What is this (garden)?
I'm referring to this thingamajig, which is on the wood of many of my plants.
I'm referring to this thingamajig, which is on the wood of many of my plants.
Hello 🙂 I bought the Milsbo display case for my plants. It contains a humidifier and fan, and I also have a grow light. Despite this, both of my Alocasia plants have been punished with root rot 🙁 and my Monstera Monkey Leaf also developed brown spots, but they weren't dry brown, they were limp…
Sos 🙁 maybe someone can help me here.. I repotted my Monstera with completely fresh soil and there were already white spots in the soil, the garden center says this is normal because moist soil in bags can sometimes develop mold, it's not a big deal. But now it's probably spread around all the root…
I have a spider plant that's about 10 years old, and its pot is completely overgrown. Now I'm wondering if it can be used to combat problems like waterlogging in other plants, since its roots grow deep and have large water reservoirs.
The farmer next door first mows the grass with a farm machine and then drives over it every day, stirring everything up again. Does this serve a purpose? Of course it does, but what does it achieve?
Hello folks.. I ate a rose from the market today because my mother said it was edible. Now I'm reading everywhere that supermarket roses are very poisonous due to pesticides. My question now is: Will it affect me?!?!? I'm scared.
I have two linden trees in my garden, both of which already have a fully developed "head." I can easily manage one of them with a pole pruner for standard pruning. The second, however, is significantly taller, and working on it from a ladder is significantly more dangerous.
These are braids. It is pure upseaters that do not harm the plant on which they are sitting. The same species of braids can be found on dead and living wood and on stones.
That’s braid. Unharmful. You can scrape it if there is time. By the way, braids on trees can prevent sunburn.
That’s dry moss.
Wrong!
Looks like lichen. It’s not harmful.
I can’t answer it exactly / professionally, but I think it’s a lichen that nests on dead wood.
The plants that show this are removed in an environmentally friendly manner sooner or later.
Flechte also grows on live wood;-)
No.
They do not grow on dead wood, but on living wood. It doesn’t hurt the trees and shrubs. They can grow for decades. Or centuries.
Like yellow braids. These are the two most common species here.
https://de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flechte