What plants can i get to plant outside that dosent require alot of sun?

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Posted by admin | Posted in Plants | Posted on 30-04-2010

I have a flower bed outside that needs plants in it but it doesn’t get morning sun there…just afternoon. so I’m wondering what plants i can get that are easy to take care of and doesn’t require to much sun. Thanks
I live in texas so it has to be a plant thats in texas!
and by galveston so itll get salt air

You should go talk to the folks at Tom’s Thumb on 45th street in Galveston. I can think of quite a few plants that would work well there. Macho Ferns, Foxtail Ferns, Philodendron, Ixora, Crotons, Dwarf Mexican Petunia, I’ve got some tropical hibiscus that only get afternoon sun and are constant bloomers. You could put several different palms there, a Pigmy Date is just one possibility.

Does growing marijuana plants for a shorter amount of time better for more buds?

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Posted by admin | Posted in Plants | Posted on 28-04-2010

Does growing your plants shorter produce more buds on the plant itself?I heard something about vegging for a shorter amount of time and the plant will produce more.Just wondering if its true or not.
Some people on this website are so imature.I have a card that allows me to grow legally.Consider the fact some people dont use it for childish purposes.

Typically, the bigger the plant, the more bud. If allowed to grow to its full genetic capacity, most sativa strains would grow 12-15 feet tall. Indoors, this is impractical. Plants can be trained; bent and tied to limit their height. They can be topped; trimmed to cause more branching and less height. They can be force flowered at an early stage so that they only grow to a height your space can accommodate. Multiple small plants can be force flowered very young Sea of Green or SOG) to produce many small budding plants that can equal one larger one in terms of yield. A plant can also be trained to spread out and grow through a wire mesh, exposing more branches and their buds to light and thus encouraging more bud growth (SCROG or Screen of Green) Vegging for a shorter time results in smaller plants, and usually less bud unless other methods to increase bud production are used.

What can I do to my house plants to keep my cats from eating them, and what’s a safe plant to test it on?

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Posted by admin | Posted in Plants | Posted on 26-04-2010

My inside cats eat my house plants! Is there something that I can do to my plants to make them unappealing to my cats that’s safe for my cats and my plants, and if so, is there a specific plant that’s safe for cats that I can use to try it first to make sure that it works for my cats before I take the risk of putting all of my plants where the cats can get to them?

I wouldn’t have any houseplants (real ones) in my house with my cats. If they are one of the poisenous ones (which are many) your cat could end up with seizures, heart failure, any number of things.

I’d take them outside in a shaded area or somewhere where they won’t get too cold since they’re indoor plants.

neighbor planted crown vetch and it spreads to my ground cover. How can I kill it w/o killing my plants?

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Posted by admin | Posted in Plants | Posted on 22-04-2010

I have spreading ground cover on my steep bank (can’t remember the name of plant right now) but it used to look nice. I put a lot of time and money into my bank to have it look nice. Now I have ugly crown vetch growing in it and I have to keep pulling it out. I never seem to get the roots and it just spreads anyway.

is there anything I can put on it that won’t kill my plants?

Where your land joins onto the neighbours put in a root barrier (available at garden centres). This will stop further encroachment.

Then, get some straight Roundup and an old small house brush and ‘paint the plants that you don’t want that are mixed with yours. If they are very close lay down some cardboard over the plants you want to keep to protect them while you paint the bad one. Remember you don’t have to get round up on every part of the plant you want to kill it will take it down to the roots. Because it takes it to the roots you know you will eventually get all of it. Remember if you get Roundup on a plant you like immediately wash the good plant with water, it will usually survive.

It may take awhile, but you will eventually kill it roots and all.

What plants are best to grow in a hot climate?

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Posted by admin | Posted in Plants | Posted on 19-04-2010

I don’t have a HUGE yard, but medium sized and would like to do some planting. We just moved to El Paso so the climate is hot and windy! Please tell me what would be some good low maintinance plants/flowers(I would like to see some color) to have in my yard, also wouldn’t mind some sort of small shade tree or flowering tree as long as it does not get huge. And NO I do not want to plant any sort of cacti. Thanks for any help!

http://www.texashotplants.com/
this site is awesome. The plumeria’s look really nice. Good luck!

What plants/flowers can I plant to encourage butterflies to come around but discourage bees and hornets?

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Posted by admin | Posted in Plants | Posted on 14-04-2010

I just want a really pretty flower garden with lots of colorful butterflies and no bees, hornets, wasps (and hopefully no ants, ladybugs, and spiders). However, if any bees or hornets are attracted to the same plants as butterflies, what plants would discourage ALL of them from coming around?

Two plants that are butterfly specific are: Butterfly weed (Asclepias tuberosa) and multiple cultivars of Butterfly Bush (Buddleia davidii). However, as you are going to plant these outdoors and this is Mother Nature’s world. There is no way to discourage what you mentioned from visiting aside from paving your yard.

My plants are suffering from the cold snap! Will any of them survive?

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Posted by admin | Posted in Plants | Posted on 12-04-2010

I got too excited about my first attempt at gardening and now the notoriously unpredictable weather in Oklahoma threatens to kill my plants.

I planted mostly herbs along with some strawberry, cayenne pepper and beefsteak tomato plants.

