What type of plants are you interested in growing? This poll is closed. |
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Perennials! | 142 | 20.91% | |
Annuals! | 30 | 4.42% | |
Woody plants! | 62 | 9.13% | |
Succulent plants! | 171 | 25.18% | |
Tropical plants! | 60 | 8.84% | |
Non-vascular plants are the best! | 31 | 4.57% | |
Screw you, I'd rather eat them! | 183 | 26.95% | |
Total: | 679 votes |
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subpar anachronism posted:Over the last year or so I have slowly permitted myself more succs as I don't kill them. I'm especially a fan of the translucent haworthia like your springbokvlakensis, but am less experienced with them - they don't appear to wrinkle much, so what are the best signs these guys are thirsty? Also that capitella gorgeous! Much as you might expect from translucent plants, it's when all the nubblies are starting to get opaque (and often brown). Basically, the more and more they look like slightly tinted water balloons, the happier they are, but anything as clear or clearer than like "strawberry lemonade jellybean" is fine. You can also just squish them! This post brought to you by: the pink cooperi baker I literally just repotted. Haworthias are the poo poo. HELLO LADIES fucked around with this message at 20:48 on Oct 30, 2020 |
# ? Oct 30, 2020 20:45 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 15:29 |
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Can I get a plant ID please?
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# ? Oct 31, 2020 18:40 |
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terre packet posted:Can I get a plant ID please? Looks like it may be a thirsty Opuntia subulata (Eve's needle) but I could be wrong. Hard to say for sure without flowers.
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# ? Oct 31, 2020 21:24 |
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HELLO LADIES posted:Much as you might expect from translucent plants, it's when all the nubblies are starting to get opaque (and often brown). Basically, the more and more they look like slightly tinted water balloons, the happier they are, but anything as clear or clearer than like "strawberry lemonade jellybean" is fine. You can also just squish them! Haworthias are indeed the poo poo, I just brought home some new ones this week
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# ? Nov 1, 2020 03:55 |
D-Pad posted:Just moved into a new house and I want to know what kind of trees we have. This is in Austin, TX: Oil of Paris posted:Interesting idea on the privet, could be Ligustrum lucida, only one I could think of that could get to that height. Bark and growth habit (especially those skinny little limbs growing straight out of the main branch) look pretty spot on. If so that’s one Big rear end privet So a while back I asked about the trees at our new house. It was pointed out the berries are toxic to dogs but taste bad and it takes a lot to be bad for them. Well they are dropping and we have a puppy and we think she has been eating them because she has had continuing bouts of diarrhea with no other discernible cause and I saw her go for some the other day. She seems fine besides the shits. Anybody got suggestions here for something like this? I swept our backyard and picked up every one I could find but there are quite a few more to drop. Now that we think we nailed down what's going on we are going out with her to prevent her eating them but that's annoying and not ideal. Any tricks to keep a dog from eating berries on the ground? We'll probably look into having the tree removed before next year, but I haven't dealt with our HOA since we moved in so who knows if they'll pull the typical HOA BS.
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# ? Nov 4, 2020 16:34 |
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Maybe give it a very vigorous shaking to try and get the rest of the berries to drop so you can clean them up? If that is indeed a ligustrum, it's definitely normally a shrub so there's a case to be made for you 'cutting it back' to basically the ground and letting it grow in fuller. Or least tell the HOA that if they get mad at you for cutting it down.
