Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Do hyacinths propagate?
We have two water hyacinths in our new pond and they seem to be doing
well. They have doubled in size and appear healthy but have not bloomed yet. Will they propagate? If so, how? TIA John |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Do hyacinths propagate?
We have two water hyacinths in our new pond and they seem to be doing well. They have doubled in size and appear healthy but have not bloomed yet. Will they propagate? If so, how? They propagate by runners, water hyacints will take over even a large pond in just a few weeks under the right circumstances. Moon remove nospam from e-mail to send to me, I grow trees in aquariums like bonsai. I breed dwarf crayfish, great for planted community tanks. If you can get me a shovelnose sturgeon fingerling (Scaphirhynchus platorynchus) no wild caught please, contact me |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Do hyacinths propagate?
They will send out rhizome, and new stem form from that. Soon, you'll
have to thin them because they take over the pond. Flowers are for show. I haven't seen any new stems from them. John Bachman wrote: We have two water hyacinths in our new pond and they seem to be doing well. They have doubled in size and appear healthy but have not bloomed yet. Will they propagate? If so, how? TIA John |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Do hyacinths propagate?
Does a bear fertilize the flora in a forest? If they are growing at all they will send out puppies. --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.488 / Virus Database: 287 - Release Date: 6/5/03 |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Do hyacinths propagate?
On Sun, 15 Jun 2003 07:10:07 -0400, John Bachman
wrote: We have two water hyacinths in our new pond and they seem to be doing well. They have doubled in size and appear healthy but have not bloomed yet. Will they propagate? If so, how? If you're in the south, Water hyacinth will become a creeping monster. It's super-agressive, and smothers huge lakes and waterways. If you decide to remove it, put it on concrete until it turns brown. It's a very harmful alien plant, and we wouldn't want to spread it. Bob |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Do hyacinths propagate?
[original post is likely clipped to save bandwidth]
On Sun, 15 Jun 2003 07:10:07 -0400, John Bachman wrote: We have two water hyacinths in our new pond and they seem to be doing well. They have doubled in size and appear healthy but have not bloomed yet. Will they propagate? If so, how? They need warmth to take off (and some potash if you have fish, full fertilizer if not). They suck nutrients up like crazy - The University of Vermont has even experimented with them in "green houses" to scrub sewage. VT is too cold for them to survive in the winter and most lakes are too cool for them to spread very much in one summer. Thus they are no treat as an invasive species in VT. They are illegal in many southern states - in FL, one plant can have 3 million offspring in one season via natural vegetative reproduction! They normally propagate via multiple side sprouts, each growing one pant which quickly starts sending out it's own sprouts. I don't know if "sprouts" is the correct word, it isn't "runner" because only one plant forms from each, it isn't rizome since there is no food storage in the "sprout". In MA Z6, mine just sit there until things warm up. Usually by later July I'm composting them by the bushel. gerry -- Personal home page - http://gogood.com gerry misspelled in my email address to confuse robots |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Do hyacinths propagate?
"gerry" wrote in message ... They need warmth to take off (and some potash if you have fish, full fertilizer if not). They suck nutrients up like crazy - The University of Vermont has even experimented with them in "green houses" to scrub sewage. VT is too cold for them to survive in the winter and most lakes are too cool for them to spread very much in one summer. Thus they are no treat as an invasive species in VT. Where do you find fertilizer that has a low nitrogen and low phosphorus content, and is fairly high in potash? Sameer -- Sameer change the two in my email address to a 2, when replying |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
Do hyacinths propagate?
In article nk.net,
"Snooze" wrote: "gerry" wrote in message ... They need warmth to take off (and some potash if you have fish, full fertilizer if not). They suck nutrients up like crazy - The University of Vermont has even experimented with them in "green houses" to scrub sewage. VT is too cold for them to survive in the winter and most lakes are too cool for them to spread very much in one summer. Thus they are no treat as an invasive species in VT. Where do you find fertilizer that has a low nitrogen and low phosphorus content, and is fairly high in potash? Sameer If you don't need much, Flora Fin by Tetra is Potash. Otherwise, you can get rock form from a water conditioning co. WH seem to flower best if you contain them into a overcrowded space. jay Sun, Jun 15, 2003 -- Legend insists that as he finished his abject... Galileo muttered under his breath: "Nevertheless, it does move." |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
Do hyacinths propagate?
