6,340 Garden Web Discussions | Growing from Seed



I have some orchids seeds coming in a trade so I've been researching. Here's what I found on Bee orchid.
Here is a link that might be useful: Bee orchid

Irish, you aren't making the currency conversion - 2 packets seed + shipping $32.24 US.
Hope you find someone interested - I've ordered from them in the past and the seeds/customer service are great, but I sadly don't have room for more delphs right now.


there's also a FAQ at that forum that is quite a useful place to start.
Here is a link that might be useful: seed saving faq

Here is a blog, it is still kind of new so there is not a lot of plants on it. However, there are tomatoes, and Squash and Garlic.
I too have been looking for more examples, but the step by step on this site is nice.
Here is a link that might be useful: Seed Savers Exchange


crabs,
There is some Gibberellic Acid info with links on the J. L. HUDSON, SEEDSMAN website.
ZM
(not associated with any product or vendor mentioned)

kayjones,
I appreciate the link to the ratings. I have used Garden's Alive in the past, and had nothing but positive experiences. One thing I ordered for my Dad for Christmas last year came a few days after New Year's, but I suspect it was more due to the volume of orders and shipping, than Garden's Alive themself. In either case, the delivery was WELL before my Dad needed the product!
I am more interested in the PRODUCT, than the company. Does anyone have experience with the PRODUCT? (or a coir product in general?)

I've been using coir since it came out on the market and I absolutely love it. I put it in all my soil mixes for potting soils and I use it half and half (with seed starting medium) for starting seeds. It has really helped my concrete like clay soil get a better tilth in a huge flower garden bed I have under a tree. I have been putting leaf mold and compost in that bed for 20 years - when I started putting a lot of coir in it I noticed the difference immediately. I order from Gardens Alive every year and have never had a problem with them. I LOVE those 25 dollar coupons.


I had trumpet vine on 3 sides of my yard for twenty years. My neighbors had it growing in their fence lines because they didn't care about it, they are renters. It is HORRIBLY invasive and when you cut it back, it starts new shoots underground. Even worse than bamboo. I probably spent 40 - 50 hours a season just cutting it back as hard as I could. Then I bought some powdered roundup and mixed it double strength and sprayed those vines about 4 times. That got rid of it. It was the first time (hopefully the last) I ever resorted to using poisons in my yard but it was so worth it. If it comes back in the spring, I'm going to spray it again. It was even coming up as far as ten feet away from the original plants. DON'T PLANT IT or I'm sure you'll regret it.

Adjusting the water pressure on a drip irrigation system is relatively easy by using a pressure regulator on the spigot. Most soaker hoses come (in the ones that I have anyway) with a blue round rubber pressure regulator in the female end of the hoses. The blue regulator has a hole in it that acts like a regulator. If the current hole doesn't produce enough rainfall, drill it out and make it larger. Then again, you could regulate the amount of rainfall by adjusting the flow out of the spigot. Just a few ideas.

Most of the soaker hoses I've used, the higher you turn up the water, the more the water tends to shoot out in direct spray jets from the myraid slightly-larger-than-regulation holes that there tend to be. If that makes any sense at all. I've had some success in the past rectifying this by covering said holes with electrical tape, but there are usually quite a few. Hence, your 'hard rain' would be interspersed with tiny shooting jets of water in various spots. Also, in my limited experience, water coming off of a soaker hose tends more to run down the length of the soaker hose and eventually drip off, rather than falling in neat, patterned 'raindrop' style drips. Though I admit to never really observing it in an elevated state with this thought in mind.

Thank-you to both of you for your responses. My Acer palmatum is covered in seeds at the moment. I will pick some and plant them outside in pots. I do get some natural germination every year, but digging them up successfully and potting them up is never 100% successful. Thanks for the input!



Tea plants are evergreens in the Camellia family. Camellia sinensis, for cool, high mountain regions and Camellia assamica, more tropical....you'll need to check seed catalogs under those names. Chilterns carries the c. sinensis seed -
Here is a link that might be useful: Chilterns - Tea Plant