Florida's Rarest Tree - Torreya taxifolia & Chigger Infestation

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
  • note : Fagus grandifolia was incorrectly referenced as "Fagus americana" in this episode. No such species exists. I screwed up and gave you bad info! Another occasional lapse in species ID. Grant me some leeway, prick. My brain is filled with thousands of genera and species names. Sometimes it conks out.
    In this video we explore sandhill habitat, and wet ravine to see some of the coolest plants found in North Florida, including the endangered Florida Yew and Florida Torreya, both of which are Paleo-endemics and relicts of a cooler climate.
    Many chiggers were encountered on this episode, during which we observe upwards of forty different plant species composing the rich biodiversity of Northern Florida.
    Penstemon australis
    Opuntia mesacantha
    Vaccinium arboreum
    Rhododendron austrinum
    Oxydendrum arboreum
    Symplocos tinctoria
    Torreya taxifolia
    Hydrangea quercifolia
    Baptisia alba
    Liatris gholsonii
    Fagus grandifolia
    our contributions support this content. It sounds clichéd, but it's true. Whether it's travel expenses, vehicle repair, or medical costs for urushiol poisoning (or rockfalls, beestings, hand slices, toxic sap, etc), your financial support allows this content to continue so the beauty of Earth's flora can be made accessible to the rest of us in the degenerate public. At a time when so much is disappearing beneath the human footprint, CPBBD is willing to do whatever it takes to document these plant species and the ecological communities they are a part of before they're gone for good.
    Plants make people feel good. Plants quell homicidal (and suicidal!) thoughts. To support Crime Pays But Botany Doesn't, consider donating a few bucks to the venmo account "societyishell" or the PayPal account email crimepaysbutbotanydoesnt@gmail.com...
    Or consider becoming a patreon supporter @ :
    / crimepaysbutbotanydoesnt
    Buy some CPBBD merch (shirts, hats, hoodies n' what the shit) available for sale at :
    www.bonfire.co...
    To purchase stickers, venmo 15 bucks to "societyishell" and leave your address in the comments.
    Plants ID questions or reading list suggestions can be sent to crimepaysbutbotanydoesnt@gmail.com
    Thanks, GFY.

Комментарии • 240

  • @dontcarejustwatchvid
    @dontcarejustwatchvid Год назад +100

    As a Florida-Man I have appreciated your Florida series of videos. Thank you so much for taking the time to share your [and your guests] expertise!

    • @fuxan
      @fuxan Год назад +4

      Likewise...I'm from Central Florida and really appreciate these recent videos...I didn't spend nearly enough time up in the panhandle. Making up for lots time before it's all gone one day.

    • @jul.escobar
      @jul.escobar Год назад +3

      As a Florida woman I too have enjoyed the heck out of this serious. 🎉

    • @seanclapper9965
      @seanclapper9965 Год назад +1

      Now i have even more appreciation for the flora native to the panhandle, especially realizing it used to be coastline.
      Lake Wales area in Central Fla has quite a few giant sndhills (Bok tower botanical sanctuary sits on a 300" hill). These largest sandhills were tiny islands at one point.
      Didnt even realize we had so many euphorbias here either.
      Ive always enjoyed the many springs and rivers here, and north Floriduh has a ton.

    • @kamikaze2613
      @kamikaze2613 Год назад +3

      I pray for you as a species

    • @nicholasagnew2792
      @nicholasagnew2792 Год назад +1

      You won't catch me Floridaing myself down to Florida any time soon so I'm glad to experience the Florida remotely.

  • @CarlosRuiz-en9iy
    @CarlosRuiz-en9iy Год назад +23

    I'm having a bad day, but man, these videos bring me up!

  • @user-ig7mt9ny9m
    @user-ig7mt9ny9m Год назад +9

    incase anyone was thinking of harvesting sassafras trees, instead consider Cinnamomum camphora its quite invasive in a lot of countries and has a liable amount of what your looking for

  • @DavidRexGlenn
    @DavidRexGlenn Год назад +13

    Heard the mention you got from Scott Simon on NPR's Weekend Edition on the snapping turtle/Chicago River video & tweets. For a minute I felt like a hipster having foreknowledge of what the radio host was referring to

  • @davidbarts6144
    @davidbarts6144 Год назад +8

    Three yew species in North America (there is also Taxus canadensis in addition to T. floridana and T. brevifolia).