I had one hyacinth 2 weeks ago and now it has spread out and made two more plants. I can see where i am going to be killing some off. On Sun, 15 Jun 2003 11:59:34 -0400, gerry wrote: [original post is likely clipped to save bandwidth] On Sun, 15 Jun 2003 07:10:07 -0400, John Bachman wrote: We have two water hyacinths in our new pond and they seem to be doing well. They have doubled in size and appear healthy but have not bloomed yet. Will they propagate? If so, how? They need warmth to take off (and some potash if you have fish, full fertilizer if not). They suck nutrients up like crazy - The University of Vermont has even experimented with them in "green houses" to scrub sewage. VT is too cold for them to survive in the winter and most lakes are too cool for them to spread very much in one summer. Thus they are no treat as an invasive species in VT. They are illegal in many southern states - in FL, one plant can have 3 million offspring in one season via natural vegetative reproduction! They normally propagate via multiple side sprouts, each growing one pant which quickly starts sending out it's own sprouts. I don't know if "sprouts" is the correct word, it isn't "runner" because only one plant forms from each, it isn't rizome since there is no food storage in the "sprout". In MA Z6, mine just sit there until things warm up. Usually by later July I'm composting them by the bushel. gerry |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
Do hyacinths propagate?
Float them...they'll come!
-- ______________________________________________ See our pond at: home.bellsouth.net\p\pwp-jameshurley Check out Jog-A-Thon fundraiser (clears $140+ per child) at: jogathon.net ______________________________________________ "John Bachman" wrote in message ... We have two water hyacinths in our new pond and they seem to be doing well. They have doubled in size and appear healthy but have not bloomed yet. Will they propagate? If so, how? TIA John |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
Do hyacinths propagate?
HAH, that could be the understatement of the year......last summer I pulled
them out with two hands and my feet wedged against the rocks to get a good pull.....a battle.....I can only imagine how destructive they are down south. Maureen |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
Do hyacinths propagate?
Water hyacinths exhibit two major forms of propagation: vegetative
reproduction occurs when daughter plants are formed along stolons (runners), and under ideal conditions rates of new plant production are unbelievable; sexual reproduction is achieved through seed production. Never release water hyacinths into the wild, and make sure they are legal to possess in your state. John Bachman wrote: We have two water hyacinths in our new pond and they seem to be doing well. They have doubled in size and appear healthy but have not bloomed yet. Will they propagate? If so, how? TIA John |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
Do hyacinths propagate?
[original post is likely clipped to save bandwidth]
On Sun, 15 Jun 2003 16:31:11 GMT, "Snooze" wrote: "gerry" wrote in message .. . They need warmth to take off (and some potash if you have fish, full fertilizer if not). They suck nutrients up like crazy - The University of Vermont has even experimented with them in "green houses" to scrub sewage. VT is too cold for them to survive in the winter and most lakes are too cool for them to spread very much in one summer. Thus they are no treat as an invasive species in VT. Where do you find fertilizer that has a low nitrogen and low phosphorus content, and is fairly high in potash? I add just potash, 0-0-60. Just about any good garden center has it in 5 lb bags. You don't need much. gerry -- Personal home page - http://gogood.com gerry misspelled in my email address to confuse robots |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
Do hyacinths propagate?
If you give them lots of sun they will EXPLODE. We went on vacation last
summer and when we came back 2 weeks later the whole pond was chock full of them. However, with little sun I find they grow much much slower. John Bachman wrote: We have two water hyacinths in our new pond and they seem to be doing well. They have doubled in size and appear healthy but have not bloomed yet. Will they propagate? If so, how? TIA John |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
Do hyacinths propagate?
I can't get them to grow no matter what I do!
D.S. "Michael Shaffer" wrote in message ... If you give them lots of sun they will EXPLODE. We went on vacation last summer and when we came back 2 weeks later the whole pond was chock full of them. However, with little sun I find they grow much much slower. John Bachman wrote: We have two water hyacinths in our new pond and they seem to be doing well. They have doubled in size and appear healthy but have not bloomed yet. Will they propagate? If so, how? TIA John |
Reply |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Propagate Jasmine? | United Kingdom | |||
Do locusts propagate via root cuttings | Plant Science | |||
when do swords propagate? | Freshwater Aquaria Plants | |||
when do swords propagate? | Freshwater Aquaria Plants | |||
Evergreen Clematis Armandi - propagate? | Gardening |