View allAll Photos Tagged seedling
Parsley and four types of tomatoes have sprouted, but hot peppers have not, so I just added a heat pad and hope that works. After taking this photo, I also thinned down the tomato seedlings, so one per cell, and fingers crossed they don't get leggy like last year, because that made it difficult to transplant them.
Haworthia sordida Haaspoort (seeding of 2014)
Using bed of sphagnum moss.
1 year 6 months old seedlings.
This photo was taken in Huai'an, located in central Jiangsu province of Eastern China.
Photo Credit: Gwendolyn Stansbury / International Food Policy Research Institute
Seedlings I started in late March/early April. Getting them acclimated to being outside in the wind. Will plant some in pots and some in my garden. It has been really fun to watch them grow the past few months.
The alyssum is supposed to get tiny purple flowers. Thought they might work for doll photos :)
The vinca is for my first lab in Sept (a cancer fighting rain forest native). This is the third generation I grew from seed. I save the seeds each Fall. Must germinate them in the dark.
Dill (annual herb)
Lavender (perennial)
Vinca (Rosey periwinkle) (annual flower)
Alyssym (annual flower)
Tips: Start seeds in ziplock bags with wet paper towels, hang in sunny window (not vinca), transfer to pots once they germinate. Use seed starting medium. Once planted in moist soil, water weekly from bottom (pour water into basin, allow plants to absorb what they can for about 12-24 hours, pour off excess).
I also used indoor grow lights and kept them really close to the lights to prevent them from getting too leggy as they tried to reach the light.
My Rabbits Foot fern dies back every Winter and then sprouts back out. Meanwhile tiny seedlings are emerging. (most likely Impatiens) I am playing with layers and put 2 on this.
Textures from CG Textures!
A photo of a small seedling sprouting to life. I am trying to raise a bonsai tree, unfortunately this species seems hard to grow in the cold environment I am currently in.
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Salvia, Heliotrope, Petunia, Snapdragon, and Coreopsis just about to be transferred to under the grow lights.
If you’ve followed me for a while, and saw my stories over the weekend, then you’ll know that Jack and I have discovered a love of gardening over the past year. In the past 10 years we’ve never really had a proper garden together, but we’ve always loved livening up spaces with plants (indoor and out) and at our old house we made a little jungle nook on our drive way and filled it with greenery.
When we moved to my parents house (a year ago this week 😬) we knew we wanted to plant some veggies at some point using my Grandads greenhouse. The lockdown garden mega project took our priority last year, the one where we decided to spend the first few weeks of lockdown clearing the end of the field. It took literally weeks but we still admire it today and have often stood staring at it together saying ‘wow, we actually did this’. It really gave us something to focus on and gave us a huge sense of accomplishment through such an unusual time. It helped a lot with my mental health.
We are still currently in a lockdown here in the UK, and although I can’t control a lot of things right now, one thing I can control is what happens in the greenhouse. So we bought lots of different seeds a few weeks ago, made a plan, studied germination times and are hoping to grow lots of fresh veg over the next few months. I cannot wait!
First step was to clear the greenhouse (swipe to see) and plant the seeds. fingers crossed we can make this work, and if not, at least we’ve given it a go.
One thing we do need to do next is create a fence around the patch, so that Pepper the food hoover doesn’t eat it all before it’s made it onto our plates 😂
#7DaysWithHolly word of the week ‘Spring’ suggested by @kirstierothwell & @menapynemakeup - new word every week! ☺️
For those of you who are from the MTV/Look at my shiny IPOD/IPhone/can't spell/can text generation who like instant results and have the attention span of a gnat then:-
This sculpture is made from mud and birch bark and is stuck on a rock. It's of a seedling and is supposed to be marking the arrival of spring, geddit!
And news just in: I was interviewed on the Etsy Blog yesterday.
For everyone else, especially those in the psychiatric profession or anyone with ALOT of spare time, you may carry on and read my insane ramblings below:-
I began the day with a stroll around the park to see what is growing (well I actually it began with peanut butter on toast and taking the recycling boxes down to the sidewalk - hello my stateside friends ;-) - but this is supposed to be about land art after all).
It was almost a year to the day that I made this dandelion sculpture. I noticed the first dandelion flower this last Wednesday and the very next day there were already hundreds in flower. So excited I am about spring that I am desperate to mark its coming (not in a canine way) but although the changes are already immense they are only just beginning. There is some blossom, the beginnings of deciduous leaves, catkins galore, hawthorn in flower, grass beginning to grow, the sap risen in saplings, ground covering plants starting to spread, bees and butterflies and good moods and smiles all round. To wake up to a balmy Saturday, with the weather set fair for the entirety of the weekend, already t-shirt temperatures, no wind and plenty of free time means the spring lover in us all is embued with excitement and expectation.
