Please tell me you're not trying to grow kudzu on purpose.
If you are located in the United States, there is a ban in most all states from any type of kudzu propagation be it commercially or privately. (from Greenwood Nursery)
The seeds INSIDE the packet should be. The packet itself is paper or foil and is of course, not alive.
Practitioners of Chinese medicine advise that apricot seed should not be given in combination with the herbs astragalus, skullcap, or kudzu root.
The answer is Kudzu, if you are doing the big crossword.
A person can determine how deep to plant a seed by reading the back of the seed packet. Generally, plants with longer roots will have to be planted further into the ground.
You start with the appropriate seed. Plant in fertile soil at the appropriate date listed on the seed packet. Water as indicated. Your seed will proceed on its own with appropriate care.
Seeds need moisture to germinate, and seed packets are dry.
Brown, green and purple are kudzu's colors. The climbing, coiling, trailing vines in question (Pueraria spp) have brown roots and seed pods and grape-scented, purple flowers. The leaflets look the darkest green of the above-ground foliage and shoots.
isoprene is in a kudzu cell
to an extent it depends on the variety, the average plant-to-fruiting period should be printed on the back of a seed packet.
WHICH SEED WOULD GROW FASTER A LITTLE SEED OR A BIG seed
what eats kudzu? Well the platasid eats the kudzu that is its natural habitat but in the U.S. bunnies and cows eat it
Kudzu can be found in Japan and Asia.