  • @wamlartmuse
    @wamlartmuse Год назад +36

    Man.. I absolutely love these Florida videos. Such great diversity. I'm from Oklahoma, we have little diversity of plant life. We're very boring considering botany lol. I try my hardest to grow naturally plants from my local wildlife. I'm trying to understand botany but mycology is much easier for me. It all fits in together anyway. Plants & fungus wouldn't work without each other. & it just moves up from there. Humanity depends on ecology. Without one there is no other. I will forever be in debt to my teachers like CPBBD.. I can mention many other great teachers but I'll leave it at him. Do your own research. 🍄🌳💜

    • @riku8342
      @riku8342 Год назад +5

      How is having (+/-)2500 native plant species in your state boring? Florida has around 3000 natives so it's not even that much more diverse.

    • @wamlartmuse
      @wamlartmuse Год назад

      @riku8342 well that's about 500 more lol. I think Florida & a couple other states have cooler & prettier plants. Oklahoma has mostly flat land & we don't get a whole lot of rain. If you want to enjoy some nice areas in nature you either have to live by it or plan a trip to see it. Not to mention all the red dirt we have that nothing likes to grow in.

    • @Cpt_JaK
      @Cpt_JaK Год назад +3

      You're looking for charismatic Natives aren't you. Look deeper...

    • @alexjames879
      @alexjames879 Год назад +4

      As someone who lives in eastern Oklahoma, maybe you should explore more, there’s definitely a ton of fascinating plant diversity around here. The drier western areas also have fascinating plants as well. Watching the transition from arid grassland and shrublands in the west to moist subtropical forest in the southeast can teach you a lot about plant adaptation and ecosystem evolution.

    • @wamlartmuse
      @wamlartmuse Год назад

      @alexjames879 exactly, I definitely agree with you. In order to see the beauty I have to travel. I might as well go out of state lol. I love mountains but the only time I see them is when I'm headed out of state & don't have much time to chill.

  • @RobinMarks1313
    @RobinMarks1313 Год назад +5

    You need mud. In my backyard, we had a sulfur spring swamp. The frogs at night would make it so the visiting city folk couldn't sleep and complained. It was white noise to us hicks, we only heard it when we tuned into it. So, I've been dancing with bugs and critters all my life. If you need to stop them from biting you... mud. Find some clay mud and spread it on your lower legs. Heck, some of the minerals will nitrify your skin too. If you get a thick layer, the stupid bugs can't get through. Or, make sure your pants are no entry and put elastics at the bottom of your pants to cinch them tight. I'm sure you know about this approach, but I don't get a view of your legs much. It was nice to see the whole Tony and Al when I saw a promo for Kill Your Lawn. Good to see lawns fading into the past.

  • @RUFUSKNAPP
    @RUFUSKNAPP Год назад +18

    Saw a great old pacific yew in N central Idaho on main Salmon river schelteted above high water line next to pretty little creek.

  • @txbirdman01
    @txbirdman01 Год назад +5

    When yall were looking at the witch hazel you joked that people always want to know what a plant does, and Lily said that it provides "ecosystem service's" I thought yall were just making that up on the spot. Then I was reading an article that mentioned an estimated value of "ecosystem services " assigned to pollinators worldwide. I realized this is a real term that science uses to explain value for anything in the ecosystem to people who might not care otherwise.

  • @wamlartmuse
    @wamlartmuse Год назад +7

    @Crime Pays But Botany Doesn't thank you for mentioning mycology as much as possible. Micro biology is extremely important. Nothing but love and respect for you. You are a part of a great revolution.

  • @chuxmix65
    @chuxmix65 Год назад +9

    NEVER touch fuzzy caterpillars.
    Look. But don't touch.
    I love the lesser known Ilexes.
    I also love how Lily has been your guide.
    I'd welcome meeting more of your local experts as you travel!

