View allAll Photos Tagged seedling

At Nostalgic street in Kawagoe

伝統的な中にアクセント

tiny little seedlings still coming up... I don't think they know what's coming... I saw the first snowflakes in the air yesterday... only a few but a little reminder of what's just around the corner... but they definitely have the will.

 

HFF everyone!

 

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Light-craving seedlings moved to catch the last of the sun...

One tiny little hawks weed seedling looking for somewhere to root

Tobbacco seedlings.

 

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A lemon tree seedling. Hopefully it will bear fruits some day (b&w version 2).

fujicolor C200

Labouheyre, Landes, France

I transplanted (repotted) my tomato seedlings this morning. I've got some Krim, Roma, Sungold cherry, and a yellow/purple cherry going. I learned some lessons from last year, where they got too leggy and were hard to plant outside. Right now, these are just settling in.

 

This year, I started the seedlings a bit later, planting the seeds a bit deeper, and doing this transplant indoors. The seedlings were already 8-10cm tall, so I buried a good portion of the stems in to help with root development. Last year, I only transplanted them once, when they went outside, and I think the next time these get transplanted it will be outdoors in another few weeks. I used some Miracle Grow potting mix with moisture retention (blue bag), which has a tiny bit of fertilizer, so I'll feed these guys again in another week or two. I'll probably keep 8 plants, and give the rest of them out.

beetroot litllies

Gardener with sugar snap seedlings.

 

License photo

Growing parsley (Petroselinum crispum) from seed.

 

License photo

Some of my brother's seedlings. I can't remember what he said these were. Tomatoes maybe...

There was a lot of rain and cold temperatures in June so I'm late in planting them out.

 

Some of them are still not planted yet. They are too big for their pots.

 

These were photographed in the beginning of June, protected from all the rain on the balcony.

No. 23 of 115 Pictures in 2015: Homegrown.

This is still a seedling, recently planted out - will it survive the summer?

43/365 (3,361)

 

We had lunch at Bateman's today, and whilst I was stood in the queue waiting to order, I spotted these delicious seedlings ... if only baby bottles of wine grew into big bottles of wine :))

Sweet basil seedlings in a nursery pot.

 

License photo

Continuing on with what's growing now in my Northeast Iowa yard and neighborhood. A squirrel must have planted this in my herb garden. The taproot was much longer than what I could dig up. The closest red oak is in the next block down Clay Street. May 24, 2021

Chervil (Anthriscus cerefolium) seedlings.

 

License photo

New growth in nature. Inspiring in its own small way. Photographed in Canada's Yoho National Park.

Wilding conifers, also known as wilding pines, are invasive trees in the high country of New Zealand. Millions of dollars are spent on controlling their spread.

In the South Island they threaten thousands of hectares of private and public land including roadsides. The wilding conifers are considered to be a threat to biodiversity, farm productivity and to landscape values. Since they often invade tussock grasslands – which are characterised by low-lying vegetation that is considered to be a natural environment – the tall trees become a prominent and unwanted feature.

This tiny one lives no longer! Pulled it out

 

Out for a walk in the woods the other weekend, leaning against a tree to take a photo, I noticed this little seedling growing in a crook near the base. With the tough of evening sun on the bark above I thought it would make a nice low key photograph...

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