jammer wrote in message . ..
I have such a huge taro that i have decided not to bring it in this
year. I am undecided what to do with it though. Cut the stalks and
sink it? I am considering that.
Best of luck. I don't know where you are, but in Ottawa it isn't an
option: the pond freezes over solid from December thru early March and
the water underneath will be at the canonical 3degC. I'm pretty sure
that will kill anything tropical.
-- Kizhe
On Wed, 22 Sep 2004 14:53:45 -0700, ~ jan JJsPond.us
wrote:
I'd be very interested in your results, especially dry storage. I
took
bring in my taros, in buckets, next to window and under lights. Would
be so
much easier to store dry, but I'm not brave enough to try. ~ jan
On 21 Sep 2004 10:12:28 -0700, (Lt. Kizhe Catson)
wrote:
It'll be frost-time fairly soon here (Ottawa), so I'm planning what
to
do. In past years I've kept my Black Magic Taro awake, in a small
aquarium under grow-bulbs (interesting factoid: the deep dusky
colour
only appears under sunlight; under artificial light the leaves are
dark green with only the veins showing maroon).
However, I divided it this year, so I now have three healthy pots
and
can afford to experiment (ie. risk losing one). So: can taro be
overwintered in a dormant state, and if so how? Should it be kept
wet
or dry, and at what temperature?
And of course the followup Q is: how do I wake it up in Spring? I
have a sunroom which would be good for "hardening off" (if that's
something you can even do to taro).
-- Kizhe
~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~