  • @martinlehtonen
    @martinlehtonen Год назад +9

    You make learning this stuff so fun! Thanks for making these videos. Hope you know we appreciate.
    You are so enthusiastic, funny and goofy guy. Hope to meet some like you someday to have for myself.
    For the meantime, I got you bebe.
    Martin of Finland

  • @canadiangemstones7636
    @canadiangemstones7636 Год назад +2

    That Lily is an awesome gal to put up with your lunacy, lolol. My kinda people!

  • @bobjacobson858
    @bobjacobson858 Год назад +1

    Excellent video. I would like to offer two comments:
    1. Torreya taxifolia was planted at the Biltmore Estate near Asheville, North Carolina, and it both thrives (getting to be a fairly large tree) and reproduces there. Thus, that is essentially the new home for this species. There are other specimens in various botanical gardens. I recall being told that this species "will never grow again in the Cotton Belt".
    2. There is also a third native species of yew found in northeastern and Great Lake areas (Taxus canadensis), and it is a low-growing species (unlike the Pacific yew, Taxus brevifolia and the European and Asian species often cultivated that become trees). I've seen Taxus canadensis in southern New Hampshire and in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.

  • @tylernaturalist6437
    @tylernaturalist6437 Год назад +14

    I was down in the Corkscrew Swamp outside of Naples Florida last month, and I remember seeing red maple growing deep in the swamps amongst pond apples and other subtropical plants, and being so confused as to how such a northern species could make it in such a different environment. I definitely didn’t expect to see orchids growing on red maples.

    • @alexanderkonczal3908
      @alexanderkonczal3908 Год назад

      There are orchids in New England!

    • @tylernaturalist6437
      @tylernaturalist6437 Год назад

      @@alexanderkonczal3908 I was referring to epiphytic orchids growing on Red Maple, not terrestrials.

  • @scottcave7383
    @scottcave7383 Год назад +6

    Magnolia ashei is cold tolerant at least up into zone 6. Put one in your (former) lawn!

    • @katiekane5247
      @katiekane5247 Год назад +1

      Stunning tree for a damp spot.

    • @fuxan
      @fuxan Год назад +1

      I wonder if Mail Order Natives who are not top far from this area of Florida grow them.q

  • @aheinzer
    @aheinzer Год назад +4

    So nice. Thank you for sacrificing yourself to the ticks and chiggers so we could see all those cool plants. I saw a few that I knew and a lot more that were new to me. Learned a lot.

  • @corybeanland6506
    @corybeanland6506 Год назад +9

    I live down in Panama City. Way cool to see you bouncing around the area. Tons of great plants to point at!

  • @bodayshus1437
    @bodayshus1437 Год назад +3

    Good show. There is also Canada yew in North America

  • @LukeMcGuireoides
    @LukeMcGuireoides Год назад +3

    I love a long episode.

  • @MBroam
    @MBroam Год назад +4

    It's so awesome seeing you talk about the plants I am familiar with and love so much. 💜

  • @meanjeanmcqueen6171
    @meanjeanmcqueen6171 Год назад +1

    "Splooge and fear"...I love this man, lol.

  • @Dan_Slee
    @Dan_Slee Год назад +5

    Joey needs one of those 360 cameras when he has company so we can see their facial reactions for the more memorable commentary lol =))

  • @ReallyBakedGamer
    @ReallyBakedGamer Год назад +1

    13:19 you got a nice shot of a green arachnid friend, all camouflaged on the leaf nice.

  • @KarlKarsnark
    @KarlKarsnark Год назад +3

    Huzzah! I'm glad you made it to Torreya. It's such a neat place. Thanks for visiting.

  • @christopherelizondo318
    @christopherelizondo318 Год назад +2

    I love the ms doubtfire voice when describing soft leaves. Great work 🎉

  • @Cpt_JaK
    @Cpt_JaK Год назад +3

    Takes me back to my college days in Pensacola. Nothing like learning about fire ecology while gaining wildlands firefighting training at Eglin afb.

  • @myrmepropagandist
    @myrmepropagandist Год назад +6

    could you do an episode about all kinds of gall please??

