the water overnight and went on my way until about 18 hours later; They were fine and just floated around. Now, they are AGAR-avated and we'll see how they do over the next week. SEE NEXT for AGAR deets!
 
Saturday, February 11 View Page
Here is BulkFoodsDotCom where I got this AGAR about 2 years ago: https://bulkfoods.com/gelling-agents/agar-powder.html Item Number 47034 I bought 5 lbs. when I did and have not made a dent into it with just experimenting 2 years; It really is very cool stuff to mess around with and it only takes 1/2 Tablespoon per pint of H2O to make the right consistency. It is mixable with Seed-Starting Mix and I'm sure also Miracle-Gro, lol; So, relatively-hot water to begin with in a 16-ounce Pyrex measuring cup; Add and stir-in 1/2 Tbsp; 3 minutes in center of rotating microwave and 30-second bursts from there-on; I dare NOT look at the mic for very long other than to see progress; As far as I'm concerned, it is very BAD for your eyes and generally-so otherwise (!); I view that it is 'Lava Lamping' and once it foams up, I hit the STOP/Clear button; It is a slow eruption, butt it can get ya! Upon this event, remove from mic (200*F, mind you) and distribute into glass(es) right away or plastic/peat/whatever *once cool enough to handle and flow*. Plants can be inserted as soon as YOU would lay around in it, lol! Okay, now the waiting begins! eg
 
Wednesday, March 1 View Page
Terrible pictures I do take with a cell phone, but Oh, well! The wildly-submerged and tormented plant I had in a vase got to this level of growth even though the submerged roots did not like their submergence after a week or so - My belief is that with circulation and proper hydroponic apparatus, all would be well;\ I have seen it done before, of course on BigPumpkins.com, with massive rooting results!
 
Wednesday, March 1 View Page
This is the secondary root system, we'll call it, on that plant; Makes me wanna grow LEGGY seedlings and plant them a foot deep or more! The plant is no more. Glad I never spilled it, lol---
 
Wednesday, March 1 View Page
I love the roots on this plant, and these are of course not even the main tap root! The more = the merrier!
 
Wednesday, March 1 View Page
I'm not sure at all why or even how this plant is twisting in the light of day and then evening living room lighting for apparently no reason; It seems like it would just rotate left and right rather than go all the weigh around, lol! Either weigh, it is really neat and will lend credibility to another experiment I have in mind.
 
Wednesday, March 1 View Page
Okay, here is the ROOTS plant @ 27.5 inches' root depth; Last week it was growing downward at 1 inch per day butt now, it has stopped. WHY? Well, unbeknownst to me, the amount of H2O I have added over the last couple of weeks has accumulated up to the point where the root stops growing. (!) This is of interest because if the root stopped because it attained standing water, then that is perhaps why my other plant stopped its root at 19 inches. I did such a good job snugging and taping the bottom container on (by accident, lol) that it is just like my vase/submerged roots experiment, previously. I punctured a tiny hole into the bottom container and it is dripping/seeping out at about a tablespoon per hour, so, once the water level drops, if it does (SS Mix is very adherent to H2O) the root may continue! 2 NOTES: >>>The entire apparatus is leaned up against a wall to avoid it tipping over again, so the root grows obediently along the one side of the plastic tube. Awesome! >>>The bottom container was INCREDIBLY hard to puncture into - if you need to store/protect something, drink a lot of fruit juice! Stay Tuned! eric g
 
Thursday, March 23 View Page
This will be a waste of a Diary entry with no pics but I have yet again sprouted a 178 seed and put it into the Pumpkin Bong to see if I/it can break the 27.5-inch record thus far. It had been sprouted in a ZipLoc bag as part of a 'No-Air or Not No-Air' experiment to see if 2 seeds would sprout sooner if all the air was SQUEEZED out of one of the ZipLocs. Inconclusive, as I used gallon-sized (stupid) bags at first 'cause that's al that I had, lol. I have done this experiment before and I am convinced that a relatively AIRLESS environment is more conducive to seeds sprouting quicker than a usual, inconsiderate-of-air-volume proseeding, lol. SO - the PB contestant is already at 1/3 the required distance and it is in record time at doing so. PS---the seeds in the air expairiment were in the ZipLocs for a week (moist paper towel, 2 seeds each) to 10 days before I even moved them to the living room where they got a TASTE of any warmth (70-74, intermittently) then - BOOM!!! Growth!!! They may have been gonna sprout in another day, butt, still...eg
 
