Skydiver said:I would hate to be in that situation. I absolutely love crows. I want one as a pet pretty bad.
You'd be in crow heaven here then, they're as thick as flies.
If you split their tongue they can be trained to talk.
Skydiver said:I would hate to be in that situation. I absolutely love crows. I want one as a pet pretty bad.
Silver_Surfer said:If you split their tongue they can be trained to talk.
Skydiver said:Since I've never worked with peat pucks before, my results were less than spectacular. I don't think I wet them enough before planting in them, so they were pretty compact.
So I just pulled my two douglah seedlings, a naga morich, and a Texas Chiltepin out of the old stuff they were in (regular potting soil), the f'ing peat puck was still a bit of a lump in there, no wonder the roots couldn't grow, and got to work.
Mixed up some pro mix bx, gently took the seedlings out of their old homes (solo drinking cups), dunked the roots in water gently until nearly all of the peat lump washed away, and repotted them into small bathroom cups very loosely, just enough compaction to keep the plant upright.
Gave them a nice drink of water and put them back under the grow light instead of being near sunshine.
Pretty much doing a reset on them back to what worked for me at the start of the year.
I had terrible luck germinating those three varieties or else I wouldn't have taken the trouble.
The two douglahs and the one texas chiltepin are the only ones I have, the Naga I do have a larger plant, but with only two of them I thought it worth the effort.
Now, after that long winded intro, I ask you. Has anyone ever done this before? Repotted down a plant that was smaller/weaker and had any good results?
The three manzanos in my front yard raised bed are doing well as usual, these plants seem to love the Pittsburgh weather so far. Dunno if it's similar to their native climate or what, but these are growing far better than everything else. Two of the three already have a nice fork in the stem.