Botanical Garden 900m altitude
- Adrien (ex-nico239)
- Econologue expert
- posts: 9845
- Registration: 31/05/17, 15:43
- Location: 04
- x 2150
Re: Botanical Garden 900m altitude
spontaneous - the viperine, there is everywhere but it remains pretty
spontaneous - la Buglosse (unless wrong)
If my memory is good that's what we sucked when we were kids.
I tried with those who are in the garden ... my faith hardly sweet
bought and planted - Amaryllis et cie
spontaneous - la Buglosse (unless wrong)
If my memory is good that's what we sucked when we were kids.
I tried with those who are in the garden ... my faith hardly sweet
bought and planted - Amaryllis et cie
Last edited by Adrien (ex-nico239) the 18 / 06 / 18, 23: 53, 2 edited once.
0 x
- Adrien (ex-nico239)
- Econologue expert
- posts: 9845
- Registration: 31/05/17, 15:43
- Location: 04
- x 2150
Re: Botanical Garden 900m altitude
The strangers if you have an idea is willingly
Bizarre this little thing with these balls ....
This grass super cute there is only ONE ... I watch over her seeds that she is doing ....
That one she was nice but she disappeared
That she grew up but apart from a little more twists nothing new on this weird thing
I guess a variety of orchid.
Indication it is partly "arid" of the garden
for pleasure a big slacker who let herself be photographed a few cm without moving a wing
Bizarre this little thing with these balls ....
This grass super cute there is only ONE ... I watch over her seeds that she is doing ....
That one she was nice but she disappeared
That she grew up but apart from a little more twists nothing new on this weird thing
I guess a variety of orchid.
Indication it is partly "arid" of the garden
for pleasure a big slacker who let herself be photographed a few cm without moving a wing
0 x
- to be chafoin
- Grand Econologue
- posts: 1202
- Registration: 20/05/18, 23:11
- Location: Gironde
- x 97
Re: Botanical Garden 900m altitude
I have ... I just need an address!nico239 wrote:to be chafoin wrote:If you want, I'll send you seeds ...
Ah yes gladly .... if you have rab ...
0 x
Re: Botanical Garden 900m altitude
Ah, it makes me dream, your "botanical garden"!
The grass is amazing, as is the "compound" which would have its place as an ornamental!
[Attention, it will happen to you what happened to me, the visitors who come by dozens!]
The grass is amazing, as is the "compound" which would have its place as an ornamental!
[Attention, it will happen to you what happened to me, the visitors who come by dozens!]
0 x
- Adrien (ex-nico239)
- Econologue expert
- posts: 9845
- Registration: 31/05/17, 15:43
- Location: 04
- x 2150
Re: Botanical Garden 900m altitude
Did67 wrote:Ah, it makes me dream, your "botanical garden"!
The grass is amazing, as is the "compound" which would have its place as an ornamental!
[Attention, it will happen to you what happened to me, the visitors who come by dozens!]
Well the better is the buit ... I reassure you are not jaded either and it makes us dream too if we are at the beginning.
I might have called it a garden of acclimation ... it would have brought back memories when, as a child, I went to Paris to the garden of the same name ... to see Guignol and Gnafron and the rides or the enchanted river or take the little train to go ... a whole era
Memories memories...
In short, visitors will be NIET except friends.
But what is crazy is to see the number of things that can grow when you do NOTHING in a given place ...
Attention it is not said that we will never do anything.
Indeed the failure to do nothing according to the place is to give the premium to the highest: a kind of San Geminiano garden.
As a result, roses, mint, wild strawberries, for example, are covered and invaded.
Currently the camerisier we do not see anymore.
However doing nothing during 2 or 3 years it also allows all that has been mowed and over-blown and / or dried out by the abandonment, to come back to life.
Last year not a trace of thyme (farigoulette)
This year we do not know how to avoid trampling.
When we see the price that it is sold ... we are rich (I cheated I took the most expensive
https://www.jardindupicvert.com/plantes ... polet.html
In addition it's good, 1ère tentative seasoning not later than this afternoon ...
that the tomatoes come from the garden.
Not to mention the few originalities photographed above.
Ditto for clary sage but it is sure that one day will take a little off because at this rate we will be overwhelmed in 2 or 3 years ...
It remains to make endure, not to break the balance and to enrich tranquillou the medium
0 x
Re: Botanical Garden 900m altitude
The limit of doing nothing, it comes quickly! Because, in fact, woody plants, which have this cheap carbon fiber called lignin, which allows them to pass over others, always end up having the upper hand ... And inevitably, without grazers, we go to the forest (or the scrubland) ... in short, a "shrub" formation (variable depending on the climate / pedology).
To maintain a "savannah", therefore an open environment such as you have it now, you will have to either install grazers, or you yourself harness a "mechanical grazer" (this is called a mower, a motor mower. , a brush cutter, a tractor with a cutter bar ...).
The alternative, to maintain your "flowers", is late mowing, when they have all formed their seeds ... Early mowing, and repeated (tointe), favors the grasses ("herbs") ... These are the species which have adapted to grazers: the more they are grazed, the more they "grow" = form lateral stems, and the better they gain the upper hand! Including to humans: cereals!
To maintain a "savannah", therefore an open environment such as you have it now, you will have to either install grazers, or you yourself harness a "mechanical grazer" (this is called a mower, a motor mower. , a brush cutter, a tractor with a cutter bar ...).
