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Hope Munro Smith 18-05-2003 04:56 PM

Lucky bamboo at Hong Kong market
 
Hello,

I went to Hong Kong supermarket yesterday to add to my collection
of lucky bamboo. The prices are really great! The curly bamboo,
which is my favorite, is only $7 per stem! They have lots of it
too, plus the regular straight kind. The stems are very lush
and healthy.

until soon, Hope

G a e X a v i er 18-05-2003 06:20 PM

Lucky bamboo at Hong Kong market
 
The top died off of one of my little canes and I cut the brown part off
at a segment, but have no leaf there. Do you have any secrets about
getting them to take root and sprout leaves.

A pinch of fertilizer maybe? Kind? Thanks. Gae

Hope Munro Smith wrote:

Hello,

I went to Hong Kong supermarket yesterday to add to my collection
of lucky bamboo. The prices are really great! The curly bamboo,
which is my favorite, is only $7 per stem! They have lots of it
too, plus the regular straight kind. The stems are very lush
and healthy.

until soon, Hope



Hope Munro Smith 18-05-2003 06:56 PM

Lucky bamboo at Hong Kong market
 
One of mine has the same problem. I'll see if I can find
some information and I'll pass it along!

In article ,
G a e X a v i er wrote:

The top died off of one of my little canes and I cut the brown part off
at a segment, but have no leaf there. Do you have any secrets about
getting them to take root and sprout leaves.

A pinch of fertilizer maybe? Kind? Thanks. Gae

Hope Munro Smith wrote:

Hello,

I went to Hong Kong supermarket yesterday to add to my collection
of lucky bamboo. The prices are really great! The curly bamboo,
which is my favorite, is only $7 per stem! They have lots of it
too, plus the regular straight kind. The stems are very lush
and healthy.

until soon, Hope



Hope Munro Smith 18-05-2003 07:20 PM

Lucky bamboo at Hong Kong market
 
In article ,
G a e X a v i er wrote:

The top died off of one of my little canes and I cut the brown part off
at a segment, but have no leaf there. Do you have any secrets about
getting them to take root and sprout leaves.

A pinch of fertilizer maybe? Kind? Thanks. Gae


Ok, here are some tips I've found online:



The Lucky Bamboo is a distinctive and beautiful tropical plant that has
naked branches ending in tufts of sword-shaped leaves. Its stalk won't
grow any taller once cut, as it's the leaves of the plant that grow and
slowly develop into stalks themselves. Once a leaf has developed into a
stalk, it can be clipped at its base -- where it was sprouted -- and
placed in distilled water to start more bamboo.


The "parent" stalk in turn produces more little leaf sprouts. If a piece
of Lucky Bamboo starts turning yellow, clip below the infected area or
above, as it may start from the bottom. Then simply discard that portion
of the yellow stalk. Because it is relatively long-lived and easy to
care for, the Lucky Bamboo is a great low-maintenance, high-value gift
idea!

---

So it sounds like another leaf will grow in the place of the old one.
I've noticed they do grow pretty slowly. Last year one did turn
yellow and mushy -- the advice I got was to throw it away, which is what
I did.

As for roots, I don't thinks it's a problem if they grow slowly.
Another site recommended changing the water by putting the container
under the faucet and running out the old water, as opposed to disturbing
the plants every time. You *are* keeping them in water, not soil?

animaux 18-05-2003 11:32 PM

Lucky bamboo at Hong Kong market
 
I have to laugh! Before us westerners started buying lucky bamboo (really
dracena and not bamboo) they only charged about two dollars for a very large
straight OR curly stem.

I love that store and think everyone should try a mung bean cake. Great stuff.


On Sun, 18 May 2003 16:04:39 GMT, Hope Munro Smith wrote:

Hello,

I went to Hong Kong supermarket yesterday to add to my collection
of lucky bamboo. The prices are really great! The curly bamboo,
which is my favorite, is only $7 per stem! They have lots of it
too, plus the regular straight kind. The stems are very lush
and healthy.

until soon, Hope



Hope Munro Smith 19-05-2003 08:56 PM

Lucky bamboo at Hong Kong market
 
LOL, I'm sure they did!

animaux wrote in
:

I have to laugh! Before us westerners started buying lucky bamboo
(really dracena and not bamboo) they only charged about two dollars
for a very large straight OR curly stem.

