Planted in the pot picture

Planted in the pot picture

Friday, April 24, 2009

A Dyer's Garden: From Plant to Pot: Growing Dyes for Natural Fibers (Paperback)

Editorial Reviews
Product DescriptionA Dyer's Garden touches on the history and nature of dye plants and walks you through a garden season from design to planting to harvesting for the dyepot. About the Author
Rita Buchanan is the author of Taylor's Master Guide to Landscaping.


Rita gives CLEAR instructions on WHAT part of the plant to harvest for which color; which mordants and which fibers produce which colors; and what time of the year to harvest the plant. In addition, her color photos of the color outcome are neatly stacked along the right edge, enabling the reader to flip through the book to see the colors. There is also an appendix listing where the reader can get seeds for the plants in the book. Anyone interested in trying GOOD dye plants (almost any plant will give you at least tan) should have this small, well-written and beautifully illustrated book. Rita is one of the best.mstore08-20

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Pumpkin grown in pot

Like vegetables grown dramatically yesterday to buy pumpkin seeds to grow to eat.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Price?

Do you know ,how much does the pot cost ? . The pot have many kind , we want to used not large over bucause we have not wind area . Price of pot about 1-2 $ and can buy in discount store in aggricuture department such as Tesco .

Sunday, April 19, 2009

vegetable

I like eat vegetable ,every day .

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Flower and Vegetable Seed

To obtain quality plants, start with good quality seed from a reliable dealer. Select varieties to provide the size, color, and habit of growth desired. Choose varieties adapted to your area which will reach maturity before an early frost. Many new vegetable and flower varieties are hybrids, which cost a little more than open pollinated types. However, hybrid plants usually have more vigor, more uniformity, and better production than nonhybrids and sometimes have specific disease resistance or other unique cultural characteristics.
Although some seeds will keep for several years if stored properly, it is advisable to purchase only enough seed for the current year's use. Good seed will not contain seed of any other crop, weeds, or other debris. Printing on the seed packet usually indicates essential information about the variety, the year for which the seeds were packaged, germination percentage you may typically expect, and notes of any chemical seed treatment. If seeds are obtained well in advance of the actual sowing date or are stored surplus seeds, keep them in a cool, dry place. Laminated foil packets help ensure dry storage. Paper packets are best kept in tightly closed containers and maintained around 40°F in a low humidity environment.
Some gardeners save seed from their own gardens; however, if such seed are the result of random pollination by insects or other natural agents, they may not produce plants typical of the parents. This is especially true of the many hybrid varieties. Most seed companies take great care in handling seeds properly. Generally, do not expect more than 65 to 80% of the seeds to germinate. From those germinating, expect about 60 to 75% to produce satisfactory, vigorous, sturdy seedlings.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

How to planted in a pot

1.choose from a variety of vegetables that can be grown in a pot or a container. Read the tags on the vegetable seed packets to learn the requirements or ask an employee to help you find the correct seeds.
2.growth of the vegetables. Small containers tend to constrict the plant and it dies quickly. Choose from a variety of clay, wooden or plastic pots. It is advisable to use a plastic pot with small holes for adequate drainage and root growth. Other pots tend to dry out quickly, whereas a plastic pot retains moisture and is considered a good medium for homegrown vegetables
3.Purchase a mixture of good quality pot soil, vermiculite, sphagnum peat moss, compost bark, perlite and a fertilizer. Do not use garden soil as it usually contains insects and small pests that eat away the vegetable sprouts.
4.Put the soil in the pot and bury the vegetable seeds inside. Press down the soil and sprinkle water on top. Place a fiberglass sheet underneath the pot to keep insects and bugs away from the vegetables. This also prevents the soil from spilling out of the pot
5.Place the planted pots on a stand or hang them on your patio wall so they receive an adequate amount of sunlight. Remove the vegetables once they are ripe.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Safe vegetables

Vegetables grown will own safety. Eating vegetables purchased. Fact that you?

Friday, April 10, 2009

Pot mushroom

Pot-grown vegetables to the multiform Most plants are weak Planted vegetables in the pot. Must take care of water regularly. Little manure. Vegetables will thrive. To eat. Such as mushroom in pot.

The cultivation of mushrooms. The one thing I would dream. But have previously thought But read Then do not. Because not buy infected mushroom sources. Time to do it. Because the teachers have known? You hear one. I want that mushroom cultivation Fang Teachers say it will to buy infected mushroom cultivation thatch to try. After a few days teachers is infected mushrooms buy 4 bags to throw money I have not. How to add culture to tell. Infected mushroom is the ago do now Disease combined with mushrooms to go I do not have time to think up a few days to take good . If culture is like a pile infected mushroom vegetable bed is too small. ? Do that recorder for Fang does not take a better view in the book is how blurred the mushroom cultivation in a pot he not purchase the chemicals ? If the seed money in the pot to buy a potted take good reason to find the last side. Buy it buy pot. Mushroom trail is not used to take pot. Decided to buy size 12-inch plastic pot leaves 8 per license price a 200 C 25 C chemical they use. I try not to see it mushroom trail, it's time hands.

