Re: Starting Seeds...
- To: perennials@mallorn.com
- Subject: Re: Starting Seeds...
- From: A* B* <a*@prairie.lakes.com>
- Date: Fri, 03 Jul 1998 11:08:24 -0700
- References: <199807022132.OAA04069@smtp5.teleport.com>
A lot of people use "found heat" by starting seeds on refrigerator tops and radiators. I suppose some appliances like dryers would work too if you could stand plants in your laundry area. Wouldn't work for people like me who do laundry once a month tho... :) --------------------------------------------------------------------- To sign-off this list, send email to majordomo@mallorn.com with the message text UNSUBSCRIBE PERENNIALS
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- Re: Starting Seeds...
- From: "MARILYN DUBE'" <maridube@teleport.com>
- Re: Starting Seeds...
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- Next by thread: Re: NorthHill Symposium/Native PlantsStacey, it sounds like the whole symposium and tour was very interesting, I'm not familiar with Tres Fromme but agree that he's right about gardening being an unnatural act. A really natural garden would have an awful lot of undesirable plants (i.e. weeds) although the gardener wouldn't have to do anything to do it, either. If you do anything, you're interfering with nature, after all. That said, I think there are good reasons for using native plants, particularly in these times of drought and generally strange weather. "Natives" endure.But what are native plants? Tony Avent of Plants Delight has been quoted as saying that all plants were native before the continents split. True enough. Yet, as has been discussed on this list, some plants are terribly invasive when imported to new areas. Moderation in all things.