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# ? Nov 5, 2020 18:58 |
Kaiser Schnitzel posted:Maybe give it a very vigorous shaking to try and get the rest of the berries to drop so you can clean them up? If that is indeed a ligustrum, it's definitely normally a shrub so there's a case to be made for you 'cutting it back' to basically the ground and letting it grow in fuller. Or least tell the HOA that if they get mad at you for cutting it down. It's the berries from the 2nd tree she is eating which I believe was identified as the china berry. She left the berries from the first one alone and they dropped much earlier and are done now also. Edit: After reading a bit more about chinaberries I am starting to think we may be wrong. It sounds like she should have been way worse off, if not dead, if she was eating the berries multiple times. Besides diarrhea she had no symptoms, so maybe it actually was something else? Either way that tree has to go as I have very young kids as well. D-Pad fucked around with this message at 20:16 on Nov 5, 2020 |
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# ? Nov 5, 2020 20:08 |
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Help me make my idiot container children look healthy! Despite having a few years' experience with growing experimental plants at field sites and greenhouses, I only started gardening for personal enjoyment at the beginning of the rona. My lovely condo patio in slightly inland SD faces east and has a concrete wall. I got this Clinopodium douglasii from a native plant nursery in May or June. I accept that it probably looks so bad because I've repotted it 80,000 times, which I now understand is bad for it (previous times were because I wanted to grow it as a hanging plant, the last time was to take it out of a huge 5gal where the soil was always soggy and put it into crummier and faster-draining soil). Right now I have it in a ~2gal and try not to water it too much. As you can see/imagine, it gets maaaybe 1-2 hours of sun a day. Can/should I prune off the dead part? Why isn't it a lush trailing vine, or at the very least has more than two sad branches? I don't want to prune the poo poo out of it and kill it entirely....... This Pinus pinea, on the other hand, has no such excuse. It was a live Christmas tree that we kept on, and on, and eventually I took pity on it and repotted it into this much bigger vessel. Why does it look so raggedy-assed, exploding on the top and with all different branch length and shaping around the silhouette? Is it just imbalance of exposure to sun? I try to rotate it a quarter or half turn once every month or so. Can/should I prune off the bottom 1 or 2 sets of branches before winter rain so it starts looking more like a Christmas tree again? e: I should also say that I'd equally love to have it in the more mature Italian stone pine silhouette (as seen below) eventually, if that's possible without having a bigger container. snailshell fucked around with this message at 04:41 on Nov 6, 2020 |
# ? Nov 6, 2020 04:32 |
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Is anyone here successful in growing avocados in cool temperate climates? If so I have questions about growing avocados in cool temperate climates
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# ? Nov 7, 2020 08:14 |
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You may find this PDF about growing avocados in Japan to be useful.
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# ? Nov 7, 2020 10:22 |
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Hey I’ve got a purple oxalis in an indoor pot that’s done great over the summer, but it’s got a bit big and bushy. Can I just cut that sucker back or will that kill it? BTW the leaves are pretty delicious.
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# ? Nov 7, 2020 20:52 |
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the fart question posted:Hey I’ve got a purple oxalis in an indoor pot that’s done great over the summer, but it’s got a bit big and bushy. Can I just cut that sucker back or will that kill it? Judging by the oxalis in my lawn, you can cut it back every week and it will never die
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# ? Nov 8, 2020 00:34 |
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the fart question posted:Hey I’ve got a purple oxalis in an indoor pot that’s done great over the summer, but it’s got a bit big and bushy. Can I just cut that sucker back or will that kill it? Purple oxalis is the first plant I ever kept alive long-term, and I can tell you: I moved into an apartment with terrible lighting, realized my potted oxalis was doing badly, put the dying potted oxalis underneath my bed for a full year, it turned into a pot of literally just dirt, and then once I moved somewhere with light and stuck it in a window and watered it again, it sprang back to life immediately and got bushy and huge. I have since divided it like five times and now I have SO MANY oxalis and they cannot die. Basically, cut it back as much as you want, it will be just fine.
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# ? Nov 8, 2020 03:45 |
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Platystemon posted:You may find this PDF about growing avocados in Japan to be useful. Thanks, though sadly can't access it, but thanks anyway. Pretty wild for me to learn about the htfg's existence though. I guess the only question(s) I have is about feeding the things over summer and winter. I used a fairly rough organic compost to grow the freshly rooted/sprouted seeds, and they seemed to love it, putting out a lot of healthy looking growth over summer. I think they got burnt from the first winter chill, as the leaf-tips have died off a little. But like do avocados need a special winter routine/feed as they sit sadly in the window looking at the snow? I have no growing lights, but may consider them if people think they are a good idea.
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# ? Nov 8, 2020 20:04 |
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RickRogers posted:Thanks, though sadly can't access it, but thanks anyway. Pretty wild for me to learn about the htfg's existence though. Hmm it worked for me at the time of posting, but now it’s broken on my side, too. Here’s the same file on a document sharing service. It has a bunch of great information about growing a lot of quality fruit in a small space, as is necessary for the Japanese tropical fruit industry. As to your question, dying leaf tips in avocado is a very common problem and it’s caused by salinity in the soil, which avocados are extremely sensitive to. Fertiliser can exacerbate this. Some formulations are worse than others, but the tree’s growth slows way down in the winter, so it’s not going to be hurting for fertiliser. Last year one of my trees got leaf burn bad simply because I was not watering it enough. Conditions were very humid and I didn’t want to overwater it, but I ended up doing it harm by allowing salt to concentrate. Some plant pathogens can cause similar symptoms, but in this case it was all the fault of my watering regimen. I flushed the salt out with copious amounts of water one day and all was well. Lots of plant appreciate supplemental lighting and subtropical trees grown in Germany are no exception, but it should be fine in south‐facing window. Immature avocado plants naturally grow in the forest understory. They’re accustomed to less light than most fruit‐bearing plants.
