Welcome to /plant/, the happy green place on this blue board, where growers, gardeners and horticulturists share their love for things that grow.Newbies and amateurs are very welcome, and we’ll always try to answer your questions.>Flora of the Worldhttp://www.worldfloraonline.org/>Plants of the World Onlinehttps://powo.science.kew.org/>Hardiness zoneshttps://www.plantmaps.com/>Plant ID Siteshttps://identify.plantnet.org/https://wildflowersearch.org/>Pests and Diseaseshttps://www.rhs.org.uk/advice/advice-searchhttps://www.growveg.com/plant-diseases/us-and-canada/>Thousands of Botanical Illustrationshttp://www.plantillustrations.org/>Cacti and Succulentshttps://worldofsucculents.com/https://www.cactiguide.com/https://www.succulentguide.com/>Carnivorous plantshttps://botany.org/home/resources/carnivorous-plants-insectivorous-plants.htmlhttps://carnivorousplants.org/grow/guides>Alpine plantshttps://www.alpinegardensociety.net/plants/>Pondshttps://www.wildlifetrusts.org/actions/how-build-pond>How to Make a Terrariumhttps://terrariumtribe.com/diy-terrarium-guide/Previously on /plant/ >>5063609
my orchid will bloom any day now. for once I have not killed it inadvertently
I like eating plants
Anyone here have success using terra prada for a flower bed?
>>5093317curious about this as well
what are some good affirmations I can tell my plants everyday?
>>5093325Tell them Jesus loves them.
>>5093317>>5093320I live in Peru, they sell these at local rural marketsI suppose I could try to send them, I need something to contact you though and check the logistics, something like a burner discord account or something similar
>>5093361Nevermind it is illegal outside of Peru lol, hilarious
>>5093374What plant was it
>>5093383cocaine
>>5093359My plants dont like christians
>>5093548Based plants??
I dont get how you can overfeed vftsLike I've been to a bog, there's more insects than plantsI know you can overfertilize regular plants, but carnivores are literally designed to attract insects constantly, at all times. Producing nectar or being bright red or whatever they do is just part of their healthy growth patterns, they physically can't refuse a meal they catch. Feels like another myth from people keeping them in windows or thinking a 3000fc grow light is strong because it looks bright, so they couldn't handle the foodAs far as I've seen everyone just sources a single forum post where a guy said he starved them, fed every trap, and then they made smaller traps
I don't think you can overfeed VFTs desu
>>5093748I know you can't pitchers either, they are apparently so good at attracting/trapping and so bad at digesting that people regularly report entire pitchers just filled up with a tower of flies and bugs
>>5093758Yep, some of my pitcher well filled to the top with bugs by fall, must be hundreds of dead bugs per pitcher
>>5094061Guess that's why they get the biggest
I was proud of my plants for being their tiny, tiny carbon sequestering selves and knowing that every leaf they grew was helping global warming by 0.000000000001 % of 0.000000000000000000000000001% but I recently learned that there literally is not enough space on the entire earth for plants to even make a difference in co2 levels and thats very depressing
>>5094122if we can cut emissions enough then the trees will catch up (eventually)
>>5094122The mass of extracted fossil fuels on Earth is very large compared to the mass of all living plants (mostly contributed by trees). We would have to plant trees, cut them, and then store the trunks permanently, and do that for generations to remove all the carbon that was emitted over the last 150 years.
Are aerial roots a permanent sign of your failture or will they reabsorb them?Is it like a flower stalk where if you snip them down they'll take the hint?They're my one exception to my 'oh beauty of nature let them grow how they want' bullshit
>>5094586>oh beauty of nature let them grow how they wantConsidering they're in artificial conditions, this is still your responsibility.
>>5094605I resent your use of the word responsibilityI water him more than even my bog plants, literally still has water in his pot and decides it's just not enough and he has to send out a tentacle to try to drink the truly humid indoor heated room in winter air
>>5093707>>5093748Anecdotally, mine has actually done seemingly the same thing the guy described after filling all it's traps but one. Growth has slowed down considerably and its newest trap is actually smaller.That said, there was another very interesting comment in that same thread that brought up the fact of (paraphrasing) "well, it just caught a bunch of food, so maybe it doesn't really need to focus on making big pretty traps, it could be working on root growth or even spreading the rhizome, you should examine their health over the long term rather than making a conclusion after 2 weeks".And in my limited non-expert experience, it has been the case to me that plants seem to "focus" on one thing at a time. They get repotted, their topside growth stops almost completely while they get their roots established, then they start growing like crazy once they have nice big roots. An echeveria I have is growing an offshoot, and the leaf growth cycle on the main head has almost completely stopped in favor of pushing the baby out a half centimeter a day. Lots of people say that flytraps specifically will often actually grow bigger, redder, more impressive traps when they're hungry. We're biased to think that a flytrap with a bunch of giant traps means it's doing the best it can, because it looks cooler, but the traps are basically just expendable arms reaching up to feed the rhizome, the real core of the plant.
>>5094623oh, also, 2 weeks is the timeframe they digest things for. So, you know, a lot of its energy is probably being spent on that.
>>5092779down to -25 by the end of next week btw
>>5093638They evolved to be very based. They put charles darwins theory of evolution by natural selection into practice and stick it to creationism ;^)
ok the third time is apparently the actual charm, i'm ready to start considering them establishedit's not nearly this yellow in real lifeshould i buy springtails for the sundews or will they be fine for another month or 2 (or 3)?the pitchers don't seem to be physically capable of catching anything yet which makes me think seedlings don't need much food, but sundews aren't seedlingsthe algae also means there's nitrogen and such in the moss, so will that be enough for them to grow off of for a long while? springtails are stupidly expensive for literally no reason, it should be literal cents for a colony and yet they're only sold in cups for like 10 dollars, even on marketplaces
I killed 2 lithops todayDon't be misled by online diagrams like me, they don't do 3 month cycles with the seasons you can see, they will literally sit there growing their new leaves inside for like, an entire year, split, and then do it again. If they're not rotten, they're not dead.
Thoughts on my two favourite Forget-Me-Nots?
Should I just fertilize my plants and not care that it's bad for the environment in the same way that an individual person's carbon footprint is literally nothing compared to an oil company's, where my drops of fertilizer running out of a 10 inch pot are nothing compared to the metric tons that farmers wash over their plants constantly
my lil dudes growing its first flower
>>5095178Cut it, it's starved of light and too weak to support it.
>>5095195yeah i was reading up on that. wasnt sure if it would be ok since im feeding it flytrap chunks but yeah its been getting crummy sunlight all winter.
>>5095203nigger what the fuck is a "flytrap chunk"go to the pet store and buy a BUG
also>all winterjust kill it now and save yourself the effort, HOLY
>>5095210are you inverse 'eat the bugs' posting at me?
