This is a public-interest archive. Personal data is pseudonymized and retained under
GDPR Article 89.
Re: fresh seeds
- To: s*@eskimo.com
- Subject: Re: fresh seeds
- From: A*@aol.com
- Date: Mon, 14 Sep 1998 13:21:50 EDT
- Resent-Date: Mon, 14 Sep 1998 10:25:59 -0700
- Resent-From: seeds-list@eskimo.com
- Resent-Message-ID: <"cQ33E3.0.U-6.c6L_r"@mx1>
- Resent-Sender: seeds-list-request@eskimo.com
In a message dated 9/14/98 10:06:59 AM Eastern Daylight Time,
lussier@fas.harvard.edu writes:
<< I have gathered seeds from belamcanda, aka blackberry lilly. Seeds are
>shiny and hard. May I plant them now, or do they have to "age" for a while
>? >>
One year I allowed one of my favorite belamcandas to go to seed and allowed
the seed to just fall in the garden. The next spring I had loads of new
plants. I have always had trouble getting them started in the house so I
assume that they need some sort of cold treatment. I would plant some of them
out now and refrigerate some for next spring.
Other Mailing lists |
Author Index |
Date Index |
Subject Index |
Thread Index