Grow vegetable in Containers

Pots and cans are the perfect space-saving containers in which to grow this favorite vegetable. The potting process is quite simple and takes only minutes. If you feed and water the plants regularly, you will have freshy vegetable to picking for long time.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Growing Vegetables in Pots

What you can grow in a container vegetable garden is limited only by the size of the container and your imagination. How about a Summer Salad container? Plant a tomato, a cucumber and some parsley or chives all in a large (24-30") container. They grow well together and have the same water and sun requirements. By late summer they might not be very pretty, but they'll keep producing into winter. This makes a great housewarming present, too.Containers and Pots for Vegetable GardensSelecting Containers: Containers for your vegetable gardens can be almost anything: flower pots, pails, buckets, wire baskets, bushel baskets, wooden boxes, nursery flats, window planters, washtubs, strawberry pots, plastic bags, large food cans, or any number of other things.
Vegetables Plants Suitable for ContainersSeed companies realize that homeowners have less and less space to devote to vegetable gardens. Every year they come out with new vegetable plant varieties suitable for growing in small spaces and vegetable container gardens.Be on the look out for key words like: bush, compact, and space saver. Here are some vegetable plant varieties to get your vegetable container garden growing.- Cucumbers: Salad Bush Hybrid, Spacemaster, Bush Pickle- Eggplant: Bambino, Slim Jim- Green Beans: (Pole beans give a higher yield in a small footprint) Blue Lake, Kentucky Wonder, French Dwarf- Green Onions: Beltsville Bunching, Crysal Wax, Evergreen Bunching- Leaf Lettuce: Buttercrunch, Salad Bowl, Bibb- Peppers: Frigitello, Cubanelle, Sweet Banana, Apple (Hot) Red Cherry, Jalapeno, Robustini- Radishes: Cherry Belle, Scarlet Globe, (White) Icicle- Squash: Ronde de Nice, Gold Rush- Tomatoes: Patio, Pixie, Tiny Tim, Saladette, Toy Boy, Spring Giant, Tumbling Tom, Small Fry

Varieties for container grown vegetables

Tomatoes:
Patio, Pixie, Tiny Tim, Saladette, Toy Boy, Spring Giant, Tumbling Tom, Small Fry
Peppers:
Yolo Wonder, Keystone Resistant Giant, Canape, (Hot) Red Cherry, Jalapeno
Eggplant:
Florida Market, Black Beauty, Long Tom
Squash:
Dixie, Gold Neck, Early Prolific Straightneck, (Green) Zucco, Diplomat, Senator
Leaf Lettuce:
Buttercrunch, Salad Bowl, Romaine, Dark Green Boston, Ruby, Bibb
Green Onions:
Beltsville Bunching, Crysal Wax, Evergreen Bunching
Green Beans:
Topcrop, Greencrop, Contender, (Pole) Blue Lake, Kentucky Wonder
Radishes:
Cherry Belle, Scarlet Globe, (White) Icicle
Parsley:
Evergreen, Moss Curled
Cucumbers:
Burpless, Liberty, Early Pik, Crispy, Salty

How to Plant Vegetables in the Pot

Planting vegetables in a pot is a fun task but one that requires your utmost care and attention. It gives easy access to a home- grown harvest, which is fresh and free from industrial chemical sprays. Follow these steps to successfully plant your favorite vegetables in a pot.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Watering Newly Planted

Watering newly planted trees for the first two summers helps trees re-grow the roots they lost during transplanting. It is the single most important thing you can do to ensure their survival. A good starting point for determining how much water to use is 5 gallons-per-inch of tree trunk diameter per week. However, depending on the weather and the soil-type, more or less frequent watering may be necessary.

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Watering vegetables.

Summer should have to water often, especially if lack of water and vegetables could wither And die easily. Vegetables should be watering morning and evening. Do not water at midday. It could not adapt. Because the water is hot and vegetables will wilt die.

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Spreading Seeds

Some seeds are spread by animals' feet. Charles Darwin once grew 80 plants from the mud he scraped off a bird's foot.A seed has everything it needs to produce new plants. No seed can grow with the fruit around it. A seed has to have enough water, good soil, and sunlight. Sometimes people plant them and other times the seeds get planted on their own. People also put seeds in gardens or fields, and water and fertilize the seeds.
Birds help some fruits like the cherry by eating the fruit around the seed. The mistletoe's seeds are covered with a sticky substance that sticks to the bird that tries to eat it. The mistletoe's seeds have to land on the tree or they die.
Some seeds travel by sailing in the wind. Others float in the water to get to the land. Others hitchike on animals. Some just get blown in the wind. Seeds can also grow in a flower and drop to the ground. When the seed leaves the flower or whatever it was in, it's called dissemination. This is one of the most important steps in the seed's life. Some tree seeds drop directly below the parent and die because there is not enough light or food for them to grow.

Friday, April 3, 2009

Photosynthesis

Animals inhale oxygen and exhale carbon dioxide. Green plants are the only plants that produce oxygen and make food, which is called photosynthesis. Photosynthesis means ''putting together with light.'' This takes place in chloroplasts, which have chlorophyll in them. Chlorophyll absorbs the sunlight. From sunlight, green plants combine carbon dioxide and water to make sugar and oxygen. Green plants use sugar to make starch, fats, and proteins. There are tiny pores called stomota. Oxygen and carbon dioxide enter and leave through the stomata.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

How Plants Grow

Root hairs are cells. They take water to the main root. Then the main root brings the water to the main plant. The roots also help hold the plant in the ground.
The inside of a root has four different parts. The epidermis is the outside part. It is like our skin. It protects the inside parts of the root. Plants take in water from the soil through their roots. The water passes through the vascular rays until it reaches the center of the root, the stele. This is where the veins are located. The veins are called xylem. They carry the water and food through the plant. Between the epidermis and the stele is the fleshy cortex.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Find seeds to grow vegetables in the pot.

Holidays that will go to buy seeds and vegetables. Take to grow pot in the sale price is not expensive is $ 10 per package or envelope that the more brands The germination rate will vary. Sometimes germinate. And to see a description next to the envelope with this Range. Summer vegetables should be planted? What kind of a summer suit. Planted vegetables in the pot must be careful not to lose water. Need watering every day. If the trial will be planted and then came down to see information.