- rainbowgardener
- Super Green Thumb
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- rainbowgardener
- Super Green Thumb
- Posts: 25279
- Joined: Sun Feb 15, 2009 6:04 pm
- Location: TN/GA 7b
Isn't this what gardeners do?
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- Just when you think you are done. There's always a way to find space for one more.
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- TomatoNut95
- Super Green Thumb
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- Greener Thumb
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- applestar
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...I know how that works— the joke is that about half hour to a day later, you DO find out that it WAS an useful plant.... OR worse, that you should have been extra careful NOT to touch it and should have cleaned your tools with industrial detergent or some such — a reminder that you should ID the plant.
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- Greener Thumb
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- TomatoNut95
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I recall a time I was repotting a houseplant. I was reusing dumped dirt from cups or pots of seeds I thought weren't going to germinate. Later when checking on the houseplant I noticed something was peeking from the soil, and that something was a newborn tomato plant! Lol! And if I remember correctly, (this was many years ago) I think a second tomato seedling came up in the houseplant. I removed the seedling(s) and put them outside.
- TomatoNut95
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- applestar
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Bokashi and Mushrooms, too, though I had early fungus gnat issues this winter so I never did try growing indoor mushrooms this winter.
I couldn’t help taking this one seriously since there are quite a few experiments and actual growouts that are only possible during the winter months when ambient temperatures are in the 60’s or lower and more suited to the indoor microbial and fungal growing (easier to manage) than in the summer.
This doesn’t fit ...but sprouts are also easier to grow during the winter and satisfy the need to “grow something”
I couldn’t help taking this one seriously since there are quite a few experiments and actual growouts that are only possible during the winter months when ambient temperatures are in the 60’s or lower and more suited to the indoor microbial and fungal growing (easier to manage) than in the summer.
This doesn’t fit ...but sprouts are also easier to grow during the winter and satisfy the need to “grow something”