I love that store and think everyone should try a mung bean cake.
Great stuff.


On Sun, 18 May 2003 16:04:39 GMT, Hope Munro Smith
wrote:

Hello,

I went to Hong Kong supermarket yesterday to add to my collection
of lucky bamboo. The prices are really great! The curly bamboo,
which is my favorite, is only $7 per stem! They have lots of it
too, plus the regular straight kind. The stems are very lush
and healthy.

until soon, Hope




Hope Munro Smith 19-05-2003 11:44 PM

Lucky bamboo at Hong Kong market
 
By the way, have you found a store that sells the lucky charms you can hang
on your lucky bamboo? I found a site online, but it's wholesale. I don't
need 25 charms, just a few!

animaux wrote in
:

I have to laugh! Before us westerners started buying lucky bamboo
(really dracena and not bamboo) they only charged about two dollars
for a very large straight OR curly stem.

I love that store and think everyone should try a mung bean cake.
Great stuff.


On Sun, 18 May 2003 16:04:39 GMT, Hope Munro Smith
wrote:

Hello,

I went to Hong Kong supermarket yesterday to add to my collection
of lucky bamboo. The prices are really great! The curly bamboo,
which is my favorite, is only $7 per stem! They have lots of it
too, plus the regular straight kind. The stems are very lush
and healthy.

until soon, Hope





Rusty Mase 20-05-2003 12:32 AM

Lucky bamboo at Hong Kong market
 
On Sun, 18 May 2003 22:34:42 GMT, animaux
wrote:

I love that store and think everyone should try a mung bean cake. Great stuff.


Reminds me of the John Prine song that quotes,

"This times she was a-goin too far"

Mung beans?

Rusty (no mug beans, please) Mase


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animaux 20-05-2003 01:44 PM

Lucky bamboo at Hong Kong market
 
I'm not familiar with the charms. When you go back to Hong Kong Market, ask
them. Sometimes they sell things which are not always out in the open.

I wanted a Baqua mirror. It was not in the showcase so I asked and out came the
8 sided mirror!

V


On Mon, 19 May 2003 22:28:50 +0000 (UTC), Hope Munro Smith
wrote:

By the way, have you found a store that sells the lucky charms you can hang
on your lucky bamboo? I found a site online, but it's wholesale. I don't
need 25 charms, just a few!

animaux wrote in
:

I have to laugh! Before us westerners started buying lucky bamboo
(really dracena and not bamboo) they only charged about two dollars
for a very large straight OR curly stem.

I love that store and think everyone should try a mung bean cake.
Great stuff.


On Sun, 18 May 2003 16:04:39 GMT, Hope Munro Smith
wrote:

Hello,

I went to Hong Kong supermarket yesterday to add to my collection
of lucky bamboo. The prices are really great! The curly bamboo,
which is my favorite, is only $7 per stem! They have lots of it
too, plus the regular straight kind. The stems are very lush
and healthy.

until soon, Hope





animaux 20-05-2003 01:44 PM

Lucky bamboo at Hong Kong market
 
On Mon, 19 May 2003 18:24:37 -0500, Rusty Mase wrote:

On Sun, 18 May 2003 22:34:42 GMT, animaux
wrote:

I love that store and think everyone should try a mung bean cake. Great stuff.


Reminds me of the John Prine song that quotes,

"This times she was a-goin too far"

Mung beans?

Rusty (no mug beans, please) Mase


Sure, mung beans! I sprout them among 20 different other types of seeds for my
parrot! If it's good for my parrot, it's good for me.

v

Hope Munro Smith 20-05-2003 11:32 PM

Lucky bamboo at Hong Kong market
 
animaux wrote in
:

On Mon, 19 May 2003 18:24:37 -0500, Rusty Mase
wrote:

On Sun, 18 May 2003 22:34:42 GMT, animaux
wrote:

I love that store and think everyone should try a mung bean cake.
Great stuff.