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# ? Nov 9, 2020 07:33 |
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YAPID!!! ...Yet another plant ID. This is the last mystery plant in my home.
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# ? Nov 12, 2020 19:48 |
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terre packet posted:YAPID!!! that just a varietal of Crassula?
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# ? Nov 12, 2020 20:00 |
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Yeah, it looks exactly like a baby version of my $8 Ikea jade, down to the reddish edging.
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# ? Nov 12, 2020 20:19 |
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my two grafted ficus “ginseng” bonsai were ikea rescues. And one of my variegated aloe. And a bunch of small Euphorbia trigona And I had an absolutely gorgeous calathea ornata that did what calatheas do and died slowly and miserably over ~3 years
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# ? Nov 12, 2020 20:36 |
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I had a calathea that slowly died! Things that it hated include: being watered regularly, being watered sporadically, a humid room, a drier room, indirect sunlight, direct sunlight, being fertilized, not being fertilized.
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# ? Nov 12, 2020 21:52 |
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Oh, is that what's happening to my calathea? Seems it's just calatheaing. (It died back spectacularly to gross brown nothing, but has since put up one solitary leaf. Maybe there's hope for it yet. The voodoo-lily-looking hitchhiker in its container is doing better than the calathea.)
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# ? Nov 13, 2020 01:38 |
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Hirayuki posted:Oh, is that what's happening to my calathea? Seems it's just calatheaing. Lol, good luck. Maybe do a bit of research, I hear they’re savable but it takes work. Mine did that and held on for a year+ but it never regained vigor or put out more than like 2-3 lovely leaves before dying again
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# ? Nov 13, 2020 01:46 |
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I transplanted some rather overgrown pepper plants from my roommate's aerogarden into pots.When can I stop worrying about the shock from tearing up their root balls and moving from hydroponic to pots killing them? I cut them way back because I knew it'd be super hard on them, and after a few days they seem fine and have new growth, but I'm still paranoid.
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# ? Nov 13, 2020 14:38 |
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Cowwan posted:I transplanted some rather overgrown pepper plants from my roommate's aerogarden into pots.When can I stop worrying about the shock from tearing up their root balls and moving from hydroponic to pots killing them? I cut them way back because I knew it'd be super hard on them, and after a few days they seem fine and have new growth, but I'm still paranoid. You have my permission to stop being paranoid about it. If the transplant shock was going to straight up kill them, you'd probably already know.
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# ? Nov 13, 2020 15:57 |
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Wallet posted:You have my permission to stop being paranoid about it. If the transplant shock was going to straight up kill them, you'd probably already know. Cool, I figured that would be the case, but it's nice to have confirmation.
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# ? Nov 13, 2020 16:03 |
Any tricks/tips for cleaning up a hundreds of berries from my yard? We had the chinaberry tree removed, but that left the yard blanketed with berries. They are too small to rake up. Should I sweep them? I'm hoping somebody has some clever trick that I don't know about.
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# ? Nov 13, 2020 17:30 |
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Birds will do it for you for free
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# ? Nov 13, 2020 18:05 |
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The best calathea is musaica and I'll fight about it. Most other calatheas are so dramatic but I think whatever makes the musaica's leaves glossy helps protect them and keep moisture in so they're less delicate. Also, they have the coolest pattern! Does anyone else here do plants in leca? I've been slowly converting the majority of my stuff over the last few months and I'm pretty happy with it. Pros for me: it's a lot easier to clean up from carpet than dirt, it's reusable, I use clear containers so I have a good idea what the water level is with just a look, and I seem to have to water them much less often than plants in soil. Can anyone recommend a good liquid fert to go along with superthrive? uranium grass fucked around with this message at 18:27 on Nov 13, 2020 |
# ? Nov 13, 2020 18:24 |
Bi-la kaifa posted:Birds will do it for you for free There are not enough birds for this amount of berries lol. Our puppy wants to eat them so I can't wait anyway.
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# ? Nov 13, 2020 18:53 |
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D-Pad posted:There are not enough birds for this amount of berries lol. Our puppy wants to eat them so I can't wait anyway. You got a leaf blower? I’d collect them as best I could into a little pile and then sweep them up or whatever.