Thursday, March 23 View Page
Okay, so, in thinking about WHY I experiment and wanna know things, the result here is that a pumpkin seedling's roots can and will go to 27.5 inches into soil that is enabling it to do so. For most of the weigh to that 27.5 inches downward, there are roots that want to extend sideways as well and I'll assume that they will do just that AND send others downward if merely permitted to in the patch. SO, a hole 3 feet deep (minimum) and I'd say a foot in diameter (minimum) would be needed initially to accommodate a plant early on; There must be some logic and wisdom to those 'growing pits' that I used to see all the time in Don Langevin's books. If it is up to me though, I'd merely fill this Hole of Wonder with Mycorrhizae-enriched Seed Starting Mix; I 'found' and bought some the other day at Target - 'Back to the Roots' brand - 12 quarts and has 4 species of Myco already in it. $7.99...About the same cost of as if I had bought SS Mix, added water AND MYCO and had to mix it by hand. THIS stuff is ready to rock. Will be testing it in the near future, indoors first-----eric g
 
Monday, May 1 View Page
Here is the Gerry Germ-Fridge - The Germerator, lol--- It is not literally plugged in, although that is an option for later into the summer. It is far more useful for sprouting seeds! Honestly, every fridge should have this option... I only just now noticed the association of words like refrigerate, Frigidaire, Refrigerator, etc. So, 'fridge' is just a term that means all of that but is spelled as it is said, lol---liv and lern! eg
 
Monday, May 1 View Page
It may be difficult to make out where the light bulbs ARE due to the glare but there are four total and they started out as (2) 14-watt 100-watt replacement bulbs from Walmart; The brand is 'Great Value' and they are about 8 bucks for FOUR bulbs - they will REALLY light up your life! I actually 'had to' remove one from my kitchen's 4-receptacle overhead light, as it was TOO bright in there! It turned out to be that the wattage is of course super-relevant to if they are used as a light source versus a heat source; You could burn your hand on the plastic part where the LEDs are actually lighting up butt the opaque plastic bulb is quite cool, which totally makes sense - it is just to disperse the light. I ended up adding a few more items and had to slowly step up to 2 - 53-watt Halogen bulbs also, so the final wattage is 134 watts. eg
 
Monday, May 1 View Page
Here it is with a few either remaining or initially-occupying seed starts; It was impossible to have three shelves a perfect distance apart and the third (bottom) one was probably absorbing more of the heat than anything - plus the uncertainty of what the wattage would end up being. It works GREAT like THIS! eg
 
Monday, May 1 View Page
Great - 22 little 'mouths' to feed soon, lol---I could not be happier! eg
 
Monday, May 1 View Page
If I want to, I can fit 33 seedlings VERY temporarily under each 40-watt X 2 light assembly; The bulbs are 1 Full-Spectrum/Aquatic and 1 that says 'Chroma 50' on it; Hey, since one of my fluorescent lights didn't work for no apparent reason, I made sure I was on DRY concrete and when I WENT TO wiggle the bulbs, they lit up; Nothing was loose, nothing was poorly-connected - further than that, merely touching the edge of the light reflector (edge) made it work - at different points along the edge! There IS life after death, as these bulbs are about 18 years old; Weird. Once warmed up, they start just fine if turned off or on intermittently...eg
 
Monday, May 1 View Page
Yeah, hooray for Starbucks! Nothing wrong with using what would otherwise be tossed into the work garbage, right? Don't answer that - or my phone for me, lol--- The lights are lowered to as close as possible to the seedlings' leaves - <= one inch is perfect; At only 40 watts each, even their intermingling with the leaves is completely appropriate and there is never any leaf burn or whatevers and they never become leggy! Of course, they have to come up gradually, as the plants HAVE TO grow, but the legginess, regardless, is surely the least it can be! The lack of burn possibility may be not true of NEW bulbs, butt I doubt that it'd be a concern. Prolly find out the hard way someday. For NOW, 'Leaves n' Lights' it is!!! eg
 
Monday, May 1 View Page
Maybe I should check the rating again on the bulbs; Could it have said '400'??? Maybe I got a good deal on them, after all! ---Laters---Eric G
 
Thursday, May 4 View Page
Here is a piece of a cover crop prospect I have in my pumpkin patch; I intend to "Search Google' for it butt I'll bet that that won't work just because I REALLY wanna find out what this is, lol, and I had to put it on here to even see if it would work from here; It has little light purple flowers on long, little stalks and having said that it could be Baby's Breath, perhaps. In any event, it is seemingly 'stoloniferous' or has tiny vines/sideways stalks that cause it to be somewhat 'creepy' and it is abundant naturally, butt I want a LOT of it in seed form, just like Buckwheat or Clover or whatever. If you or anyone you know could or would determine its variety for me, I'd appreciate it! I will advise if I ever find out for myself; Thanks---Eric G
 
