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Nature and Gardening
Nature and Gardening

All things green, outdoors, and nature-y. Whether it's animals in their natural habitat, hiking trails and mountains, or planting a little garden for yourself (and everything in between), you can talk about it here.

See also our Environment community, which is focused on weather, climate, climate change, and stuff like that.

(It's not mandatory, but we also encourage providing a description of your image(s) for accessibility purposes! See here for a more detailed explanation and advice on how best to do this.)


This community's icon was made by Aaron Schneider, under the CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.

Members
6,870
Posts
435
Active Today
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Created
2 yr. ago
  • Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org
    Jim East @slrpnk.net

    Some tropical trees act as lightning rods to fend off rivals

    cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/20552909

    The fruit is edible, but there's not much food on it, so probably not worth planting outside of its native range.

  • Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org
    SPelot @lemmy.ca

    Zone 4 Gardening - 2025-04-08

    Frosty blanket of white this morning.

  • Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org
    Jim East @slrpnk.net

    Pereskia aculeata

    cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/20514746

    photos by Lumicon

    This plant should not be thriving in this environment. It is growing on compacted oxisol in an area that gets over 4 metres of rain. Yet here it is, growing completely out of control. Nothing makes sense. Climate change?

  • Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org
    Jim East @slrpnk.net

    Anyone here growing a fruit forest?

    If so, which fruits and other plants are you growing?

    What is currently producing?

    How do you manage the size of your trees?

    Do you make compost, or do you only use mulch to build soil fertility?

    Which climate are you in?

    I'm interested to know how popular fruit forests are in this community and how others are doing it.

  • Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org
    LallyLuckFarm @beehaw.org

    What's growing on, Beehaw?

    I think I need to split my tomatoes today.

    What's growing on with you all?

  • Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org
    LallyLuckFarm @beehaw.org
  • Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org
    LallyLuckFarm @beehaw.org

    What's growing on, Beehaw?

    Phenomenal cosmic power, itty bitty living space edition

    We've got thirty, maybe forty pots looking like this, with true leaves starting to appear on a bunch of the starts - only a few of the pots have any duplicate plantings. There's two pots of chamomile (pictured) and a few other herbs like sage and lavender.

    We're also growing wheat for the first time, which is pretty exciting. I've done up a few dozen plugs for the bird yard, which will be fenced this first year to protect them til they go to seed, and have a row in the vegetable patch that I'm thinking of using for seed saving purposes. If anyone's grown grains before I'm interested to hear your wisdom.

    What's growing on with you all?

  • Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org
    LallyLuckFarm @beehaw.org

    What's growing on, Beehaw?

    I accidentally let some of the Anethum get way too leggy, whoops. They're still pretty freshly germinated, so a little breeze from a fan should fix things and they should straighten up some and get a little stronger. It wasn't a big dill.

    What's growing on with you all?

  • Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org
    JohnDumpling @beehaw.org

    Tips for starting a wildflower meadow?

    Hey people! I'm located in western Slovakia (Central Europe) and would like to start a wildflower meadow sometime during the end of March or even the start of April. It is going to replace the lawn in the middle of our plot. It is in a sunny place and no chemicals have been used for ~3 years, although the ground is not super ideal for it (not nutrient-poor). My question is: will the seeds be able to germinate if I just go over the space with a verticutter? Should I try to remove the lawn fully (i. e. using a hoe)? Cover it with cardboard to let the lawn die? I have read the excellent Wild Your Garden book by The Butterfly Brothers, and they recommend rotovating. But that seems like a lot of work. What was your experience or what species would be suitable? I'm all ears!

  • Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org
    LallyLuckFarm @beehaw.org

    flood irrigation

    [Image description: A picture of plants being hand watered with a caption that reads I make them planties wet. Mark this NSFWSP - Not safe for water sensitive plants

  • Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org
    LallyLuckFarm @beehaw.org