Flowers ... Good - Bad & the Ugly
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- Опубликовано: 16 окт 2024
- One minute you think your fall planted flowers are doing well and the next day they look terrible. I'm having trouble with some of my fall planted snapdragons. I severely pinched them because the stems were unusable. I hope someone knows what is going on with these snapdragons. Please let me know if you have seen this happen to your snapdragons. I have had some die out of my Scabiosis and Rudbeckia. I do believe these crops probably succombed to the large amounts of rain we have had and didn't like their feet staying wet.
I mention Jennie Love's No-Till Flowers Podcast. The Magical Brix Number podcast is the one I started listening to and thus the reason I have done a soil drench with Molasses. But I have since been bing listening to all her podcast. I am especially interested in the one's with Bryant Mason of Soil Doctor Consulting. Bryant has so much good information on improving soil and thus improving our flower production. Obviously I am having plant issues so I am super interested in how I can improve all things soil to improve all things plant related in order to hopefully have beautiful flowers to sell.
I'm about to plant some snapdragons seeds so I really needed to see this. Thanks for sharing!🌼🌺🥀
I am so glad this has been helpful to you!!
Thanks for sharing your video and garden. New subscriber to your channel.
Thank you so much for subscribing to my channel! I really appreciate your nice comment as well! When I put videos out I always wonder if anyone is interested so feedback is especially appreciated!
I’ve grown snaps for three years now. The first two years they were perfect. This year I used support netting and they are so wonky and curly they are worthless. I will never use netting again. I think it’s better to just corral them but that’s just me.
interesting! I have always used netting with my snaps and never had an issue with the netting. I did have bent, curvy and split snap stems this year. I'm not exactly sure what happened. My guess... too much rain, lots of cold/warm temperature changes throughout the winter causing inconsistent growth habit where the plant needed more nutrients than the cool soil could provide.