>>5094886i did that to my lithops years ago ;_;
>>5095232On the one hand, I'm pretty sure neither of them actually had a taproot? Like it had somehow rotted off or something? There was no damage, and they were healthy, but they just didn't have any kind of big central root I could see. So its hard to say how long they would last.But on the other, it sucks, because I split them open for science (which was how I learned they were still actually in perfect condition) and ALL of their leaves were DOUBLE SPLITTING, I had taken PERFECT CARE OF THEM
>>5095238It's also weird for a plant completely designed around camouflage for their dead flower stalk to just stay attached for months at a time and be really fleshy and bad to remove, why would they evolve like that?
My dormant plants have not yet arrived from the nursery. I have ordered more plants.
>See word related to plants on building>Its flower arrangements or weedEvery single time
Here is a mango tree I've been growing for a few months
>>5095178get that man a LAMP>>5095203>flytrap chunks???????
>>5095284Based mango grower. What kind of mango?
Is an offshoot a clone or just a new growth point? If you put one plant in a pot and it fills it with offshoots or runners is it still accurate to say its one plant? Is the cutoff just if it's still connected? Are they easy to remove because they're "supposed" to come off or do we just find it easy to rip them apart because we're big and strong?
>>5094889cute
>>5095305we had a gnat problem in our apartment and on top of bug traps i got two of these flytraps i found in a clearance bin at krogers. unfortunately the gnats are too small to trigger the mouths so it cant eat anything so i have to buy it supps
>>5095489Get sundews or pinguiculas for the gnats
>>5095408I have no idea what kind of mango it was but this is a picture of the exact mango that I took the seed out of
>>5095548Based i hear those are really sweet compared to the small yellow and big red ones
You guys ever get struck with the feeling that you only really care about a few of your plants and you wouldnt mind if you had to get rid of the rest
>>5095708definitely, there are some that are a real nuisance to take care of and I often get the feeling I'd be free from a burden if they diedbut then again I can't bring myself to willingly get rid of anything or try to kill any of them
>>5095489i'm calling bullshit on that stuff. if they were serious they'd mention the extra stimulation needed to actually feed VFTs non-living food. they don't seal and begin digestion if the 'prey' doesn't 'struggle.'
>>5095903Every living Carnivorous plant damages the carnivorous plant industry
>>5095931Not unless it thrives enough to be divided or hybridized and sold :3
>>5096233care to explain how consoomers selling their own plants helps the industry retard-kun??
>>5094623To update, less than a week later, while her growth definitely slowed down, the traps she's pushing out are still just as big and red as her current biggest, so I'm getting ready to call bullshit on this.That said, I'm probably still not going to "overfeed" just because a flytrap with all of its traps closed is infinitely less fun to look at then one with them open.
Nothing about the plant industry makes any fucking senseNurseries want plants to grow as fast as possible for as cheap as possibleso they exclusively use peatyou know, peat, the soil that is so devoid of nutrients carnivores grow in it.Peat that is also very absorbent and retains a ton of waterAnd they'll grow succulents in these, like, primarily succulents, because that's what plant normies likeThese succulents that are never sun stressed and nearly always etiolated to a degreeso the peat surely wouldn't dry out and they'd start rottingbut they get them to massive sizes before shipping them out, somehow, despite giving them bad light and using garbage soil???and if peat has no nutrients, why is there an entire industry built around destroying wetlands to harvest it?????
>>5096325you don't need nutrients to germinate seeds or root cuttings
>>5096292Because i said so ;^)
I have gollum jade plant (Crassula ovata gollum), but it is mostly not gollum, but normal jade (flat leaves). I read this can happen, the gollum reverts back to normal.However there are few leaves that are gollum type (cylinder shape).If I snip a leaf like that and root it, what are the chances it becomes a complete gollum jade plant?Any other ideas what to do? I dont really care about normal jade, I just want the gollum variety.
>>5096325I was wondering how they always have blooming orchids if they mass ship them in dark boxes. Must be local nurseries and fast shipping times
I kind of want a philodendron however it seems they want high humidity. My humidity never really goes above 37%. Will it be too miserable to even attempt?
Ok im gonna try for like the 5th time to propogate an echeveria leaf from the grocery storeAre there ANY tricks beyond the basic knowledge and rolling a die?Oldest leaves? Biggest leaves? Can they get too much light to root? Do they need to be touching dirt? Will sticking it in after they callous help? Its so simple but it never works for me
>>5096857>Oldest leaves? Biggest leaves?One that is already falling off or already fallen
>>5096989But they don't "fall off", they just shrivel up...
Postan my terrarium I set up 6 months ago.
Hello, anyone knows a way to dig a 1 meter hole on hard compacted without a shovel or expensive tools without trying? I want to try Hugelkultur to try to revive some barren land i have in my property. hopefully, once i finish the hugelkultur underground piles, i will have enough energy to dig a water reservoir in the middle of my garden.
>>5097188nice JO crystal, does it really work for keeping the plants alive?
>>5097191How do you own property but not a shovel?Unless your soil is more rock than dirt, a meter deep by a couple long is totally doable on the weekend even by a couch potato once you buy that shovel
Will tropical plants die if I take them outside in 20s for 30 seconds or so to get into a warm car, and then again on the other side?Trying to get my house ready to move, I have snake plants, purple waffle, lucky bamboo, monstera, jade, zz plant, cat palm, and pothos, which I need to get out of my old house and into my new house.
>>5097214Yes anon, if a single snowflake touches one of their leaves, they will die.
>>5097206Its earth that has been compacted from years of cars passing over it.
>>5097220nigga just hit it with shit, pour water on itare you even male? fucking DIG
>>5097220Ass quality soil doesn't hurt nearly as much as roots and rocks. Just wet it and start taking slices out of the sides.
>>5097219Welp, guess they're being sold with the house.
On the topic of selling plants, plants as a financial asset seem very strange to me. Assuming you have a very old, well taken care of plant, you would assume that it's valuable, because you as a plant person know what goes into growing it.But it doesn't really matter what you know, because you're not the one buying it. If you're selling a plant, 9 times out of 10 you're going to be selling it to a normie for it to starve on their windowsill. So if they don't care enough about plants to take care of them as well as you, they're not going to want to spend a bunch of money on your plant vs the one at the store, even if yours is prettier. For all I know normies like etiolation and think that's the plant growing and getting bigger because it's doing well. Wow, big tall plant, that's what it's supposed to look like! Well it died after a couple years, but that's just it's lifespan, it's like a fish!But then if you get to hobbyists or people who actually know or care, and you run into the issue that they could have grown that plant like that themselves, so why spend a ton of money on yours instead of just buying a baby, propagating or rehabbing one? They might even be autistic enough to have a policy about only growing from seed or something. Which THEN goes into, even if your plant is like 2 decades old and perfectly taken care of, if it's a common species, someone who would be willing to pay a lot for it, probably ALREADY HAS IT, especially given the fact that your local nurseries largely dictate what kind of plants can generally be found in your area, unless someone (likely you) is obsessed and rich enough to buy from etsy.