Reminds me of the John Prine song that quotes,

"This times she was a-goin too far"

Mung beans?

Rusty (no mug beans, please) Mase


Sure, mung beans! I sprout them among 20 different other types of
seeds for my parrot! If it's good for my parrot, it's good for me.

v


Is a mung bean cake sweet or savory?

Hope Munro Smith 20-05-2003 11:32 PM

Lucky bamboo at Hong Kong market
 
LOL, ok I believe you! I'm not sure when I'll get over there again but
I'll let you know what happens.

animaux wrote in
:

I'm not familiar with the charms. When you go back to Hong Kong
Market, ask them. Sometimes they sell things which are not always out
in the open.

I wanted a Baqua mirror. It was not in the showcase so I asked and
out came the 8 sided mirror!

V


On Mon, 19 May 2003 22:28:50 +0000 (UTC), Hope Munro Smith
wrote:

By the way, have you found a store that sells the lucky charms you can
hang on your lucky bamboo? I found a site online, but it's wholesale.
I don't need 25 charms, just a few!

animaux wrote in
m:

I have to laugh! Before us westerners started buying lucky bamboo
(really dracena and not bamboo) they only charged about two dollars
for a very large straight OR curly stem.

I love that store and think everyone should try a mung bean cake.
Great stuff.


On Sun, 18 May 2003 16:04:39 GMT, Hope Munro Smith
wrote:

Hello,

I went to Hong Kong supermarket yesterday to add to my collection
of lucky bamboo. The prices are really great! The curly bamboo,
which is my favorite, is only $7 per stem! They have lots of it
too, plus the regular straight kind. The stems are very lush
and healthy.

until soon, Hope






animaux 21-05-2003 01:44 PM

Lucky bamboo at Hong Kong market
 
On Tue, 20 May 2003 22:16:49 +0000 (UTC), Hope Munro Smith
wrote:

Is a mung bean cake sweet or savory?


It's a sweet. During the Moon Festival the Asian people make moon cakes.
Usually this is a similar cake, but with a whole egg yolk in the center to
represent the moon.

The common ordinary ones come in packs of four by the register. Make sure they
feel a bit soft to the touch or they may not be fresh. They are two dollars.

V

Hope Munro Smith 21-05-2003 07:44 PM

Lucky bamboo at Hong Kong market
 
animaux wrote in
:

On Tue, 20 May 2003 22:16:49 +0000 (UTC), Hope Munro Smith
wrote:

Is a mung bean cake sweet or savory?


It's a sweet. During the Moon Festival the Asian people make moon
cakes. Usually this is a similar cake, but with a whole egg yolk in
the center to represent the moon.

The common ordinary ones come in packs of four by the register. Make
sure they feel a bit soft to the touch or they may not be fresh. They
are two dollars.

V


Thanks for the tip. I'll let you know what I turn up in for lucky bamboo
accessories, etc.

Carol Adams 24-05-2003 10:57 PM

Lucky bamboo at Hong Kong market
 
Rooting hormone works wonders for getting cuttings to root. You can get it
at any garden store for $5 - $6.

carol

"Hope Munro Smith" wrote in message
...
One of mine has the same problem. I'll see if I can find
some information and I'll pass it along!

In article ,
G a e X a v i er wrote:

The top died off of one of my little canes and I cut the brown part off
at a segment, but have no leaf there. Do you have any secrets about
getting them to take root and sprout leaves.

A pinch of fertilizer maybe? Kind? Thanks. Gae

Hope Munro Smith wrote:

Hello,

I went to Hong Kong supermarket yesterday to add to my collection
of lucky bamboo. The prices are really great! The curly bamboo,
which is my favorite, is only $7 per stem! They have lots of it
too, plus the regular straight kind. The stems are very lush
and healthy.

until soon, Hope






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