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honestlydeepesttidalwave:

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asterismsandmoonlight:

herbwicc:

Growing Herbs in Water

Growing herbs in water makes it easier to control your plants growth conditions, it takes up less space, and produces bigger and healthier plants.  Easiest/most common herbs to grow in water from cuttings (propagate) are lemon-balm, mints, basil, sage, thyme, and oregano. Rosemary also works, but will take longer to sprout roots. Herbs like ginger, turmeric, and garlic might not do very well. 

To start, you’ll need:

- A jar/ container

- Tap or bottled water (avoid distilled water)

- Liquid plant food

- Rooting hormone 

- Herb stems 

Cutting Stems:

Choose a stem that is a good 4-6" tall, and looks healthy and strong, and cut it below a leaf joint. You can also buy cut herb stems in the produce section of your grocery store. A good example:

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Next, strip the bottom leaves so that about ½-¾ of the stem is bare.

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Then use scissors to make a slanted cut right below the lowest leaf joint. The area that the leaves grow out of, leaf joints or nodes, have a lot of meristem cells, which form a callus over the cut and sprouts roots. And cutting at a slanted angle increases the surface area for both water and nutrient uptake.

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After this, place the stem in a jar of (not distilled) water, and place the jar somewhere moderately sunny (depending on the needs of the herb). (Source for pictures)

You don’t NEED to do much else after this, but it would likely appreciate some help. Add a rooting hormone to the water, which will stimulate the stem to grow roots and contains a fungicide to prevent the cut from rotting. You can buy a premade rooting hormone, such as this one, or you can make your own using willow twigs. Here’s a DIY.

Also, plants usually get their nutrients from the soil, but since we aren’t using soil here, we will have to provide nutrients for the plant by adding it to the water. Again, this is something that many people do well without, but it will likely give better results. You don’t need much, certainly not as one would with an entire hydroponics system with a nutrient reservoir. Just add a drop or two when the roots start growing (about two weeks in), and maybe once a month after that when you change out the water. You can buy liquid plant food like this one.

Finally, changing the water can depend on what plant you have, such as lemon balm which needs to have its water changed weekly. If you are using an opaque container, algae won’t form as quickly as it would in a clear one, and doesn’t need to be changed quite as often. Generally, more or less every three weeks or when the water is a bit murky should be fine. Done! 

Some plants do not even need rooting hormone. Such as:

- Mint (All types)

- Lemon Balm

- Strawberries (runners will create their own roots if you put them in soil and water for a week, clip when there are roots)

- Green onions

- Lettuce

*As long as the water is fresh and changed every other day. You are going to get plants from these.

Definitely! Those root so quickly and easily, it’s really fun and rewarding to watch :)

rarecultcinema:
“Shock Waves (1977)
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rarecultcinema:

Shock Waves (1977)

adrianjune:

thatpettyblackgirl:

Leaders who made an unannounced visit to a border Patrol Center in El-Paso found 950 immigrants smashed into a facility that only has a capacity for 125 people. 

This is evil. Beyond evil. Completely monstrous! Heartbreaking. 

THESE ARE PEOPLE!

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Source from May 31, 2019

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/31/us/el-paso-border-overcrowding.html

Straight from the article

  • “Investigators found 155 people in a cell that was supposed to hold 35, and 41 people in a cell that was supposed to hold eight. Nine hundred people were being held at the center on one day in May — far exceeding its capacity of 125.”
How Food Looks Before It’s Harvested.

gallusrostromegalus:

elodieunderglass:

kawuli:

elodieunderglass:

biochromium:

pr1nceshawn:

Sesame Seeds

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Cranberry

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Pineapple

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Peanut

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Cashew

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Pistachio

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Brussel Sprouts

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Cacao

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Vanilla

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Saffron

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Kiwi

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Pomegranate

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exactly 1 minute ago i had absolutely no idea what the plants sesame seeds and peanuts came from look like and i am shocked and surprised

for some reason every time I see pineapples growing I laugh out loud. Like, the punchline is it’s a pineapple!!!!!!!!! it’s a pineapple

An Interesting Fact About Peanuts, while we’re on the topic of food-plants:

Peanuts-you-eat grow underground, but they are NOT part of the peanut plant’s roots. Peanut plants are ambitious little fuckers and plant their seeds themselves. They flower like any perfectly reasonable legume, but once the flowers have been pollinated the plants do something called “pegging” (no really), in which they drill the stems where the flowers used to be into the ground. And that’s where the peanuts you eat form. Like so:

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(src)

I’m going to pull myself together to endorse this Extremely Interesting Fact, but it’s going to be a real struggle

Ain’t botany fun?

gahdamnpunk:

Louder for the people in the back 🗣🗣

A man must cling to the belief that the incomprehensible is comprehensible; otherwise he would not try to fathom it.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Maxims and Reflections (via philosophybits)
doronjosama:
“This week’s nails: Wet'n'Wild I Moss Ask You a Question moss green with Wet'n'Wild Kaleidoscope glitter on top. #thisweeksnails #shortnails #diynails #mynails #nailpolish #wetnwild #imossaskyouaquestion #green #kaleidoscope #glitter...

doronjosama:

This week’s nails: Wet'n'Wild I Moss Ask You a Question moss green with Wet'n'Wild Kaleidoscope glitter on top. #thisweeksnails #shortnails #diynails #mynails #nailpolish #wetnwild #imossaskyouaquestion #green #kaleidoscope #glitter #drugstorebeauty #cheapasschic #cheapmakeup #girly #moonprismpowermakeup
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