Posted on February 18, 2024February 18, 202402/18/2024 ready The elderberry is ready to go. I’ve seen two shoots coming up out of the ground that I need to move too.
Posted on February 14, 2024February 18, 202402/12/2024 inoculations Getting ready to inoculate various legume seeds. For the species we have where I couldn’t find its inoculum for sale, we made a mix of all the ones we have plus general inoculum for the genera where we didn’t find a specific one for sale at prairie moon.
Posted on February 12, 2024February 18, 202402/11/2024 scarification! Tephrosia virginiana can apparently be scarified with hot water. We chipped off bits of the hard seed coat on yellowpuff. The red soil there is a bit of soil from near the parent plant, in hopes of getting the correct bacterium for inoculation.
Posted on February 11, 2024February 10, 202402/10/2024 maybe also Lomatium?? This seed cover looks a lot like the carrot leaf Lomatium and it does seem to be their sprouting time. And I’m pretty sure I seeded some here in backyard concrete blocks. the fuzzy seedlings nearby are Heterotheca subaxillaris (pretty sure) and the little succulents are Sedum pulchellum. A second suspect, sans seed cover, with two long skinny seed leaves. That wrinkly thing is my gloved finger tip.
Posted on February 10, 2024February 10, 202402/10/2024 rain forecast tomorrow That means plant moving time! (Because if it rains then I don’t have to water them.). This is one of two C. altissimum Thistles that have survived (a third seedling is up too we noticed). I’m not sure if the cold was too much in a pot, or it’s been too wet. All the undulatum seem to have died and a big chunk of texanum did too, because of those two holding too much water in pot trays. The texanum in the ground seem fine.
Posted on February 9, 2024February 9, 202402/09/2024 Lomatium rooting I was looking at the seedlings and soil in the caliche planters when I saw one of the carrot-leaf lomatium seeds we planted last spring. I picked it up and was surprised and delighted to see it has a single thin root emerging! I set it back carefully with the root facing into the soil and gave it a bit more water.
Posted on February 8, 2024February 8, 202402/08/2024 multiple spring beauty stems I see four individual stems. Last year this was one. So I don’t know if the tuber spread or if seeds came up!
Posted on February 2, 2024February 1, 202402/01/2024 pink and red seed processing Removing dried fleshy coats of coralberry fruits. Each one has two halves of a creamy colored seed. After an overnight soak in water, the coral-bean seed coat was still so, so hard. I finally scored one spot enough that a chip flaked off. success!! So I put it back in water for one more night and hopefully it will imbibe. That seems to be the term for the seed swelling up with water and about to root.
Posted on February 1, 2024January 31, 202401/29/2024 seedlings to watch These friends seem a little fuzzy to be the hoped-for Echinacea, but we shall watch. I’m pretty sure this one is a dandelion with the toothed leaves. A little skinnier and less fuzzy.
Posted on January 31, 2024January 31, 202401/31/2024 red seed processing Paula picked up this coral-bean from the Texas coast somewhere. Nokes’ guide to native plant growing says hot water allowed to cool can break the thick seed coat. I also scratched at it somewhat ineffectually with a razor and barely made any noticeable damage to the hard shell. The fruits of American Bittersweet have been sitting drying in this envelope for several months and slid right out of the dried fleshy bits. Nokes says they succumb easily to damping off, in addition to needing cold stratification, so we’ll just put them outside in a pot.