  • @leannaerickson9745
    @leannaerickson9745 Год назад +4

    Another great lesson in Florida botany, thank you and Lilly too. I live on the Central Coast of California, about half a mile out of the natural range of Aesculus californica. Twenty-six years ago, when I moved out of Monterey County, I smuggled my potted Aesculus californica to my current home and replanted it in my back yard. Right now it's in bloom, and it smells heavenly (and so close to native).

  • @seanclapper9965
    @seanclapper9965 Год назад +3

    Ive come to the inevitable realization that im in love with Lily.
    As a resident of central Fla and a plant and conservation enthusiast its very reassuring that beautiful souls like hers walk the same earth so very nearby!
    Keep up the good work, and keep being YOU

  • @iplop
    @iplop Год назад +1

    Sparkleberries taste great!

  • @wildhareonthegulfofmexico3539
    @wildhareonthegulfofmexico3539 Год назад +1

    I remember those, on Eglin AFB....thank you for bringing these back to the realm of thought.

  • @SoNoFTheMoSt
    @SoNoFTheMoSt Год назад +1

    I love seeing magnolia in their natural habitat, so awesome!

  • @i-love-comountains3850
    @i-love-comountains3850 Год назад +1

    I love watching these videos when I'm tripping alone, always a good vibe when everyone's gone home and it's down to just me and Lucy😂

  • @joshk5686
    @joshk5686 Год назад +1

    When I saw you go for the sniff on that native azalea I LOLed cause I've done the same whenever I see a native deciduous azalea. That cinnamon-ish scent is really fragrant.

  • @yfrontsguy
    @yfrontsguy Год назад +2

    I have one small tree of that Torreya taxifolia here. I should plant more! Stunning to see such magnolia divesity in the States too.
    Love that Asimina angustifolia. looking so totally different to A.triloba & closer to tropical annonaceae.

  • @7th_Heaven
    @7th_Heaven Год назад +1

    @Crime Pays but Botany Doesn't,
    First video watching here. Voluntarily searched up Torreya Taxifolia and decided to watch multiple videos on it. Am here now.
    Goodness gracious have not heard this much concentrated taxonomy from the two of you since childhood and college botany days.
    Like bringing back memories... Am following and absorbing it but whew! you guys are leaving a wake that would bring Linnaeus a smile.
    Video is not even over and you guys got a like and contemplated subscribe.
    I'd ease up on suggestive references though

  • @RazsterTW
    @RazsterTW Год назад +1

    I'm in love with the Spiranthes sylvatica Orchidacae. Such amazing gemetry.

    • @RazsterTW
      @RazsterTW Год назад

      Croton & Berlandiera are alien like, so out of this work looking.

  • @rylandvincent6787
    @rylandvincent6787 3 месяца назад

    About choked on air when you accidentally sent the napping beetles flying. Lmfao 😂 Please keep up the great lessons! ❤

  • @alimillson8081
    @alimillson8081 Год назад +1

    37:50 Yes, Taxus brevifolia's range does extend into BC, Canada! I believe numbers are still recovering from when the species was committedly harvested for the production of taxol (anticancer/chemotherapy compound), but we see it around. Thanks for your engaging content and knowledge!

  • @StillRunningWithPointedSticks
    @StillRunningWithPointedSticks Год назад +3

    Yesterday I noticed leaf chew on my kumquat. Then I saw bird shit on a leaf. It moved. I trimmed off the small branch and placed it in a jar. That bird shit cat ate 5 leaves. Apparently will pupate into a swallowtail moth or butterfly. I’m calling it “Chewy”.

    • @fuxan
      @fuxan Год назад

      A non-native loquat? And the cat was eating it? I'm a native plant purist so I'm kinda surprised a non-native actual interacts much.

    • @StillRunningWithPointedSticks
      @StillRunningWithPointedSticks Год назад

      @@fuxan …I’m in Phoenix. Plenty of citrus here. Sour orange is grown as a landscape plant everywhere. And Mexican Lime. And Citron.

  • @marumiyuhime
    @marumiyuhime Год назад +1

    even as a biologist your my favourite plant guy. cheers i love chicago

  • @nllg1273
    @nllg1273 Год назад

    Love sandy bottom streams...