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# ? Nov 13, 2020 18:54 |
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Kaiser Schnitzel posted:Judging by the oxalis in my lawn, you can cut it back every week and it will never die showbiz_liz posted:Purple oxalis is the first plant I ever kept alive long-term, and I can tell you: I moved into an apartment with terrible lighting, realized my potted oxalis was doing badly, put the dying potted oxalis underneath my bed for a full year, it turned into a pot of literally just dirt, and then once I moved somewhere with light and stuck it in a window and watered it again, it sprang back to life immediately and got bushy and huge. I have since divided it like five times and now I have SO MANY oxalis and they cannot die. thanks, I've just given it a rather severe haircut the fart question fucked around with this message at 23:18 on Nov 13, 2020 |
# ? Nov 13, 2020 23:02 |
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We still talking succ bonsai? Here is my crassula my mother gave me, needs a little bit of love as the local possums have a munch every so often ,but litteraly 0 maintenance except for a weekly water with the rest of my plants Gave it a little love because I had it out for a photo op portulacaria afra also makes a nice succulent bonsai with a little work Desert Rose is also a great succulent bonsai quite slow though...
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# ? Nov 14, 2020 06:55 |
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Followup post with pictures of the extremely normal carolina reaper plants my roommate was growing in his aerogarden.
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# ? Nov 16, 2020 00:28 |
I solved my chinaberry problem with a shop-vac and child labor Next question: We bought this house this summer. The flipper had put down St. Augustine sod but failed to water it at all in between putting an offer in and closing in the middle of August in Texas. I tried to save it but every bit in the backyard died. As you can see it's just hard dirt. Am I correct I need to wait until after winter to put sod down again? I would just seed it but apparently you can't do that with St. Augustine and I've read it's one of the better grasses for central Texas. Is there anything I should be doing now like fertilizing it or something to give it the best shot for next year? It's hard packed af should I break it up or aerate it or whatever now or before sod? It doesn't get a ton of sun. I know next to nothing about this type of stuff. What's the best game plan here? The front yard I managed to save a decent amount (still mostly dead though) and from what I read if I treat it right the St. Augustine should expand and give me a full yard in a year or so. What should I be doing their to give it the best shot?
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# ? Nov 16, 2020 02:55 |
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Operation backyard choko vine going very well
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# ? Nov 16, 2020 07:25 |
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I haven't forgotten about rebooting this thread-life just happened and I haven't gotten around to it, but hopefully that will happen soon (this week?). Oil of Paris has written a great new OP-get your effortposts ready and we will link them in a table of contents kind of thing!
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# ? Nov 17, 2020 19:12 |
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D-Pad posted:There are not enough birds for this amount of berries lol. Our puppy wants to eat them so I can't wait anyway. Haven’t had time to check the forums much lately but glad you got that China berry out, sucks that the puppy was so determined to eat those noxious berries. I guess nothing will stop a dog on a mission to eat something weird lol. Are you planning to replace it with anything or just leaving the space open? Don’t have many recommendations for the lawn, the landscaping thread would probably be a better place to get that info. Now, if you want to turn some of that lawn into beds....
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# ? Nov 18, 2020 11:34 |
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Any grass masters here? My wife wants to replant the yard but I have no idea what type of grass we have. I can't find anything that looks like what we have online. Any ideas?
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# ? Nov 23, 2020 19:24 |
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Oldstench posted:Any grass masters here? My wife wants to replant the yard but I have no idea what type of grass we have. I can't find anything that looks like what we have online. Any ideas? Sadly I'm not a master at all, so I can't say what that is (ident is easier with a flower stalk though); could even be a wild grass that has settled in. What I do know is you should have more than one type of grass in your lawn: basically when you sow or re-sow a lawn, say after scarification, you use a seed mix that is appropriate to your climate/soil/useage/whatever, and it generally has 3 complimentary grass type in it, to varying percentages. Lawn care/greenkeeping is a huge topic and has its own separate qualifications to horticulture, and it will all vary depending on climate zone and "what my grandpa taught me", so wait and see if someone else knows what's what. Probably should say what zone/area you are in though? (Edit: I have a stupid camelia question coming up sometime, stay tuned!)
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# ? Nov 23, 2020 20:05 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 15:29 |
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Agreeing with needing zone or just genera area. We can't really tell by a picture but different varieties are more likely in warmer/wetter/colder/drier climates. It's probably poa though. Poa is ubiquitous, especially if you don't have long winters, and if you're not doing much besides mowing then it'll eventually just crowd out whatever species was originally sowed there
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# ? Nov 23, 2020 20:24 |