6,340 Garden Web Discussions | Growing from Seed

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georgez5il(z5 IL)

tHERE ARE SEVERAL FORUMS DEALING WITH SEED TRADING TRY THEM
gOOD lUCK

    Bookmark     June 26, 2008 at 7:56AM
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georgez5il(z5 IL)

Prefers part shade (North side of house. Keept damp not wet, soil slightly acid Low or no additional fertilizer. High humidity helpful.

    Bookmark     June 24, 2008 at 5:12PM
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mynameismelissa(6)

Brilliant, thank you kindly.

    Bookmark     June 25, 2008 at 1:55PM
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georgez5il(z5 IL)

This is a tropical plant therefore needs warm temperatures moderate watering with a chance for the top of the soil to dry out & minimal fertilization use a low nitrogen fertilizer

    Bookmark     June 15, 2008 at 2:46PM
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karyn1(7a)

I pretty much ignore mine and they do great. I have a few and some get full sun and others are protected from the late afternoon sun. Both seem to be doing equally well. I feed them infrequently and water when dry. I winter them over in the greenhouse and they usually continue blooming throughout the winter. The blooms aren't much to look at but it's a very pretty bush when covered in the bright red fruit.
Karyn

    Bookmark     June 24, 2008 at 12:35AM
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mclad

Thanks for the info! Do these nuts need to be refridgerated and plante in their shells or do I remove the shell? Ta.

    Bookmark     June 22, 2008 at 9:04AM
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georgez5il(z5 IL)

In order to store at 40F use the vegi keeper of the refrigator.... keep the shell on

    Bookmark     June 22, 2008 at 2:09PM
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caroline_2008(Z 6)

OOps got on the wrong forum will go to the saving seeds
sorry

    Bookmark     June 21, 2008 at 9:33PM
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cnid(z5b Ont Canada)

wow, thanks. are you a professional?

    Bookmark     June 20, 2008 at 8:53PM
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morz8(Washington Coast Z8b)

Only semi-pro. And I have a constantly expanding library (can't resist a book) of horticulture/design/propagating reference books that I'm happy to share online :)

    Bookmark     June 21, 2008 at 1:26AM
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cnid(z5b Ont Canada)

Good sources in Canada: Try Vesey's or Botanus. Both are on-line.

Here is a link that might be useful: Botanus

    Bookmark     June 19, 2008 at 10:35PM
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langkai(3B)

Thanks! I actually found Botanus the other day, I might try them out. :)

    Bookmark     June 20, 2008 at 8:03PM
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georgez5il(z5 IL)

You did not say which plants your seedlings reperesent. Tropicals?.... The very cold hardy species will probably survive tomatoes, peppers squach pprobably will not survive. YOU ARE THE ONE THAT CAN ANSWER YOUR QUESTION. in the mean time start new seeds.

    Bookmark     June 20, 2008 at 5:11PM
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goblugal(7)

Jerome - the compositae (Daisy)family is one of the largest plant classes with thousands of plants that could be called a "Daisy". There are some annuals that look similar to a Shasta Daisy (Leucanthemum superbum), there are also dwarf cultivars of Shasta Daisies. Without a picture, it is pretty impossible to identify what it is you saw.

    Bookmark     June 19, 2008 at 12:27PM
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jerome69(6)

i found the daisy i was looking for. it is a shasta snow lady by park seed #1149. thanks

    Bookmark     June 20, 2008 at 7:17AM
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georgez5il(z5 IL)

Germination 21-28 days & 10 weeks till large enough to set out (green)

    Bookmark     June 19, 2008 at 6:06PM
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cokers

wow so long @_@

    Bookmark     June 19, 2008 at 9:59PM
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georgez5il(z5 IL)

Yes it will but use a waterfroof cover to prevint a shocking experience.

    Bookmark     June 19, 2008 at 6:21PM
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laura_in_hamilton(5b)

Thanks for all the helpful advice gang, I appreciate it. I feel a little sheepish saying this but, after examining a few more pods just to learn a little about them, I realized I was looking for seeds in pods that weren't fully developed. I discovered this by actually finding a full pod and seeing what they look like by comparison. I thought the pod was the seed, lol. But I did find some greens seeds too and wondered about using those, thanks Al. And Ornata, I was thinking about sowing some right away just to see what would happen...worth experimenting I think.

    Bookmark     June 18, 2008 at 3:36AM
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ornata(London UK (8/9?))

Let us know how you get on.

    Bookmark     June 19, 2008 at 5:54AM
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mclad

Can you ever get decent fruit from a seed grown avo or does it need to be grafted?

    Bookmark     June 18, 2008 at 9:20AM
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arjo_reich

If I recall correctly...

Technically since they're a "true" berry they will always produce fruit true to form from it's ancestor, however since they have four sexes***, it's really hard to do unless you have a lot of them growing nearby and happen upon the luck of the draw. or you could buy a graft and know ahead of time which type of sex you already have.

Additionally, to the best of my knowledge if the tree ever experiences a frost it tends to sterilize the plant from that point forward.

*** as for the sexes thing, it's a bit of a misnomer. There are only two sexes but there are also two blooming cycles.

1. Morning Blooming Male Flowering Plant
2. Morning Blooming Female Flowering Plant
3. Evening Blooming Male Flowering Plant
4. Evening Blooming Female Flowering Plant

You need one of each sex to bloom during the same time to get a fruit, I think... :shrug:

I was just growing them because the wifey and my little dude (son) has taken to eating a lot of avocados and the plants are both beautiful as well toxic to cats... and I have two cats that love to eat my damn bonsai plants. ;-p

    Bookmark     June 18, 2008 at 5:13PM
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georgez5il(z5 IL)

scarify/nick seed then soak in water for 24 hours store moist at 68F till ready to use. lightly cover the seed soil temp 75-80F days to germinate 30-560

    Bookmark     June 17, 2008 at 4:41PM
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albert_135(Sunset 2 or 3)

I once had a surplus of fish tanks and did some rather fancy experiments in them.

In the controlled environment it is fairly easy to propagate tomatoes from cuttings, some just do cuttings in the garden, so if your tank is large enough you could take one seed, grow one plant, chop it into a dozen plants and get several dozen fruits all from one seed.

I would inquire on the tomato forum about need to pollinate in the tank. I've usually transplanted the propagated cuttings outside and let nature take it from there.

    Bookmark     June 16, 2008 at 12:20PM
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tennandy

excellent idea , thanks Albert135

    Bookmark     June 17, 2008 at 10:37AM
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