  • @zanewalsh1812
    @zanewalsh1812 Год назад +1

    Beautiful images, playful and engaging banter, quick paced...
    I just wish I had 45+ minutes to be entertained 😂😂

  • @xgamerx360x
    @xgamerx360x Год назад +2

    13:49 Acer rubrum might be the most common tree in coastal southern Maine. If it’s not, it’s probably only beaten by Pinus strobus and Quercus rubra

    • @sagetmaster4
      @sagetmaster4 Год назад

      Red Maples are pretty remarkable, can grow a huge tree in basically just water

  • @nicholasagnew2792
    @nicholasagnew2792 Год назад

    Its a spring for the books we're experiencing. We're having a nice wet spring here in the Northwest. Keep living your life to the fullest my man. Florida it up to the fullest.

  • @MrGrombie
    @MrGrombie Год назад +1

    Yessssss finally a FL video. I didn't realize you had one out.

  • @henryhawke
    @henryhawke Год назад +3

    Have you been to Panthertown, NC? Has some excellent and rare biomes. So many rare plants.

    • @conorgraves
      @conorgraves Год назад

      North Carolina has a ton of very interesting specimens, very unique state because of its size giving a range of geology, altitudes, and climates.

  • @myrmepropagandist
    @myrmepropagandist Год назад +1

    That orchid is incredible!

  • @Dan-DJCc
    @Dan-DJCc Год назад +1

    Lily is nice. A fun one this.

  • @micah_lee
    @micah_lee Год назад

    It’s so funny seeing some of these really common southern plants on here. I love it. We get a lot of these species very commonly up in NC.

  • @chuxmix65
    @chuxmix65 Год назад

    I do like a Yew. Nice!

  • @brightmooninthenight2111
    @brightmooninthenight2111 9 месяцев назад

    Ive been watching these Florida videos because I live in South Georgia by a giant swamp called the okefenokee, largest blackwater swamp in America.
    I was very sad to learn about laurel wilt. I love the Bays around here, I started using them for cooking as well. I've noticed around where I live in the drier pine woods there is so much rust and fungus on the vegetation it looks sickly. But it's so cool someone is showing some love to the flora around here. And a fun fact about the cnidoscolus stimulosus is it has edible tubers that taste like potato, but I've only harvested it once because they aret abundant enough to warrant it

  • @sagetmaster4
    @sagetmaster4 Год назад +1

    Porose is a new botanical adjective for me. Not trying to brag, but I've got like half the names for "hairy" memorized

  • @malcolmmacqueen2340
    @malcolmmacqueen2340 17 дней назад

    even in Scotland we appreciate the banter mixed with lessons in Latin, lots of blaeberry here. All the Yew trees are in the old graveyards too

  • @lightreign8021
    @lightreign8021 Год назад +1

    Enjoy your open prairie areas, (laughs at you in ancient conifer forest). To each their own 😁. What we lack in biodiversity we make up in biomass.

  • @alanthecat59
    @alanthecat59 7 месяцев назад

    i like this , nice when you have a beutiful guest , adds some spice to the dynamic GG

  • @gator83261
    @gator83261 Год назад

    Great video.

  • @seanturner7
    @seanturner7 Год назад

    Your feelings towards Crepe Myrtle is what I have for Japanese Knotweed.

  • @5hape5hift3r
    @5hape5hift3r Год назад +1

    those beetles look like they are mimicing bees.

  • @64Pete
    @64Pete Год назад +2

    Hey brother I'm going to bed, but I'll be sure to check out your chigger bites in the A.M. Have a ripper day mate. ✌🇦🇺

    • @64Pete
      @64Pete Год назад

      If I'd known the lovely Lilly was teaching, I'd have stayed up and crammed. Glad you intercepted the scrotum tick brother! GFY ✌🇦🇺

  • @johnquinn456
    @johnquinn456 Год назад +1

    Well done
    You guys rock

  • @edreasner44
    @edreasner44 11 месяцев назад

    Love that song, come to New Mexico we'll put you in the studio.