>>5094586>>5094605>>5094607Apparently, jellybeans grow aerial roots for the same reason pothos will, as climbing hooks and little stilts to keep themselves upright, as well as fucking preemptive insurance IN CASE they topple over, and so can probably be seen as a sign of good health rather than bad.He's still super thirsty all the time as I can see by his leaf reabsorbtion, but he's apparently not parched.And honestly, after seeing this picture, I'm starting to turn around on them, they actually look really elegant if they're allowed to grow long enough to just hang down by gravity (and turn red from the sun) instead of stick out like whiskers.
>plant wasn't dying at all, it was just rootmaxxing to the extreme to compensate for its horrible sunburns>uprooted it for nothingfeels bad
>>5097236What are you talking about? The only "old" plants that I can think of that are sold by garden centers are olive trees which arent even grown to be sold as trees. Anything else in a garden center is like 2-3 years old max (for perennials). And normies DO spend money on plants. In North America a single bare roots rose is like 50 bucks.
Thoughts on felt grow bags? Just got a few of them.
To put the book to rest on overfeeding vfts, she is now pregnant, with what looks like TWO new divisions from 0. So go ahead and feed them as much as they can eat.
I let my aloe get catastrophically thin and underwatered and now I have to toe the line between causing root rot and giving it enough water to perk back up. :((((
>>5097370>The only "old" plants that I can think of that are sold by garden centers are olive trees which arent even grown to be sold as treesExactly You can't even think of a source of commercially available plants that have been well taken care of for a long time, making them large and impressive.
>>5097433>available plants that have been well taken care of for a long time, making them large and impressive.Ok such as?
>>5097370It's a matter of perspective. A lot of them are clones taken from old, cared-for mother plants.
>>5097445Bro I dontI dont understand what you're not getting herePlease stop replying
my red-brown weirdo VFT is cranking out new leaves so i guess it's fine after allhope the new ones will be better-acclimated to the light levels i've got coming out of this fixture
>still no Wisteria available at big box storesWtf I need to get one before they all get bought
>>5097618my neighbors wisteria grew 100 feet up our pine trees and he wont do anything about it
>>5097619axe that shitby that shit, i mean the lowest part of the thing that is growing on your tree, so that the top part just fucking dies
>>5097188Astonishing. Oudoors my results are pretty nice overall, but indoors I'm cured, almost always constantly by the dreaded two-spotted spider mite.
>>5097647*
>>5095178
>>5094889fuzzy>>5097653nice petunias
Do air plants need grow lights or could I stick one next to a normal lamp?
>>5097800this is the sort of shit air plants are doing when left to their own devices. they might be able to survive in dim conditions, but in general they'd always prefer more light. never forget the primary way a plant grows it outside on its own with nobody looking after it. you just gotta find out where it's doing that and try to convince the plant it's there
>>5097964I read that third worlders hate them because they're impossible to get rid of weeds that get everywhere and i think thats funny
After checking out some plant books at the library I'm reminded of how annoyed I am that normies just think of plants as flower dispensers and don't care about them outside of that
>>5098126i think you are severely overestimating how much normies think of plants, period
>>5093097Can I grow an orange tree from a bit of stem at the top of an orange? I got some sumo oranges, they’re perfect. Huge for sumos, juicy, super thick easy to peel skin with huge knobs on the top. Juicy, delicious. Thick stems on the knobs with some leaf around them. But the stem is short. I put one of the knobs in a pot of dirt and watered it. I need to salvage these genetics. I have my second one still, uneaten. Damn shame no seeds.
It's so depressing that I still have another 88 more days until the last frost date. At least I can start a few things indoors until then and hope my plants do better this year than last. If it wasn't for the Canadian wildfire smoke blocking the sunshine I'm sure my plants would have had a fantastic year last year. I have a lot of delectable compost for my garden this time too
if a mirror reflects light...would putting one near my grow lights do anything?The fact that I looked it up and actually got results saying yes actually makes me think it's even less than the nothing placebo I thought it would be, because it seems like one of those lifehack pro tips they tell people to feel less bad about not having proper lighting
moving my plant display from a table down onto the floor has reminded me of just what tiny, precious little beings they are
>>5098128Maybe if the orange came with a chunk of stem and you grafted it onto an existing orange tree
>>5098242reflectors absolutely let you recapture light that would otherwise be scattered in non-plant directions, but HOW useful that actually is? depends heavily on the geometry involved.
flashback to when i was arrested for publick intoxication. they took me to the jail and then confronted me about the plants in my backpack. i took some cuttings of euphorbia and the guy at the station was so exited. he said euphoria?!! he was so dick hard for some spurge. once i told him to look it up he stfu.
>>5098242I put a shitload of aluminum foil over mine.
>>5098532I might do that too, it seems schizo and funny looking
if you ever repot always use a spoon or something, tool vs hand is the difference between a relaxing evening giving your plants more room and a stressful mess that ends with non-centered plants that you have to deal with for another year
>>5099261Chopsticks work well for picking out the substrate without damaging roots.
>>5093097About a year ago, I germinated around 10,000 petunia saeds and ultimately grew to flowering maturity about 500 specimens. I've got one, doing quite nicely, under lights, that's pretty much the same as that orange variety that escaped the Max Planck institute in mid 80s.
>>5099366ARID ZINE IS A /PLANT/POSTER???
>>5099394I think you're mistaken
So I have my one perfect plant that I always give the best direct and center grow light spot to, I'm very proud of him and want him to grow completely optimally.I've bought some other plants and done some repotting, and I'm getting less comfortable with how little light the ones on the edge are getting.If I were to rotate the primo spot around, would it affect my golden boy getting the optimal amount of light? If plants sun stress because they're at maximum light capacity, make stores of glucose for later as opposed to using it as they get it, then he shouldn't actually be losing any significant amount by being out of the way for some days out of the week, right?
>suddenly blocked from nursery website I already bought plants from in the pastGo fuck yourself too I guess
after less than single day under the grow light, my new agavoides is already going from green to getting its lipstick tinge on the edges of its leavesfastest thing I've ever seen a plant do
>>5099683What happened anon? Dish!
>>5099683kek how does one get blocked from a plant website
>>5099826>>5099831Cloudfare blocked me for some reason
>>5099900Use a different browser.
>>5099900If you've got a browser extension for blocking scripts etc then that might be blocking something cloudflare wanted to confirm you're not a bot; otherwise, the only suggestion I can think of is trying again another day.
What is your favorite invasive plant?
>>5093325Grow you fucker. GROWWorks for me
>>5100002Invasive or like "invasive?"
>>5100017Either. Weedy plants that make people seeth.
>hehe im gonna do ecological damage to own the libsFuck off
>>5100002Kalanchoe daigremontiana
could any plant enthusiasts help me figure out what this is? I'm a /g/ sperg. My guess is garlic, but I haven't been able to 100% say if its garlic/onion/something else.