The alternative, to maintain your "flowers", is late mowing, when they have all formed their seeds ... Early mowing, and repeated (tointe), favors the grasses ("herbs") ... These are the species which have adapted to grazers: the more they are grazed, the more they "grow" = form lateral stems, and the better they gain the upper hand! Including to humans: cereals!
0 x
- Adrien (ex-nico239)
- Econologue expert
- posts: 9845
- Registration: 31/05/17, 15:43
- Location: 04
- x 2150
Re: Botanical Garden 900m altitude
For the moment there is no reason to be alarmed ... the mix is good.
But in the very large fields behind the vegetable garden I thought that there were only herbs and very few flowers.
And we even intended to resve a little variety in one of these 4.
Historically I will have to learn something but before being partly a track of auto cross I think it was only used for mowing, like almost the whole valley: we are sheep, sheep and everything for sheep.
In the pleasure garden we will take care of the grain of diversity.
But in the very large fields behind the vegetable garden I thought that there were only herbs and very few flowers.
And we even intended to resve a little variety in one of these 4.
Historically I will have to learn something but before being partly a track of auto cross I think it was only used for mowing, like almost the whole valley: we are sheep, sheep and everything for sheep.
In the pleasure garden we will take care of the grain of diversity.
0 x
- Adrien (ex-nico239)
- Econologue expert
- posts: 9845
- Registration: 31/05/17, 15:43
- Location: 04
- x 2150
Re: Botanical Garden 900m altitude
The good news of recent days is the appearance in many places of the pleasure garden of this
I have not yet tried to find out what exactly it is: I assimilate this quickly to campanulas ...
But I'm happy because it's a flower and one that I like and that does not run the streets here even if we see.
The most curious is its appearance "unbundled": one here and there but others by several meters from each other and especially not only in a shaded situation (although this is where they are the most in number) a pair having appeared in a DRY situation.
To be continued.
I have not yet tried to find out what exactly it is: I assimilate this quickly to campanulas ...
But I'm happy because it's a flower and one that I like and that does not run the streets here even if we see.
The most curious is its appearance "unbundled": one here and there but others by several meters from each other and especially not only in a shaded situation (although this is where they are the most in number) a pair having appeared in a DRY situation.
To be continued.
0 x
- Adrien (ex-nico239)
- Econologue expert
- posts: 9845
- Registration: 31/05/17, 15:43
- Location: 04
- x 2150
Re: Botanical Garden 900m altitude
In the series we make ch .... to grow flowers in a suitable environment with all the care that is needed and that is described in the manuals and during this time nature does what she wants, the 2 examples of the day.
First of all this kind of poppy (???) much prettier than an ordinary poppy that came out of the gravelled parking lot and hard like concrete (it is not the only one there are also piles of wild teasels, I will come back to it), it looks like crepe paper.
And that's the "romantic" context
First of all this kind of poppy (???) much prettier than an ordinary poppy that came out of the gravelled parking lot and hard like concrete (it is not the only one there are also piles of wild teasels, I will come back to it), it looks like crepe paper.
And that's the "romantic" context
0 x
- Adrien (ex-nico239)
- Econologue expert
- posts: 9845
- Registration: 31/05/17, 15:43
- Location: 04
- x 2150
Re: Botanical Garden 900m altitude
And then what I identified as being a Hypochondriac Amaranth ... but I can very well be wrong
What's she doing here?
In the middle of a pile of big stones of support.
Outside pleasure garden so natural watering (it was served)
Except that now will have to take care of it and make it to measure in manual watering if you want to keep it otherwise it may quickly grill
How did she come knowing that I did not know her existence before today: mystery and a ball of gum.
It seems to be edible
Has anyone ever tasted this?
Other photos from the net
If it's that variety I found that on it
https://www.prota4u.org/database/protav ... ndriacus+L.
What's she doing here?
In the middle of a pile of big stones of support.
Outside pleasure garden so natural watering (it was served)
Except that now will have to take care of it and make it to measure in manual watering if you want to keep it otherwise it may quickly grill
How did she come knowing that I did not know her existence before today: mystery and a ball of gum.
It seems to be edible
Has anyone ever tasted this?
Other photos from the net
If it's that variety I found that on it
https://www.prota4u.org/database/protav ... ndriacus+L.
0 x
-
- Similar topics
- Replies
- views
- Last message
-
- 1 Replies
- 3483 views
-
Last message by Christophe
View the latest post
16/08/20, 13:23A subject posted in the forum : Agriculture: problems and pollution, new technologies and solutions
-
- 115 Replies
- 43960 views
-
Last message by Moindreffor
View the latest post
19/02/21, 22:03A subject posted in the forum : Agriculture: problems and pollution, new technologies and solutions
-
- 70 Replies
- 26309 views
-
Last message by gegyx
View the latest post
15/05/20, 13:39A subject posted in the forum : Agriculture: problems and pollution, new technologies and solutions
-
- 0 Replies
- 3358 views
-
Last message by Christophe
View the latest post
05/08/19, 13:31A subject posted in the forum : Agriculture: problems and pollution, new technologies and solutions
-
- 196 Replies
- 45259 views
-
Last message by Did67
View the latest post
29/06/20, 19:42A subject posted in the forum : Agriculture: problems and pollution, new technologies and solutions
Back to "Agriculture: problems and pollution, new techniques and solutions"
Who is online ?
Users browsing this forum : LudoThePotagiste and 323 guests