Yes, you can plant other flowers around tulips when their leaves are still green. Be careful not to dig into the tulip bulb when planting the new flowers. When tulip leaves are yellow and brown and drying, you can give them a small tug and they'll come free from the bulb. Don't remove them while still green - they're making food for the bulb to store for next year's blooms.
With corn, the "erect" leaves allow the crop rows to be planted closer together. This generally leads to a greater yield per acre becase more plants can be planted per acre.
you must be dumb all plants begin with 2 leaves retaurd look it up planting 101
Quite possibly they are planted too deep or need to be divided.
Leaves that turn brown usually signal a cultural problem. If an azalea is improperly planted, the roots struggle and that is reflected in the condition of the foliage. Over-watering and under-watering both result in the leaves turning brown. The trick is diagnosing the cause. Was the azalea planted in a "pot bound" condition? Does the soil not drain well? Is the azalea planted under a downspout coming off the house? Do you have an automatic watering system which is delivering too much water? The rule is to water thoroughly, but not frequently. On the other side, are you in a drought situation where supplemental watering is called for?
most stomatas shown on around the leaves
yes, if the seed is planted too deeply it may not germinate at all (conditions not met), or the seedling may run out of "food reserves" before it has had time to reach the surface and the primary leaves to open. normally the ideal planting depth is twice the diameter of the seed
you can and should separate them, as for the planting distence it depents on the type of plant.
With corn, the "erect" leaves allow the crop rows to be planted closer together. This generally leads to a greater yield per acre becase more plants can be planted per acre.
beginning of the leaves called embryo
I have a four clump white birch tree which we planted seven years ago. The tree has been beautiful and about fifteen feet tall. THis year three of the clumps did not get leaves on and the clump that did get leaves on the leaves are brown and dying. What could have happened?
I think having Nitrogen in the soil helps when planting in the soil. And decomposing leaves tend to provide for such reason.
it's because you are watering it to much
Planting a eucalyptus tree will help keep mosquitoes away. Eucalyptus leaves are covered with oil glands that produce the unmistakable smell of eucalyptus.
yes break a leaf off and put it in good planting soil
you must be dumb all plants begin with 2 leaves retaurd look it up planting 101
In at least some cases the reason is that rowan is considered protective in Celtic folk-tradition.
They both have to be planted and watered, they both need sunlight, and they have roots, stems, and leaves.