Why are normoids so obsessed with "native plants"?
>>5100019I really like sumacs. They're native here but they have all of those annoying pioneer traits. They're "trees" but they're so small and cute and I like their low, spread out canopy.
>>5100200only one way to find out
They're not, you've just convinced yourself that anybody that even slightly disagrees with anything you say must be an other lesser npc because it makes it easier for your tiny brain to process us vs them.
>>5100251Seeing them along the highway is the highlight of my commute. They stand out well among the generic greenry.
>it's finally going above freezingI know it won't last...
>>5100251Those have completely taken over my local sand pit where I walk my dog.
>literally no green anywhere on the leaves>has spent the past 3 months baking 12 hours a day under the grow light>spends ONE DAY slightly to the side instead of directly underneath it>nearly doubles in width spreading the leaves out because he's hungyI guess this >>5099474 is a no go
>>5100200not enough of the plant to tell, need the leaf tips, location, climate, etc
>>5100223It is one of the few forms of nationalism they are allowed to practice.
>>5100256I will report back with confirmation whenever it appears ready to harvest, assuming there is anything to harvest.>>5100737Most of the tips broke when I covered the planter during a front. Zone 10 though. Here's a smaller one I pulled because it was too close to my mango that started growing. Only a fraction of it was poking above the soil and it had a clean break where I'm assuming the bulb was attached. Didn't dig it out though since it was right next to the mango.
I dumped out some pots of dead epazote only to find out they're perennials
>>5100748It almost looks like amaryllis or some other flowering bulb (decorative allium)dig up the bulb and plant it elsewhere, see if it blooms into something nice
i just checked a seed tray that's been sitting out in the elements since last year and has been flooded to the top with water and frozen solid multiple times over the winter, and one of the plants somehow had a 100% survival rateman these things are fucking stronk
>>5093097Indoors and out, my results with petunias are kind of insane. I've about 50 specimens under lights now, that I grew from seed planted last.March. When it comes to nuance, the species is goddamn endless, if not out of sight as the apple family is.
>>5100223>normoidsI wish. There are corners for a few natives in the better stores now but it's still mostly small online shops and hunt and share.>WhyNostalgia, suprise gardening and animal attraction. If you want certain bees and butterflies you'll need certain plants.
>>5101055What cultivars grow that tall?
>>5100200>>5100256>>5100737>>5100748>>5100758My disappointment is immeasurable and my day is ruined. I thought I was caring for garlic all this time. Pulled another smaller one, then the bigger ones once I got the root out without a break and saw it wasn't garlic. Every AI I've shown has said it's iris apparently. Thanks for the help, looks like its time to plant real garlic now.
>>5101415Iris is a beautiful plant. Plant them somewhere wet on your property and in a year they will reward you will blooms. You might as well care for them as well.
>>5101415Why did you want garlic so badYou know you can just bury garlic from the store right
>>5101419I actually replanted it in a more damp area of the yard, so hopefully it'll turn into something. I'll post an update in a year if it does. >>5101423I'm not actually that upset over it that was just a meme. I am disappointed since it sprouted randomly, thought it was garlic, and cared for it in hopes of producing something tangible and consumable as a sign of my care, which I could also replant. Was excited as a pale /g/ shut in who doesn't see the sun to have something appear to be thriving despite my thumb being gray instead of green. I did end up burying some large garlic cloves though, so I'm hopeful for round two with my now autistic knowledge of garlic.
Hey /plant/, I'm in a bit of a predicament here and I need some advice.About a year ago, I got this succulent(An Orbea?) from a nursery, the typical multiple props planted in one pot sort of thing that they sell. As they grew, they began to crawl out of the pot so I went to replant them into a wider one, and the arms all breaking apart was pretty much unavoidable due to how fragile they were. I figured no big deal, I'll just space them all out inside the wider pot and let them fill it out. That was months ago.Now about a week or two ago, I went to inspect it to see how it's doing since I figured they would surely need water with how long it's been, only to find that one of the plants in the pot had basically liquified(pic related).I'm puzzled about what could have happened here. It was a very long time since I had last watered and the soil is bone dry, has excellent drainage, clay pot, etc, and I don't water often either.All the other ones in the pot are completely fine, and I removed the bad one. Fast forward to today, all the plants in the pot are very thirsty and need to be watered, but despite how utterly dry the soil has been, I can still pick up that sour scent when I go near it. Is the soil more or less ruined and I have to throw *all* of it out and do a full re-pot, or can I just continue watering it like normal and everything will be fine?The damp looking bit of soil in the picture is from the plant melting.
>>5101468You generally want to get succulents out of their nursery pot ASAP as their usually a peat mix meant to keep them alive during transport. It looks like they're still in peat too. Rot can sit and spread pretty slowly through succs. I'd follow that piece on the right down until you find good healthy tissue and sever it
>>5101514The whole piece was destroyed, arm was a dark green and I severed it, haven't repotted it yet because I wanted to monitor it.It was removed from it's nursery pot as soon as I got it, and the pot in the picture is the second pot(of mine) it's been in.Potting mix is coco coir and pumice.Does rot compromise the soil? I don't know if I got every single root of the plant out of there because there are other plants still in there and I wouldn't know which root is which.I'm just wondering if I would be safe to water the plants now.
bromeliads. that's the post
>already making 4/5" trapsdeathtube-rescue VFT stocks going up, boys
I keep a few succulents and a zamioculca. Had a few days off so I had the time to look through them more carefullyWhile my other succulents are growing nicely and look healthy, it seems I didn't water this one properly lately. I made sure to water it again(not too much, of course) but it's not too late for it, right?This particular one is 4 years old and it has been through a lot, including my damn cat tearing it apart for fun. Would suck to see it die because I just didn't water it enough.
>>5101664Mine is going insane with stupidly dark reds and even red teeth as well
>>5101778>indian takes horrible care of a starving plant barely clinging to lifeNot big surprise
>>5101095Right now there are two big trends in nu-gardening: 1) edibles only, and 2) native plants only whereby anything non-native is automatically rejected because normalfags think they're saving the environment.
>>5102014
>>5093097the only plant I care about is Cannabis I'm a fauna guy,not flora
>>5102014You... ARE helping the environment by planting natives
>>5102098This is the flora thread. Fauna need not apply.
>>5102158You're not. A garden is by definition an artificial and man-made space that is always the result of habitat destruction. It's a fantasy for people to feel good about themselves. To each their own but pretending you're helping the "wildlife" by getting rid of of non-native plants in your suburban garden is an absurd idea.
