where do all the colors come from, species plants are white
9 years ago
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Where do the bugs come from??
Comments (8)And to answer your question, YES, unfortunately you will see bugs in your raised beds. I have RB that last year had okra, turnip, chard, basil, cucumber, watermelon and squash(which I planted late in an attempt to miss the SVB, they still got wiped out by the SVB, my okra, watermelon, chard, turnip almost always had stink/squash bugs on them and then one other type of bug some kind of small beetle? I routinely hand picked them off, searched daily for eggs and nymphs, I was diligent at picking them off. I learned to anticipate them jumping off the plant as I approached, but I was ready with my cup of soapy water just below, I made them a suicide diving pool..that part at least was fun. My tomatoes last year were nearly infested with the leaf footed bug, and that is a horrible bug, they literally will fly at you and attack, and they are nasty looking too. I would sneak up on them with a spray bottle of something to knock them down, or immobilize them and then I hacked them in two with scissors. It was that or hit and miss with the scissor approach first.. I was not about to hand pick them!!! I wish I knew what actually happens in the universe to deliver them to the plants that they intend to destroy. Why cant them feed on other plants and NOT the plants we want to grow for food??? It's really amazing how that works. (to our dismay)...See MoreWhat do you all do to protect small trees and plants from frost?
Comments (8)I don't do anything to protect trees from frost, with one exception, that being very small plants that have not yet had a good strong growing season to get established. I am protecting one tree at the moment, a friend's 18" tall Eucommia ulmoides that was just about to break bud when the last few cold blasts (one down to 14 F and the other to 17 F) came through. It was planted last spring and only put on about four inches of growth. The species is hardy here but its foliage has shown some sensitivity to late spring and early fall freezes. With this new little one, I didn't want to chance it not having the energy reserves to grow a replacement set of leaves. What I am using is two 3 gal. plastic containers, the bottom cut out of one, and both lined with bubble wrap. Nested upside-down, they form a sort of teepee over the plant. So far this arrangement seems to have worked pretty well. There is a slight blackening on the edges of the tree's bud scales, but the buds overall remain plump and green. BTW Toronado, how did the Gum Bumelia tree do for you last season--the one Missouri Wildflowers sent you by mistake in place of the Nyssa you wanted?...See MoreWhere do new colors come from?
Comments (7)There's a few ways that colors are inherited. Some are your basic single gene, dominant recessive inheritance. Lets say that Yellow is dominant, white is recessive. The flower can ger a Y from mom and a Y from dad and be a YY and look yellow. Or it could get w from mom and w from dad and be white. Or it could get one of each, be Yw, look yellow, but be able to throw a few white baby seedlings. You also have some things like four o'clocks where the genetics control the color in a way that gives blends. A white crossed with a red gives a pink. Then you can get ones where the color is actually caused by more than one gene. You might see blue, but two different genes are doing something that gives the overall look of a blue. There's a book called "Breed your own vegetable varieties" that covers all of the complicated details, but also has a bunch of more straightforward stuff in it that can guide you in intentionally breeding your own veggies or flowers to get characteristics like tallness, hardiness, color and the like. Some of the book is pretty heavy reading, but then she shows you how simple it can also be to make something all your own. When you winter sow, just the simple act of planting seeds that way and then selecting the hardiest of the seedlings will actually steer you toward your own strains of seed that are best suited to your growing region. Same idea with my four o'clocks. I've got one plant that is a rich true red. Never had one like that before. When I save four o clock seeds this year, hers will be kept apart in their own seperate baggie and given their own part of the garden next year so I can try to get more of that unusual red. I'll add a link for the book. You might like to see if your library has it. I found it inspiring when I read the part about how the sugar snap pea was one guy's backyard cross. The plant was made in only about two growing seasons (of course it took more than that to build a big seed supply and sell it to seed catalogs.) Pretty amazing what you can do in your own back yard with plant genetics. Lynda Here is a link that might be useful: great plant breeding book...See MorePlease help ID tiny white specks on all plants in greenhouse
Comments (5)Thank you tj, The greenhouse is very simple, a temporary structure of PVC and greenhouse plastic, with two doors on each end. To ventilate, I just open the doors enough to maintain the temp, so it is not protected from insects or dust. Does this make you think it is pollen? I thought it would be easy to test this hypothesis, but it is currently and has been raining steadily for 24 hours here, so I cannot check plants in the yard to see if they are also covered in these specks....See MoreRelated Professionals
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Dave in NoVA • N. Virginia • zone 7A