Thursday, May 4 View Page
'Nuther angle...not finding it to be Baby's Breath, yet...eg
 
Friday, May 5 View Page
Veronica persica Poir. Bird's-eye, Persian speedwell, Bird-eye speedwell, Creeping speedwell, Creeping veronica, Common field speedwell... (I'd like to meet this 'Creeping Veronica' when she's not creeping, lol. It is OK with me, though, if it helps to grow BIG pumpkins!) As far as I can tell at 5:20 AM, lol--- I will treasure this website FOREVER, with its 'add/drop an image' function!: https://identify.plantnet.org/the-plant-list/species/Veronica%20persica%20Poir./data ...down further, there were literally HUNDREDS of images to see concerning my query; https://bs.plantnet.org/image/o/f852e5339fc002663bf97d70f5ce0fe9eab59216 DO be careful that your takeaway is not the photographer's name, rather than the botanical name (!). EG
 
Monday, May 8 View Page
Another thingie growing in my pumpkin patches - has been creeping into them for about three years and is impervious to Glyphosate! If I can't beat 'em, I'll research 'em! eg
 
Monday, May 8 View Page
The address in the previous previous entry was incorrect in that I offered the addy that went to the plant in question. The seemingly correct addy for general entries is: https://identify.plantnet.org/ ...and my Mystery Plant is 'Marsh Horsetail'; It could be 'Common' or 'River', butt I like its sound...Marsh...Horsetail, right alongside a marsh that is MINE (!) with all its little cover crop examples---eg
 
Friday, May 12 View Page
Here is MONSTAHHH - a 1541.5 McMillin that is not only a curly-leafed beast butt also a friendly, two-leafed (with benefits) 'sweety' and has a slightly-doubled stem to it that just begged to be planted to see what is in store for early growth and who knows what - But I will find out! The cots are curled under 99% and the 1st true leaf was not able to be seen enough to determine direction of growth, so, after minor surgery to remove said 'third leaf', I left it alone from there on and I merely pointed it in the direction of stem lean and I'm sure it will be fine - I'll have you know that this seedling is the most vigorous one of the year and I even have another planted and that one is considered 'normal'. Now, about the grower... Plus, check out that root system! yeahhh...
 
Saturday, May 13 View Page
I believe this is cow parsley... checking, checking... I'd like to have clumps of this scattered about...
 
Saturday, May 13 View Page
Here I am - Rock You Like A Hurricane, little 839 Sandercock! Getting my -Gro on, people! Umm, for reference, the 839 and all others in my pics this year probably did not have experience with direct sunlight NOR any fertilizer, so this pic was JUST for as long as it took and the following clothesbasket coverage is essential for the weigh I break them into it, whereby they are kept shaded 'til planted and plywood-shielded for a few days and/or up until they get out of any greenhouses I may keep them in. PS---Yes, it's cow parsley in the previous pic, but its leaves r very similar-looking to poison hemlock... although I have not had any adverse reactions to pushing it aside to plant the 839, lol! eg
 
Saturday, May 13 View Page
Here is or are the standard Gerry pumpkin putout items, minus the WeedBlock just to get them in the ground, pronto! I usually use TWO clothesbaskets, butt I had not noticed, or rather forgot, that I was down to only like 8 of each kind, so, limited protection this year for the first 16 plants, lol; A basket provides: Wind protection - somewhat, critter protection - somewhat, sun protection - sideways, somewhat and from above - dramatically; Doubling-up of them doubles-up the protection of 2 out of 3; The plywood piece will go on top of the basket soon - for now, it is the plant's morning or afternoon sunblock. SHOULD have supplied two per plant; eg
 
Saturday, May 13 View Page
What I mean by 'doubling them up' is to of course put one on top of the other and turn the top one to 'polarize' the two, resulting in double the physical strength and greater protection from critters and wind - this also reduces the light level getting to the plant, butt that'll be alll right before tooo long. Can't have it all! Actually, well, no, good enough for now...eg
 
Tuesday, May 16 View Page
I had a seed sprout recently that I thought I was doing a favor to that was white-tipped; I felt that another previous seed had rotted IN the white-tipped end, so I figgered 'Let's see if snipping the white part off this one would help' (a rerun); Well, that seed had done this, complete with the leaf ends snipped (oops!) and the better part of this is that the 2nd 2 seeds basically HAD TO come up through the snipped end. Hence, here is an example - It'll be neat, or devastating, to see (if) the seed coat ever comes off... or busts! eg
 

 

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