>>5102173People really stretch the definition of native when they do this. It's rarely the right plant that would actually be in their county or that grows effectively in the microclimate where it's planted. There is an actual meaning, but most people are using it as a meaningless feel-good buzzword, and exotic plants aren't necessarily worthless just like native plants aren't necessarily better.
love me squashlove me marigoldslove me tomatoessimple as that
>>5102159I know. I just felt like being a jerkgoodbye
>>5102173T. Boomer that shoots any animal that comes onto his property, douses everything in pesticide and wonders where all the birds went
Sometimes I'm tempted to buy a monstera and just turn it into a beast bigger than myself by actually putting it outside in the sun instead of in a corner by a window and having it somehow still grow
>>5102266Based
Dunno why I bought 25kg of calcium nitrate. I really only need 5kg to last me a year. The safety symbols are making me nervous
>>5102266I want a room full of spider plants. Every baby plant will get it's own pot, but it will stay connected to the mother plant.
Rose seeds are finally germinating
>>5102173Habitats often depend on destruction and animals don't give a shit if their food is grown by a human gardening or a cow feeding and trampling. Humans tend to fill their gardens with rare or valued things, so if weeds that won't get mowed down and the bugs that depend on them are rare now, naturally some people will start to plant and cherish them. Most non-native plants (just like lots of native plants too) eventually get less valued if they realize they could get something else that feeds even more or more interesting bugs. Some non-natives are better additions than certain natives but even if they attract your favourite butterfly, as long as you don't also provide enough of its caterpillars food plants you can loose the species easily. It's just simple plant -> bug -> birds, hedgehogs and bats. If they want to feel like a hero for liking wildlife I won't complain as long as they do it by feeding and housing the animals I like.
I hope my peony seeds sprout this spring. I can't justify spending so much on tubers
>>5102603While waiting for seeds to sprout you can always sow more seeds.
>>5096325>and if peat has no nutrients, why is there an entire industry built around destroying wetlands to harvest it?????Because you can't use regular soil otherwise overtime, with watering, it will compact and there will be less and less oxygen, suffocating the roots. You want something that when it dries expand allowing oxygen to pass through, cococoir and peat moss are perfect for this, otherwise you need to "bonsai" your soil and sift through various inert until you have the same grain size, an action that would push away many beginners. Compost is also not ideal because of the high PH, often around 8, most indoor plant prefer slightly acidic soil (5 to 6) or acidic (4).(I agree with the rest of the comment)
>>5100262Are you sure they are Sumac and not Ailanthus?
>>5102739>Because you can't use regular soil otherwise overtime, with watering, it will compact and there will be less and less oxygen,What's natures secret trick so this doesn't happen outside where not just rain falls but also animals walk?
Peat is also annoying because it dries out rather quickly and when it does it shrinks and becomes hydrophobic and is a pain in the ass to rehydrate. The ideal potting mix would be a combination of garden soil + peat/choir + compost. Also, less than 1% of the peat that is harvested is used for horticulture
>>5102795>less than 1% of the peat that is harvested is used for horticultureJesus, how much do they take?
Hello. I was curious to know what tree species this is. The plant identifiers say that it's a Argyle Apple or a Apple Eucalyptus. It was large and in Manizales, which is 2000m above sea level and very rainy.https://maps.app.goo.gl/86jVN4zyWmb7uNpg9?g_st=ac
>>5102795I throw my old peat from my carnivorous plants onto the garden when I repotThey keep trying to ban peat sale in the Yookay but fortunately it keeps getting pushed back, the next best thing would be sphaggers but that's expensive. Has to be brought in from Argentina!
>>5102763>What's natures secret trick so this doesn't happen outside There is more than oneThe first one is not being a sterile environment, fungi, worms, insect and fossorial vertebrates create tunnel in which air passes and that roots are happy to populate. The second one is not going deep underground,only the tap roots go deep providing achorage and searching for water pocket, the rest stay in the top soil where there is the most oxygen and organic matter.The compaction of the soil by animal is irrilevant, they don't do the same path often enough, the problem arise with human activity, trail path often lack any sort of vegetation (example in pic), and heavy machinery compaction leads to yield and crop size reduction (ex: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/282861214_Vehicle_Traffic_and_Soil_Compaction) the scientific literature has extensive research on the matter in agricoltural setting.If you want to try it in real life take whichever plant you prefer, starting from seed, put some in pot with garden soil and other in your preferred potting mix, and see the result for yourself.
who /gettingtoobig/?
>>5102763Animals stick mainly to a few paths and roads like we do
>>5103108My Nepenthes greenhouse is a mess with vines tangled togetherMy wife won't let me cut living plants back for a couple of months for feng shui reasons
>>5102763The big one is worms and even ants.
>>5103124Are there any plants that promote a lot of ant activity, other than passionflower? I had a ton on some burnweeds but they were just farming antcows.
>>5103153sunflowers, ants love the sap for some reason.
>>5103161Yes, and peonies apparently. The biggest families that seem to have external nectar glands are legumes, passionfruits and spurges, mallows, and trumpet vines. What would having an ant-focused garden do to your property, I wonder?
>>5103186i have ants infest my garden and patio every year. i don't really notice much, but sometimes they go to war for some reason? vidrel, they are vicious as fuck stinging each other. i'd imagine if you catered a garden to ants you would get a lot of them and eventually start a race riot or something.
>>5103189for some reason they also swarmed my melon and basil bed last year.
>>5103189I guess there's a risk I would just get fire ants...
Can you just fill a tub with some dirt and water and grow aquatic plants like that or is there something inherently wrong with that?
>>5103416Look up barrel ponds
>>5102746Fairly certain. I'm know what staghorn sumac looks like in the winter and the trees along the highway look like them.
>>5103416It makes it harder to take down for the winter or cleaning.
>>5102746In my case, the wild ones along the road tend to fruit so it's very obvious. I had a few pop up in my beds that I guess could be mis-ID'd, but they're winged sumac here and they do have the wings along the stems.
>>5102606I'm going to indoor sow some Foxglove seeds tomorrow, and phlox and strawflowers next week. This year I'm doing a cut flower and pollinator garden. Late winter gives me so much to look forward to :)
>be me>watering my plants>have tourettes>scream "DRINKERS">awkward silence
flytrap is trying to flower again. i think im feeding it too many cubes
>>5105220Never post your dying abused plants again
My dragon tree keeps yellowing it's leaves, before they turn black. Is this a sign of over- or underwatering? What should I do anons? Living in Scandinavia, but I have this plant under a plant light so the lighting should be okay. Plant still keeps pushing new growth, and the new leaves are beautiful.
>>5105502A close-up on a couple of leaves turning yellow and black.
>>5105284theyre in a window next to his friends and i feed him a soi cube every week they are being well taken care of.
>>5105502Soil looks like it's just soil, and very wet, meaning basically no airflow which leads to root rot.Plant is probably going to be dead within the month.Research potting medium and how different blends are better for different plants. Then research the plant you have and research how their native environment behaves and replicate it as good as you can within reason.
I accidently gave too much ammonium sulphate to my in ground plants and now they're expressing a calcium deficiency. Is it generally more effective to foliar spray with calcium nitrate or to just side dress with some gypsum?