  • @tonybezanson9625
    @tonybezanson9625 Год назад +1

    3 yews, Canada yew, (T. canadensis, which grows in Eastern North America, New England up into Canada.

    • @mechaslugzilla
      @mechaslugzilla Год назад +1

      Yeah, I was about to post "what about Taxus canadensis?"

  • @edwardhaglin2322
    @edwardhaglin2322 Год назад +1

    The FL indians used the yapon holly to make a highly caffeinated drink .called the black dink .most hollies hot at least dome caffeine.

  • @metalicminer6231
    @metalicminer6231 Год назад

    My phone died watching this great botany fella.

  • @ryeblocker2297
    @ryeblocker2297 Год назад

    I saw da Blaze!! Yall are on da Florida Scenic Trail. Nice!!!

  • @frankmacleod2565
    @frankmacleod2565 Год назад

    awesome

  • @ianplute7033
    @ianplute7033 Год назад

    Welcome to the panhandle, should have stopped in Jefferson Countey. South portion of the county is extreamly rural and very diverse. Mixed hardwood highlands, next to the blackwater disappearing rivers. I bet you can't find all 5 pawpaws in the area.

  • @georgebootsweber
    @georgebootsweber Год назад

    V. arboreum is such an underappreciated tree. Gnarly mature ones look like abstract sculptures in winter

  • @eazypeazy33
    @eazypeazy33 Год назад

    I love looking at maps and imagining the ancient coastline..
    it’d be a different world.. time is coming again soon. Time for my kind to head up north..
    and that rare Magnolia is a money shot 😂

  • @kevinhendricksen1277
    @kevinhendricksen1277 Год назад

    There's Taxus canadensis in the Great Lakes states as well. Super rare now because of all the stupid deer. Nice to hear there is one in Florida.

  • @briantomcollins
    @briantomcollins Год назад

    Thecoloron that liatris... those flowers look like somebody messed with the contrast. Amazing...

  • @subsidized2778
    @subsidized2778 Год назад +1

    Love all your videos and info. People are just driving life 90mph, right on by all the beauty of the usa. I agree Americans are addicted to mowing vast acres, and spraying the hell outta everything. Cant have any clover etc. It's a disease.

  • @anndriggers6660
    @anndriggers6660 Год назад +1

    That Smilax (green briar) is edible, and it's absolutely delicious cooked or in a salad if you pick the very young leaves and stems. You could literally make a nice big salad out of the greens that grow in your yard! Do yourself a favor and check it out.

  • @tristenwheeling2113
    @tristenwheeling2113 Год назад +1

    Yaaaaaaaahhh yahoo yabbb thanks for the awesome info here living in at the bottom of the Salish sea I don't get out of this environment much but I'm going to LA next month idk how much I can botanize there lol pls don't BOTANIZE AND DRIVE IT IS DAMGEROUS

  • @cadabuz3198
    @cadabuz3198 6 месяцев назад

    I love the money shots!!

  • @MrSrgdrum
    @MrSrgdrum Год назад +1

    You forgot your chigger repellant agin? Krylon Gold administered via paper bag lol. Keep up the great work Tone.

    • @D_S_88
      @D_S_88 Год назад

      lol, funny one.

    • @Jay22222
      @Jay22222 Год назад +1

      I hate to ask someone explain a joke, buttt I don’t get it.
      Unless you were insinuating poisoning them from right at the source, by huffing paint?

    • @MrSrgdrum
      @MrSrgdrum Год назад

      @@Jay22222 That is the "joke" indeed

    • @JazzViolinListeningLounge
      @JazzViolinListeningLounge Год назад

      I'm not worried about insects, my jewelry is a natural repellant hahahahahahaha

  • @daveatlw
    @daveatlw Год назад

    ❤ florida videos.

  • @adamolsen6411
    @adamolsen6411 Год назад

    The Florida video I have been waiting for!

  • @ceg937
    @ceg937 Год назад

    I have over 100 liatris gholsonii seeds ready to seed in my native milkweed garden!🥳

  • @c.rogers4394
    @c.rogers4394 Месяц назад

    There is also another rare one, Taxus floridiana I believe, love those Yews, looked it up, floridana, kinda odd, like somebody left an 'I' out, and it happens, especially in maps, the name gets spelled wrong and it sticks, because nobody knows any better.

