My Confederate Jasmine has SEEDS
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14 years ago
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jeff_al
14 years agoUser
14 years agoRelated Discussions
Confederate Jasmine Seeds for Trade
Comments (0)I have some C. Jasmine seeds for trade. I'm looking for some plumbago and moss. This is my first time ever to use the seed exchange board so excuse me if I'm not doing it correctly. The moss I'm looking for is the moss that can be mixed with buttermilk/beer and painted on to rocks. Thanks....See MoreWhich is Dwarf Confederate Jasmine?
Comments (2)I'm not sure Asiatic Jasmine will work well if you intend to walk on it (see the link below). Nor will Confederate Jasmine. Here is a link that might be useful: Univeersity of Florida Link...See MoreAnyone Overwintered Confederate Star Jasmine Outside in Zone 6?
Comments (1)I would maybe try one out and pot the other one up an put in your garage. These are rated zone 8, I would prune them back, mulch them and cover them with a pot for some protection. Even after all of this I would be surprised if it came back for you. I have one of these that I keep in a pot and sink it in the ground in the spring and take it back out in the late fall,it does very well like this. Good luck and let us know how it works for you....See MoreSnails, Confederate Jasmine, Lime tree
Comments (4)The lime can be rooted from cuttings. My experience with rooting citrus is that what works best is short cuttings (3-4 inches long)with the growing tip present. The cuttings should be green but a little firm. No brown wood should be present. Is it a Mexican Lime (same as a Key Lime)? Mexican Limes are the small real juicy ones with thin peels. The larger, pulpier, thicker peeled limes are Persian Limes. If it's a Mexican Lime, it's easy to grow them from seed. They mostly grow true from seed. Most of the seeds in the fruit are nucellar. "Nucellar" basically means that they just went ahead and made embryos without bothering with all of that pollinating and sex stuff. Each seed contains one embryo. What happened is that an individual cell in the ovary decided to just turn into an embryo. So, they are genetically identical to the parent plant. I've grown Mexican Limes from seed and they have produced plenty of fruit without being budded to a rootstock. Budding onto a rootstock is really not necessary if you are growing the tree in a container....See Morejeff_al
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