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Old 07-06-2007, 10:21 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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It's well known that Poppies thrive on disturbed ground. They pop up on road
verges after road works and on battlefields.

What is it about disturbed ground that makes this happen?


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Old 07-06-2007, 10:33 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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On Thu, 7 Jun 2007 22:21:27 +0100, CWatters wrote:

It's well known that Poppies thrive on disturbed ground. They pop up on road
verges after road works and on battlefields.

What is it about disturbed ground that makes this happen?


Hi Colin,
Bringing the seeds to the surface?

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Old 07-06-2007, 10:39 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
K K is offline
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CWatters writes
It's well known that Poppies thrive on disturbed ground. They pop up on road
verges after road works and on battlefields.

What is it about disturbed ground that makes this happen?

It's nothing about disturbed ground.

It's entirely about poppy seeds. They
a) are viable for a long time
b) are triggered into germination by light

Viable poppy seeds are widespread. When the ground is disturbed, some of
the seeds are brought to the surface and will germinate. The advantage
of this to the poppy is that they do not have to face much competition
from other plants. They are annuals - ie they grow, flower and produce
seeds in the course of a season, so by the time other plants have
colonised the bare ground, the poppies have produced their seeds, which
are now waiting in the soil for the next disturbance.


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Old 08-06-2007, 07:08 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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K wrote:

CWatters writes
It's well known that Poppies thrive on disturbed ground. They pop up on road
verges after road works and on battlefields.

What is it about disturbed ground that makes this happen?

It's nothing about disturbed ground.

It's entirely about poppy seeds. They
a) are viable for a long time
b) are triggered into germination by light

Viable poppy seeds are widespread. When the ground is disturbed, some of
the seeds are brought to the surface and will germinate. The advantage
of this to the poppy is that they do not have to face much competition
from other plants. They are annuals - ie they grow, flower and produce
seeds in the course of a season, so by the time other plants have
colonised the bare ground, the poppies have produced their seeds, which
are now waiting in the soil for the next disturbance.

I once did a sales demonstration of a plough on a farm where, the farmer
told me, he and his father had never ploughed deeper than 6 inches in
over 40 years. A visiting farmer asked me how the plough would perform
at 8" or 9". I set the plough deeper and ploughed a couple of strips at
this depth before setting the plough back to 6". That summer, right
across the middle of the field, appeared the most glorious show of
poppies in the parish. As it was in the middle of a corn field the
farmer was not amused. It was the first time they had seen poppies in
that field in all of that time.
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Old 08-06-2007, 08:22 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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"K" wrote in message
...
CWatters writes
It's well known that Poppies thrive on disturbed ground. They pop up on
road
verges after road works and on battlefields.

What is it about disturbed ground that makes this happen?

It's nothing about disturbed ground.

It's entirely about poppy seeds. They
a) are viable for a long time
b) are triggered into germination by light

Viable poppy seeds are widespread. When the ground is disturbed, some of
the seeds are brought to the surface and will germinate. The advantage of
this to the poppy is that they do not have to face much competition from
other plants. They are annuals - ie they grow, flower and produce seeds in
the course of a season, so by the time other plants have colonised the
bare ground, the poppies have produced their seeds, which are now waiting
in the soil for the next disturbance.


Therefore it is to do with disturbed ground.

Steve


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