  • @user255
    @user255 Год назад

    Great as usual! So many species... I live in Finland, not even near to that plant diversity.

  • @jul.escobar
    @jul.escobar 5 месяцев назад

    Just came across my first one in Florida. Adding it to Inaturalist 🙌

  • @myrmepropagandist
    @myrmepropagandist Год назад +1

    I think those ants were Camponotus discolor or maybe Camponotus discepens? I have a colony of those ants, been wanting to give them some livestock, this is giving me ideas for their new terrium.

  • @oldmango8606
    @oldmango8606 Год назад

    dangleberries ......."if you do not wipe well" lol,,,, thanx

  • @--Paws--
    @--Paws-- 10 месяцев назад

    I did not expect that Chuck E Cheese lore; I've heard about the animatronics but he confirmed it.

  • @Fabdanc
    @Fabdanc Год назад

    I remember when it was called Showbiz Pizza... Wasn't the little song something like "Showbiz Pizza, where a kid can be a kid."

  • @gandalfandferg280
    @gandalfandferg280 Год назад +1

    I have gotten the WASITDO questions. I was telling this quack about a rare native mistletoe we where passing and he's like "what's it do for us, what can i use it for? Oh its a parasite? Should i pull it off and save the plant?" Holy cow.

  • @XDarkxSteel
    @XDarkxSteel Год назад +1

    Idk the way you're talking about those soft leaf undersides kinda doing something for me ngl

  • @katiekane5247
    @katiekane5247 Год назад +3

    So many good natives need to be used more in flora culture. Why we keep importing things doesn't make much sense. Horticulturalist Jim Putnam reports seeing many more N. American natives used as ornamentals in Europe on his latest trip, why humans gotta do dat? Think they're smarter than nature? That Mitchella repens makes a really nice ground cover, pretty easy to propagate.
    Thanks for these panhandle vids, all but the tropicals are here in N. Georgia too. Still not enough natives being made available for home gardening, definitely needed.

  • @krystal6137
    @krystal6137 Год назад

    No wonder my dog eats the leaves on the sassafras tree in my yard 🤣 she loves them and will climb to get to the leaves if she can’t find any young sprouts from the root system.

  • @lucasotis9525
    @lucasotis9525 Год назад

    “Look at that flower tho” could’ve been your last words my dude, I respect the fuck outta you

  • @christinearmington
    @christinearmington 10 месяцев назад

    You sir are more than slightly altered 😂
    The ball pit at Chucky Cheese! 😂😂😂😂😂
    I’m guessing that was Hurricane Michael damage. 🌀
    I hope you didn’t really get chiggers. Our dad used to dust us in sulphur powder. Ankles, waist, etc. 😮 I really hate ‘em. 🤬🤬🤬😎

  • @laserflexr6321
    @laserflexr6321 9 месяцев назад

    Another very interesting episode. But one question, I was unable to find it so is there a common name for the plant Dogpuke Louii?

  • @pvtpain66k
    @pvtpain66k Год назад

    8:29
    Christmas
    Album
    WHEN?!!!
    Edit: 36:38 "everything is edible, once." is my go to

  • @Parker307
    @Parker307 Год назад

    So many genus and species names (and plant terms but I get some of those) just flowing over me and away. How does one remember these?

  • @Toddis
    @Toddis Год назад +1

    It's cool knowing the Latin names because I can infer that Pinus edulis is an edible plant, because edulis means edible

  • @lainecolley1414
    @lainecolley1414 Год назад

    @ the Picasso flower Joey, I handled lots of most of that before turning ten. I've yelled at my parents for encouraging me to learn botany then mowing everything to please no one.
    I forget the Japanese for completely withdraw. Do you see how your vlog could encourage that?
    If you read this, read that again. Ficus Benjamina.

  • @SpiritedHumaneering
    @SpiritedHumaneering Год назад

    Thanks for this video! Torreya at 38:00 :)