!Mikica! citat: |
Ljudi, prelepe su vam kale. Sta im to radite da su takve? |
ghostrider citat: |
With a little help of Google , sa radoscu te obavestavam da jeste seme . Stajem u red za semenke, volela bih da i to probam A evo i uputstva za sakupljanje semena Seeds and growing from seed. If you want seeds, leave the flower on the plant as long as possible. You can peek inside of the spent bloom and you should see the start of a berry shaped fruit structure. The longer you leave the flower on the plant, the bigger the fruit structure will grow. I always leave mine on until fall, or until the flower stem (petiole) has completely wasted away- at that point you know no further nutrients will make it to the seeds. The berry structure should start out green, and most of them will turn slightly yellow, some do stay green. You can pull one of the berries off the structure, and roll it and pinch it between your fingers and at least one seed should pop out. Plant the seed in moistened potting mix and just cover it with a very small amount of the potting mix. Keep moist, and you will have baby callas sprouting in no time! If the berries are already shriveled, you can just plant them without taking the seeds out, I've had good success both ways. I start my baby callas in the winter (although you can start seed whenever you have it) , and then transfer them into the ground in the spring when I plant my other bulbs. They should be slightly bigger than a pea at that point. By the end of the summer you should have a small bulb. It will take about 2 years or longer, depending on your growing conditions to get a bulb to flowering size. NOTE: The offspring may not look like the parent flower! Poslednja recnica mi je posebno zanimljiva! |
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