Thread
:
Stevia: monoecious or dioecious?
View Single Post
#
6
28-06-2009, 12:32 PM posted to rec.gardens.edible
phorbin
external usenet poster
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Feb 2008
Posts: 544
Stevia: monoecious or dioecious?
In article wildbilly-573209.23064427062009@c-61-68-245-
199.per.connect.net.au,
says...
In article
,
mleblanca wrote:
On Jun 26, 10:58 pm, Billy wrote:
In article ,
"Lilah Morgan" wrote:
I have 3 stevia plants, and in my research trying to find info about
them,
this is the best I've found so
far:
http://www.n8ture.com/herbs-stevia.html
"Billy" wrote in message
...
Does anyone know, if Stevia is monoecious or dioecious?
--
Thank you Lilah. What I'm really trying to find out is can a single
plant produce viable seeds, or do you need two plants? I have one plant
that I started from seed. I guess I'll know by the end of the season
whether I get more seeds or not.
Thanks again.
--
- Billy
There are three kinds of men: The ones that learn by reading. The few who
learn by observation. The rest of them have to pee on the electric fence
and
find out for themselves.
Will Rogers
http://green-house.tv/video/the-spri...omdispatch.com
/p/zinn
Hi Billy
Stevia flowers are perfect ( having both stamens and pistil) You can
verify this by looking
carefully at the flowers on your plant and looking for both parts. But
the plants seem
to need cross pollination. So yes, you would need two plants. The
preferred method of
propagation seems to be by cuttings.
this may be helpful (it's where I learned all that above info)
http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/p...99/v4-510.html
Emilie
NorCal
where it was 102 today, but I was up at 6800' where it was cooler, but
not very!
Thank you. I think I'll invest in lights until I know what I'm doing.
My Stevia just went into flower. I tried some leaves today. They were a
little on the sour side but sweet as sugar. Last year they didn't flower.
I wonder what,"Propagation of stevia is usually by stem cuttings which
root easily, but require high labor inputs.", means? What "high labor
inputs?"
Means they have to hire people and pay them to process and maintain the
cuttings.
Have a look at Crazysweet Stevia.
http://www.richters.com/Web_store/we...?product=X6031
&show=&prodclass=Herb_and_Vegetable_Plants&cart_id =6493232.589
Reply With Quote
phorbin
View Public Profile
Find all posts by phorbin