>>5105504Looks like overwatering, but my best advice would be to put it in the bin. Those shitty plants will have dead leaves even if you look after them perfectly
>>5105502lower leaves yellowing first means root rot has already started right
>>5105570die
tf is a soi cube
>>5105749probably this sloppa
>>5102173>A garden is by definition an artificial and man-made space that is always the result of habitat destructionWildlife doesn't give a shit, it lives and reproduces where food and habitat are available, which is exactly what native plants provide.
>>5105838>solid gel mimics real prayEmbarrassing typo.
>>5105876>forgot a space between & and resilience in "new growth, health &resilience">please cut the cube into smaller size>the product is not for human food>accidentally put two spaces between "and" and "produced" in "the product is designed and produced by Bloomify, in NC USA" (it also ought to be "this product" rather than "the product")that image sets the same alarm bells ringing in my mind as those scam emails where somebody barely able to speak english tries to pretend they're from paypal or something
>>5105838>they made plant goychow a thing.
>jerked to Harli G's feet on instagram again
temperate climate northern hemisphere bros... spring is almost here. The air already smells different and better than w*nter air
Hi /plant/, I did it, I have bought a PLANT. What am I in for?
Leeeets gooookk
i'm going to a plant store soon but i have choice paralysis. please recommend me a plant, any plant. i live in the north so i'm okay with getting more plant lights.i already have a 10+ year old ficus tree in my kitcen (the kind with really big leaves) and a jade plant i'm trying to grow, but i'm not too confident in my plant-caring abilities yet when it comes to species that aren't these two. i just water them once a week and don't do anything else to them. if you have a species you love and which is easy to care for, i want recs.
>>5106741Watering a jade plant once a week will kill it
>>5106741Hippuris vulgaris
>>5106745I'm shocked anons plants have survived this long?
>>5106760Minus the question mark
>>5106745well i always wait until everything looks dry enough with both of them which is usually once a week. but yeah i will switch to maximum once every two weeks for the jade now.>>5106748this looks neat, but the store (biggest plant store in my town) doesn't seem to sell it :(
I just put some bareroot plants in a bucket of water while I dig a hole for them, and I just threw my back out... what should I do to keep the plants alive if I can't finish?
>>5105986>soles in her latest vid
>>5093097How moist do I need to keep my soil for germination? Winter is basically over where I'm from and I will probably be pulling out my seedbed from the dark damp place I had it for winter so my seeds can finally warm up in the sun, but It's definitely going to dry them out quite quickly. So I was wondering how often I should water them for the highest chance of germination, I have kept the soil relatively moist for their entire winter period but I'm wondering how to proceed from now on.
>>5106771> i always wait until everything looks dry enough with both of themThat's what you should do, so you're good, my advice for the Jade plant is to give it two or three dry day before watering.What's the soil you are using? a shitty universal mix for cactus or something specific with a lot of grit?
>>5103108All three of these are now taller than I am (the pothos technically stretches). The Euphorbia I'm honestly surprised has gotten as big as it has.
>>5107892Speaking of euphorbias>Buy little 5$ succulent from Walmart not expecting it to last in my backroom>5 years later and now it's a spiky ass barrel of worms that's hard to move and has outgrown it's pot so bad I can't remove itGood thing the pot was on sale. Should I put it in a hanging basket since it seems to want to be all over the place? Also wtf is with euphorbias weird ass growth rate? Both this one and the trigona went from just chilling in the pots to growing a foot a day. I've had to report the trigona twice now.
fuck it man if it wants to keep growing flowers then ill just let it. i feed the other one just as many cubes and it doesnt flower.
>>5107904this shit is so depressing to look at
>>5106350>What am I in forA million little babies, assuming that's a spider plant. Also get ready to start buying more once you realize how easy a lot are to care for.>tfw Echeveria is tinging under the grow lightsWhat causes a succulent to change color, anyway? I've got a Haworthiopsis limifolia that was orange when I got it and it's never turned that color again despite being in full sun.
>thread dedicated to plants>half of what's posted is etiolated and starvinggrim
Ar air plant roots like little fingers?If they get moved from their spot can they curl around something new?Or will they more likely reabsorb them and grow new ones?Or just grow new ones and leave the old as vestigial?
>>5108030I have a rotten stump out back that would be perfect for these. I should go for a walk and see if someone has them and wants to part with a couple.
Pinguicula are truly the perfect retard plant normie houseplant and I can't understand how they're not more of a thingI leave this thing in a corner, far away from the grow light, forget to water it for weeks if not a full month, the whole time getting 0 insects because winter, and not only is it flowering, it SPLIT, and now has TWO flowers, both a bright deep purpleWhy do people insist on murdering succulents when this is everything they could possibly want??
>>5108030Succulents change color primarily as a response to environmental stress—such as high sunlight, temperature fluctuations, or water scarcity—to protect themselves, similar to a human tan. Increased light triggers the production of protective pigments (anthocyanins), causing colors to shift from green to reds, purples, and oranges. Key Reasons for Color Changes: Sunlight Intensity: More direct sunlight usually causes intense colors (reds, purples), while low light causes them to turn green to maximize photosynthesis. Temperature Changes: Cold temperatures, particularly in fall and winter, trigger the production of purple and red pigments. Water Stress: Under-watering (drought stress) promotes more vibrant, intense colors, whereas over-watering keeps them green. "Stress" Colors: This is generally not harmful, but rather a survival mechanism, often desired by growers for aesthetic, vibrant colors. If you prefer your succulents to be green, moving them to a lower-light, more temperate, or consistently watered environment will cause them to revert to their green color.
The snow has melted and my flowers are already starting to push up like the weeds that they are. The mountain mint has the most visible growth, something reddish is coming up where I had some lance-leaf loosestrife so I think I'm in good shape there. The asters, goldenrod and milkweed haven't shown signs of life yet that are verifiably not just random soil seedbank volunteers.Next week I'll uncover the bog garden and let that get going.
>>5108885my goldenrods kinda popped up but it got cold and they stopped and got eaten by bugs or something
>>5108891We had 2 days of 70 degree weather but now it's back to low 30's at night and daytime highs in the 50's or so. Honestly I've considered letting it all go and leaving that bed to the mountain mint and milkweed to slug it out. They're both aggressive spreaders and are also the two most popular among the bees and various other critters. Last year all of my monarch caterpillars got eaten but hopefully this year a few will pupate.
First time growing anything. I would like to convert about 3sqm of my stupid backyard lawn into a patch for potatoes and carrots. Any principles/techniques I should keep in mind?
>>5108905Depending on where you live, the soil might be incredibly compacted and/or full of rocks. I'd dig up the area you plan to plant and see what you're working with, you can amend it with a richer mix if needed and remove any large rocks. If nothing else it will loosen up the soil and if you're growing tubers you're gonna be doing plenty of digging anyways. You don't necessarily need to remove the soil, if you have a pick or a mattock you can just turn it over.
