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Posted: Wed Jan 02, 2008 10:02 pm
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Flora!
I've always liked gardens, gardening, flowers, etc and have been planning my Greenhouse of Doom for some time now but up until x-mas I'd never had my own serious plants. My mum gave me 6 Oriental Lilium plants for x-mas. It's my favourite flower and the plants are beautiful!
I've been taking care of them like they were my children. I love them so much!
Aside from liliums and other flowers and trees, my interest in gardening is more on the poisonous and carnivorous side. Poisons have always been a passion of mine and so has plant life, so naturally I'm attracted to Oleander, Venus Fly Traps and so on. I'm going to do my best in the coming years to get a hold of as many poisonous and carnivorous plants as I can so I can fill my Greenhouse of Doom with them (if I could be a comic book character, I'd be Poison Ivy, hands down). I'll have to start with a Terrarium of Terror, but that's fine. Terrariums are cute and Venus Fly Traps are small- and hard to take care of!
Discussion Does anyone else share my love for plants, both Pure and Poisonous? Do you have a garden of your own? What's your favourite flower?
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 8:29 am
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 1:57 pm
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 2:37 pm
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 6:48 pm
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 7:51 pm
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The past couple of years that I've lived in this house, Pa & I kept a garden since Ma can't do yard work ['cept waterin the hangin pots]. So far, we've had a couple Amaryllis, catnip, foxglove, parsley, LOTSA tomatoes, some pumpkins, lotsa squash 'n zuchinni, gourds [accidentally {we threw some old gourds into the compost pile & they took root}], corn, watermelon, cucumbers, [wow, this is a lot...] and this year we'll probably have more O.O
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 9:33 pm
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 11:14 pm
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 11:15 pm
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 11:28 pm
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-Isel- I usually keep one plant around me that gets its simple watering, just a potted plant, a pothos (not a true pothos, you know, it's just Epipremnum aureum).
Sometimes I seem to be a chaotically experimental gardener; I found a certain mixture of fluids that shows a perfect example of chemotropism without regard for any of the other tropisms once during a lima-bean experiment. Unforuntately, that's the only instance I have recorded, so none of my other achievements (if they could be called that, due to the high percentage of plant death or apoptosis, usually the latter being a herald to the former) could be truthfully reported, save for the previous parenthetical.
I thought they were the same thing. question
Experimental gardening is the best kind of gardening! Chemotropism can be pretty interesting, but I wouldn't know what kind of chemicals to use or on which plants. Phototropism is something I'd like to try though. Maybe grow some onion weed inside. There's plenty of it on my property. I used to do little 'experiments' when I was a kid by picking onion weed, putting it in a glass of water and adding food colouring dye. I could take it to the next level with coloured lights!
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 11:34 pm
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Ouka_Kusanagi The past couple of years that I've lived in this house, Pa & I kept a garden since Ma can't do yard work ['cept waterin the hangin pots]. So far, we've had a couple Amaryllis, catnip, foxglove, parsley, LOTSA tomatoes, some pumpkins, lotsa squash 'n zuchinni, gourds [accidentally {we threw some old gourds into the compost pile & they took root}], corn, watermelon, cucumbers, [wow, this is a lot...] and this year we'll probably have more O.O
You're so lucky to have foxglove!
Sounds like a happenin' garden. Watermelon is lovely. My mum grows herbs, tomatoes, lime, chillies, all sorts of yummy stuff. We have a huge lemon tree as well as a tiny orange tree.
I had to pick squash on a farm this year. They're horrible to pick! I got an awful rash from the leaves and stem. Damn squash! *shakes fist*
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 11:38 pm
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Posted: Fri Jan 04, 2008 12:18 pm
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spooky_sez -Isel- I usually keep one plant around me that gets its simple watering, just a potted plant, a pothos (not a true pothos, you know, it's just Epipremnum aureum).
Sometimes I seem to be a chaotically experimental gardener; I found a certain mixture of fluids that shows a perfect example of chemotropism without regard for any of the other tropisms once during a lima-bean experiment. Unforuntately, that's the only instance I have recorded, so none of my other achievements (if they could be called that, due to the high percentage of plant death or apoptosis, usually the latter being a herald to the former) could be truthfully reported, save for the previous parenthetical. I thought they were the same thing. question
Experimental gardening is the best kind of gardening! Chemotropism can be pretty interesting, but I wouldn't know what kind of chemicals to use or on which plants. Phototropism is something I'd like to try though. Maybe grow some onion weed inside. There's plenty of it on my property. I used to do little 'experiments' when I was a kid by picking onion weed, putting it in a glass of water and adding food colouring dye. I could take it to the next level with coloured lights!
No, Pothos is a genus of plants not related to Epipremnum aureum, it's a misnomer. Not a first in the world of biological nomenclature, sadly.
The chemicals I use are household; oftentimes they start by my desire to create something extremely caustic without creating hazardous fumes as a byproduct, but so far I haven't been able to create a caustic solution without the use of a chlorine-based chemical.
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Posted: Sat Jan 05, 2008 5:44 am
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spooky_sez GilAskan I've always enjoyed gardening, but it's been a fairly simple enjoyment. I don't use fertilizer, I've never built a greenhouse or any structure to help them grow (save for lattice on which vines can attach), I rarely prune. I enjoy putting down seeds and letting them grow on their own, giving them only water and some protection from rabbits and the like. I enjoy growing (in ironic polarity) low-lying and very tall plants, particularly ivies and grasses. I also enjoy growing pumpkins, tomatoes, and some simple flowers. That sounds fantastic! I'd love to see some photos.
Winter in Michigan... they'll all be covered in snow until April. I'll take pictures when I can.
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Posted: Sat Jan 05, 2008 9:55 am
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I have some plants in my yard that I take care of, and this spring I'm thinking about trying to start a litle vegetable garden.
Being a food nut, I strongly believe that fresh organic produce really can't be beaten. As far as edible plants go, I have rhubarb, echenecia, mint, golden rasberry, and crabapple growing in my yard, and there is a ton of wintergreen, blueberries, and and blackberries growing in the woods behind my house.
Though I really love fresh produce, I personally don't much care for gardening. All the plants I have growing in my yard are the type that you can completely ignore until it's time to harvest, and they'll be fine. Maybe I'll try to plant more low-maintnance plants though.... strawberry, more rhubarb, red rasberry bushes, etc.
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