The strawberry plants and most of the herbs are fine, but some of the leaves on the basil, pepper and tomato plants are turning mushy and/or brown or black. I have covered them with buckets and bowls from the house to protect them from the cold, but they still look damaged.

All told, there have been three full days of cold temperatures and this is the fourth. It may be another day until temperatures return to normal. Is there any reason to believe that some or all of my plants will recover from this, or am I totally screwed?

Note: So far there’s no serious damage to the stems, just the some of the leaves near the tops of the plants don’t look so good.
More info: There was only one night where temps dropped below freezing, and that didn’t last long. Even then there was no frost. Mostly it’s just been cold and kind of windy.

The plants are in the ground and have been for about a week. The basil seemed to have spread its roots pretty well and were flourishing before the cold hit.
Thanks for your help, guys. The weather is warmer now and it looks like most of the plants will be fine.

With the exception of a basil plant that lost about 75 percent of its leaves, most of the other plants should get along fine. I’ve removed the buckets and bowls and pinched off any damaged leaves so the plants won’t waste a lot of energy trying to repair them.

It’s encouraging that I was able to save them. Thanks again!

Yup your screwed!
I would wait a few weeks and re-start with healthy looking plants from your local nursery. The tomatoes and peppers I am sure are goners.
Even if they did come back from the roots everything I have read says they won’t be as good as they could have been before the freeze.

Oh yeah and I have heard good things about the arkansas travelers variety of tomatoes.

I do want to share with you my favorite gardening web site.

www.gardenweb.com
They have a Oklahoma gardening forum for us okies to talk to each other.

What kinds of plants/flowers can I put in my dog’s memorail graves that will come back year after year?

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Posted by admin | Posted in Plants | Posted on 10-04-2010

I live in southern Idaho .I already planted some bulbs in one dog’s grave ,/ They have not or did not come up so I’m a little worried about them. They are in Scruffy’s grave for those of you from Pets-Dogs) and now I’m looking for plants/flowers that will come back year after year. They will be both Scruffy’ss and Liberty’s memorials. It’s get below freezing in the winter here so we have to fact that in this.

Does anyone have any great ideas of what I can plant in their memorials that will come back year after year and get bigger too? One idea I’m playing is rose bushes. Does anyone know of plants that have beautiful flowers to remind me of them at their graveside?I’m open to suggestions.Can anyone please help me out here?

Thank You for all the suggestions with this!

Violas will come back every year and so will Gerbera daisies. Both a fave of mine!

Which herbs and plants are easiest to grow for someone that is not familiar with gardening?

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Posted by admin | Posted in Plants | Posted on 08-04-2010

I live in New Orleans, Louisiana and have been wanting to grow my own herbs and small plants. I don’t have experience in gardening whatsoever and I’d like to know what I should start off with and what plants/herbs are good for this climate (hot and humid). I would like to plant something within the next month. What’s good to plant at this time of year?

Oregano is such an easy herb! The benefit is that is can be used for such a wide variety of things, and it is a perennial so it will come back every year!
Other no brainers (and I know this from my own personal experience) is lemon verbena, thyme (lemon thyme as well) rosemary, mint, and lavender, and basil.
I have had some troubles with sage, but maybe it doesn’t like Ohio weather, so the humid/hot might be good for it! Pretty much any herb is workable, just buy from a good source (preferably a farmer’s market) and read any labels. I know having them indoors vs. outdoors makes a difference as well, so what I share is just from having outdoor herbs. (I just dug up the ground, plopped them in, and they lived!)
Good luck!

what kind of plants should i plant?

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Posted by admin | Posted in Plants | Posted on 06-04-2010

i live in the midwest, northwest indiana, and am looking for an idea of what type of plants i can plant that will come up every year, that can be in the sun most of the time. I have hostas and mini roses, i need something for filler that will come back year after year. I am not really talented with outdoor plants, so any help would be appreciated.

Plants that come up every year are called perennials.
Hostas are perennials and are shade loving plants, although there are a few varieties that can handle a few hours of full sun, those would be the newer introductions. Most Hostas will fry in full sun. Roses, another perennial, reach their maxium bloom potential in ful sun, approx. 6 hours a day. I’m guessing that you don’t have these both planted in the same place, I hope?
Anyway, to answer your question, before deciding what kinds of plants you want to plant you need to find out first what the growing conditions are for that particular area besides that it will be in the sun ‘most of the time." Has the soil there been amended with anything? Is it wet and clay-ey? Rocky? Rich and loose? Most plants have particular soils that they do
best in.
Do you have a way to water these plants or will you be looking for more drought tolerant plants?
In regards to general suggestions, there are many low maintenance perennials to choose from but many have only a few weeks of bloom . To get the most bang for your gardening buck, look for perennials that will bloom mid season (around the middle of June) until frost. My personal favorites are the coneflowers, which now come in many different colors besides the Purple Coneflower that is really pink..:) They’re pretty much drought tolerant, not too picky about soil, birds love their seeds and the clumps can be divided and spread around ever year if you want to extend your gardening dollar even more.
Ornamental grasses are the hottest selling plant sold in new, high-end housing developments for their ease of care.
We have a great group on Yahoo Groups called therookiegardener with alot of experienced and inexperienced gardeners who like to share their projects and advice. Would love to have you.