>>5108899my ironweeds seem to be tolerating it ok. and the mistflowers, lyreleaf sages, and fleabanes are up and at em like nothing's wrong
I'm only a fan of gardening because my mom was always buying plants when I was little, lol. So, nowadays I don't buy flowers. You guys have no idea how much it hurts me to see them lose their color or get twisted because my cats are always trying to eat them. They're flowers! Not plants. But when they are plants, I guess they don't notice. I have some mint in my yard anddd they haven't really tried to do anything to it. I still water it regularly, but it's drying out. I don't know what Im doing wrong. Im really clumsy with plants, but I still love them .Soooou... I dunno, could someone help me? I don't want those to die (btw sorry if my English is a bit bad)
>>5108905Priority #1 is figuring out whether your climate and yard are a blazing hellhole or a frigid wasteland. A lot of crops, some mustards and particularly parsleys, are cool weather sissy plants. If your Summers are really hot, you need to plant heat-sensitive plants at the ends of the year to avoid it, or the opposite if your yard is cold and you need to take advantage of Summer for cold-sensitive guys. The soil is an ecosystem and likes to have plants living in it, so you should always be replanting after you pick. Most vegetables are quick to germinate and only take a couple of months to grow, so you may want to have something else lined up for the Summer or Fall.Also start digging and double-check if your soil is mostly sand or mostly clay. If it's a mix, you're good, but if it's leaning clay it can be very hard for root crops to grow through and pick them back out of. (Sand is preferable for root crops to grow through and they won't rot easily.) You're only doing a patch so it should be fine to just dig the whole thing up and mix in compost. Both of these things can be kinda-sorta fixed by picking varieties specifically suited to your area, like thicker hot weather carrots in my case. Most recommendations from videos online are going to be specific to the guy's local climate, so take them with a grain of salt, BUT, and I cannot stress this enough, there is literally no reason not to get the best-tasting most high-tech cutting-edge varieties. You get what you plant, so pick something guaranteed to be strong and/or good.I do not recommend growing potatoes because it's a lot of work and potatoes are cheap, but carrots are better the fresher they are so they should be good. If you do branch out into other stuff that needs physical support like sweet peas, wire cattle panels can be used for most things. Almost every problem you can encounter has been solved long ago, so it helps to realize the problems ASAP so you can look them up.
>>5108906>>5108928Thanks very much, both of you. I live in Australia, very mild winters and fairly hot summers. I will turn the earth and check what’s going on. Potatoes I was thinking because they are a good staple and we had a months-long shortage last year. The majority of potatoes are farmed on one side of the country, far away from everywhere else. If shtf, I think they will be good to have growing.
What's something houseplant adjacent that can survive the southwest desert (shaded)
Im so sick of all these imbeciles posting about their dying houseplants. Can you fuck off already?
>>5109037make their houseplants be alive and they wont have to
>>5109037I love browsing plant boards on reddit and watch people post like a 9/11 equivalent of a thrip infestation "can i save it?".
>>5109037this is why i dont post my plants. some “plant mom” would get on me over “plant abuse” because i live in the north and dont have huge fucking windows. >its ETIOLATED!>the spider plant has BROWN TIPS! you didnt dechlorinate the water!>you’re ruining everything you PLANT ABUSER!
>>5109090My favorite is the cacti that are either entirely dessicated or putrefied inside and hollowed out. I've killed my fair share of succulents by overwatering but if you catch it early you can usually cut a prop to root.
>>5109018why contain it
>>5109093A GROW LIGHTYOU DUMBASS NIGGERSA FUCKINGL A M P WHY DO YOU HAVE PLANTS, AND GO SO FAR AS TO GO TO THE PLANT GENERAL, WITHOUT BOTHERING WITH THE BARE FUCKING MINIMUM FOR THEM? WHY ARE YOU EVEN HERE?
etiolated...
>>5100223The native plant movement isn't based in ecology, it's political. Look at the subreddit it's all trannies and libtards virtue signaling to feel superior. You get shit like them defending a monoculture of goldenrod because "erm technically it can't be invasive because it's native" or the opposite where "NOOOO YOU CANT PLANT THAT CONEFLOWER CULTIVAR YOU'RE GOING TO DESTROY THE LOCAL GENEPOOL REEEEEE". Or the purity spiral where "achkually clovers and dandelions and earthworms and honeybees are non-native therefore bad!" and act like it's some secret woke knowledge they're special for knowing.>>5100745It's not nationalism, it's more adjacent with the noble savage fetishization and decolonization movement. They think coevolution is this perfect Bambi bullshit mutualism where every idigenous™ species was in perfect harmony until the evil colonizers came and brought their evil foreign plants. In reality coevolution is a chemical warfare armrace between a plant and caterpillar trying to kill each other. And the funniest part is that the person who is actually helping wildlife the most is the redneck letting a rusty car in his yard get overgrown with weeds.
wow
>>5109123Those things fuck your eyes upNo thanks. Cactus get stretchy brrrrrrr
New leaf survived intact. It usually tears the top fenestration off when unfurling. But with some extra sprays and helping hand, wah lah.
>>5109151Not (((their))) bot even here...
>>5109153>>5109219Forget your daily dose of glyphosate?
I think this is the lance-leaf loosestrife. Its in the right spot, but if this is loosestrife then it has shown an incredibly ability to spread in a single season
>>5109331And the mountain mint.I'm going to clean everything up and trim the dead stalks tomorrow.
Cactus that are "touchable"?
>>5109357lophs, astrophytum, ariocarpus. There are a bunch of wacky san pedro cultivars, some of which have very few or no spines. Plenty of cacti have hooked spines that form a protective shield around the plant but don't poke, turbinicarpus and mammilaria off the top of my head.
>>5109357all of themdon't be a pussy
>get a new brand of neem oil>emulsify it with the usual mixture>it turns white like milkApparently I haven't achieved emulsification before as the result was just slightly brown water.Don't remember if I had hot pressed before, got cold pressed now.What's you guys results?
>>5109386
>>5109420Its weird how you get GLOCCHED a couple of times and it just stops happeningLike you first get one and you're all careful and prissy about it but yoi still get needled, but once you've had them for a while you can brush against them and nothing will come off
Smallest cutest plant you own? I bought an Escobaria Minima and it's cute
>>5109151Monsanto shill detected
Applied Bow and Arrow to the lawn today for broadleafs (mostly got oxalis, thistle and clover) will be following up in a few days with Spartan to get the Winter Grass
>>5109639Probably my lw here >>5109373 but I have a bunch of other cacti that I also started from seed. This is t. schmiedickeanus, the pic is old though and it looks much more weathered now. Only the new spines stay black and I had an incident last year where it was placed outside without my knowledge, got sunburnt and then was knocked over.