But despite all these really noticeable changes many of the materials I crave and not with us yet and there is so much more to come. My walk around the park revealed very little in the way of new deciduous leaves from native trees, nearly everything is from hardy shrubs that have been ever-present all winter.
But still the stroll was delightful and the three dogs chasing each other in circles, bums down performing that comedy gallop when they are having rollicking good fun, summed up my mood perfectly. A picked leaf held against shadow whilst the sun pierced it and made it shine, took my breath away just as it does every time I have done that. Something that I will never tire of. And yet despite the fresh air, warmth and promise of spring bringing contentment I hand't found anything that inspired me to mark the coming of spring. Instead I would use the time to explore techniques and materials for something I am proposing to create in someones garden, I would use birch bark and mud. So I set off to return to where I made the Leaf Lightning sculpture, which had now almost disappeared completely and I would create something new to take its place. The designs I'd been mulling over were a deciduous leaf, or new fern tendrils curling out into life. I would follow this theme to mark the coming of spring.
Are you familiar with how rambling thoughts can be? If you've ever read any of my stories, I am sure you are as I quite often write mine down! Are yours the same?
By way of an experiment I will write what follows as though someone was listening in my thoughts. Now this might be enlightening, worrying or very boring or perhaps a combination of more than one. We'll see... If I get a visit from those nice men in the white van with the 'special' jacket then I'll know your reaction...
"Thoughts"
"Wow look at all these red leaves, cool! Uh-oh there's a car coming! I bet they think I'm up to no good. JUst keep your head down, if I want to pick up leaves I shall! I'm not a burglar!"
"Yes I do some fell running too, it's the only way I can be fit enough to carry all this stuff! 'All this stuff' you are hardly carrying anything! Its nothing like the huge pile of stuff I had to carry on that climbing trip to Peru, now that was heavy! I wonder if I'll ever do a mountaineering expedition again? Probably not I am such a wuss! Oh look there are some people over there climbing on boulders, never seen anyone do that here before, funny coincidence seeing as I'm day dreaming about climbing!"
"Ah another coincidence, 'The Curlew' was the first pub I used to drink in when I was fifteen!"
"I wonder if I will make anything today or just sit on a rock? I don't really want to today, but then I always think that, I really can't be bothered..."
"Hmm what shall I do? None of these boulders seem suitable. Shall I just go home? Where I made Leaf Lightning is not the right shape, I'll have to find somewhere else."
"Cool, would you look at that lovely, filthy dark wet mud, perfection!"
"The sun is a bit strong I reckon I'll burn, best put my jacket on and pull up the hood, it's the only protection I've got. I wonder what we'll have for tea tonight? I wonder what the time is? Shall I eat my sandwiches now? Oh look a bumble bee has landed on my jacket. I wonder if it likes the blue colour? I wonder how the bee sees it? I wonder if the colour is the same as a particular flower? Wow that emerald green butterfly is beautiful and its crawling in my camera bag. I wonder what it likes in there?"
"So come on what are you going to make? It'll be rubbish anyway, why bother? It's silly to judge the success of a sculpture by how many comments you get on Flickr, you do this because you enjoy it. But I do like to get feedback. Well you should get on with it anyway, so what if it is rubbish, don't post it on Flickr then! I'm sure I've run out of ideas anyway, I had all the best ones last year, now I'm just repeating myself. What if my new ideas are rubbish?"
"Oh look another bee! What is it about this blue?"
"Yep, definitely going to look rubbish. Maybe just try this as an experiment and then do something better somewhere else?"
"Ah a ladybird!"
"Hmm, quite liking it now, but I should've done it higher up, that crack is spoiling it, the balance is wrong, the circles of bark do add something but this still going to be a bit substandard."
"Yes that's looking better, but how many leaves shall I add? Hmm I don't like even numbers. But why don't you like even numbers, what does it matter? I don't know, odd numbers just seem to work! How many then 5, 7, 9? I don't know, stop asking me stupid questions!"
This is the way it goes with just about everything I make. Self doubt is in control until three-quarters of the way through where I suddenly find myself liking what I see despite my psyche wishing the contrary.
I don't know why this is or indeed how the creative process evntually leads me from one to the other and whether the self doubt actaully means that I try harder to create something pleasing. This seems odd as the self doubting voice is encouraging my to give up the whole time, not to try harder.
It seems the voices in my head, the internal dialogue never stops (perhaps
that is how it is for everyone except for hardcore meditators) and what it is saying influences strongly how I feel and what I am able to do.
This must be a big reason why I am now drawn to create as despite my internal dialogues strongest intentions to hold me back and make me give up at whatever I am doing, the sculptures I create provide me with clear direction that it is worthwhile to persist.
"Wow, look at that Peregrine falcon! It's going for that bird, poor thing! It's missed what a relief! But then what will the Falcon eat?"
"Bugger what's going on here?! Ah they're next door, phew!"
Please tune in next week for more unadulterated ramblings.