>>5109639i have a small gymnocalycium spegazinni but something happened to it and it either got deathly thirsty or started rotting and recovered but either way i already mentally abandoned it and now it's sitting there with an ugly blotchy bottom half but still seems perfectly fine
>>5109645>implyingDo you even know how much roundup is sprayed in the name of "eradicating" autumn olive or bradford pears or honeysucklebut then again you don't have an actual argument against me so you just short circuit to some half ass insult that doesn't even make sense
>>5109739His smile and optimism: gone
I know /plant/ had a carnivorous hobbyist, so I've come to ask. It's about time to finally repot these guys into something bigger, should I keep the sundews separate so they can be on their own watering schedules? Should I jump up to a 3-4" pot for the pitcher plant or just go a bit bigger with a 2"?Should they be kept in plastic pots instead of clay?
>>5109803>sundew separate watering scheduleswhy?>bigger pot jumpyes. it's in a, what, 1.5" now? move to a 2" and you might be repotting again by the end of the season>plastic/claypersonal preferencealso get all three of those fellas more light, they're hungry af
>>5109803I'm just a carnivore hobbyist, but I'd say the sundews look fine in those pots but the sarracenia could use a larger one. If I understand correctly, unglazed clay pots will leech minerals into the soil.
>>5108030:oI can try raising the babies with the roots hanging in my fish tank
*rubs stolons*
Wut plant is dis? I'm guessing some type of Haworthia/Haworthiopsis based on appearances, but Walmart is garbage about actually labeling things. My overgrown Limifolia in the back for scale.
>>5110216
>>5110217A tiger tooth aloe
>>5110231Or a christmas aloe, but it doesn't seem red enough for that
>>5110217aloe hybrid, the genetics are a soup but I think they usually use castilloniae to get the tubercles on the surface of the leaves.
>>5110231>>5110232>>5110269Dang. I was way off. Ah well. Looks like it is an aloe hybrid of some kind.Here's a Euphorbia I bought as well (at least this one was labeled).
I'm just gonna say it Euphorbia are ugly
>>5110298I like milk trees
Real plant coming through
i germinated some perennial wildflowers last year that got browsed by deer and stayed tiny and they didnt reappear this year... they finally popped up though yay (eutrochium fistulosum)
>>5110298I also like milk trees and think they are pretty cool
mowing the lawn
>>5102449Wear PPE; eye protection, and I'd also say a respirator. It isn't good stuff to get on you, safe you take proper precautions though and aren't clumsy. If you are clumsy, clean it up. I work with sulphur a lot and clean the surfaces where my lab is even if I haven't spilled anything. Sulphur likes to sublimate and it drifts little particulates into the air as if they were fungi spores so having hepa filtration is also a good thing. Calcium Nitrate is also an oxdizer for potassium perchlorate, ammonium nitrate, hydrogen peroxide) that can cause it to burn without an air supply.Check out the NFPA fire diamond on it for more information if you want, I'd recommend it if you haven't read how to properly handle more risky chemical/particulate hazards.
>>5102834Could be Jacaranda Mimosifola variant, looks like it to me but I'd need a closer look at it.
>>5109093Dude, I live in the arctic and I have a grow lamp. Get real, stop making excuses.
>>5102834looks like a eucalyptus based on the fruits and the weird heterophylly it's got going on between the cordate/round ones vs the falcate ones (very eucalyptus trait). altitude and rainfall aren't really gonna help figure out which species cause it's not native there and there's a million species that all look the same anyway but there's probably only a couple that are used as street trees in your country. "argyle apple"/eucalyptus cirenea is probably right. it's weird how they plant eucalypts as street trees over there but in australia where they're actually native they use south american trees like jacarandas and tipuanas
>>5110306>>5110360Based and Spurge-pilled. Need to repot two of mine.
My megasperma or giganteum is doing a weird one.Full sized leaf but the stem is far from normal, very short. I guess it's getting a ton of light to not reach far, but thisnis just silly.
>Black house spider sets up shop on ceiling above indoor light shelf>Inconspicuous little web>Have a fungus gnat outbreak>Thrives>Has babies>Babies set up shop near mum>Now messy web but don't want to remove>No more outbreaksMy Shelob
How can I achieve Total Aphid Death for my indoor plants? Neem oil isn't working.
>>5112323Systemic pesticide. Turn the plant into their death. I've completely gotten rid thrips, the worst kind, that way.
>>5112323Neem gas chamber. It wont be effective unless you treat them all at once. I'd wait until it's warm out and take all your plants outside and spray them. Keep them out of direct sunlight while the leaves are wet though.
I'm trying to propagate burro's tail, it's been chillin for over a month under lights and it didn't do much so far, I'm misting it every few daysInternet tells me it needs anywhere from 50% to 80% inorganic soil so I took upper range of that to be safe but I'm wondering if I shouldn't burry it deeper or add more organic soil to the mix now, anyone growing those?
>>5112424That's new growth, just stay the course and trust.
I finally bit the bullet and bought pumice despite the high price. In the past I always did a lazy mix of cactus and succulent potting mix from the store with washed grit? The cactus and succulent potting mix was essentially dust with large bark, medium bark, a tiny bit of grit and some fertiliser, it was pretty shit. What exactly do I want to buy to replace this? People say peatmoss but they don't sell that in my country.
>>5112488peat moss isn't great because it gets hydrophobic after it dries out. I just use this stuff. https://www.bonsaijack.com/shop/premixed-bonsai-soil/jacks-gritty-mix-soil-for-bonsai-succulents-and-cacti/
>>5112500>he doesnt bottom water his plants
chose the goofiest fucking route
>>5112653It didnt. It grew towards the light of which it is severely starved
>>5112488>I finally bit the bullet and bought pumiceYou are in the US? if the price is the problem go for perlite, it's more economic even tho it has a shitty CEC and breaks down very fast compared to pumice. If you are in Europe try to search on the internet or a local brico shop, usually €/L pumice cost less. If you are in Asia or South America try to go for some alternative like lavarock or any kind of inert with a good CEC (25-30+) and nice porosity.>What exactly do I want to buy to replace this?Any kind of medium that act as a sponge and is soft then add some worm compost for additional nutrient and beneficial microbial life.The most popular is coco coir (find the brick that is triple washed) because it allow air to pass inside more easly. Another choice is wood chip, overtime it will break down into something softer and flufflier, can easly find it for cheap on a local lumber mill. You can also go for full compost if the grain size and ph allows for it but it may hold too much moisture and if the pot are indoor it may be a bad idea.My advice for beginner is finding w/e universal mix you can find for cheap and do a 2:1 with w/e inert you prefer. Useless to overcomplicate stuff, you aren't bonsai-ing that plant.
Any issues putting chives, green onions, kale, lettuce, and spinach together in a 2x6 raised bed? Obviously going to space them out to not crowd - mostly the kale because it's a dick.
>>5113431If you eat leaves as they grow, you can grow everything in a very cramped space, no problem.