Mint grows very fast and very thick. It's also a great plant to have with many uses.
Answer
If you want a vegetable that grows quickly, you can harvest some radishes two weeks after sowing the seeds. Baby salad greens, called "micro greens" in the restaurant industry, are also harvested within a few weeks.
Technically speaking, the fastest growing plants would be grass, or a weed like dandelion. But, as far as desirable plants, some varieties of Sunflowers grow to bloom pretty quickly, mint, petunia, marigolds. If you want any plant to grow faster, use something like Miracle Gro, or Peter's fertilizer. Follow the directions or you will overfeed and kill the plant. Radishes, cress and mustard all have fast growth rates.
Restrepia antennifera, the Antennae-carrying Restrepia, is an epiphytic, miniature species of orchid found at higher altitudes in cool, moist montane forests in Venezuela, Colombia and Ecuador.
These tiny orchids lack pseudobulbs. The erect, thick, leathery leaf is elliptic-ovate in shape. The aerial roots seem like fine hairs.
The attractive flowers are 5-6 cm long. They develop one at a time at the base of the leaf. They are borne on a slender peduncle, originating from the base of the back of the leaf. The long dorsal sepal is erect, triangular at the base and ends in a somewhat thicker club-shaped tip (= clavate). They have fused lateral sepals (synsepals) which may be quite colorful : yellow, orange or tan with contrasting maroon lengthwise stripes. The long, slender, lateral petals equally end in a thickened club-shaped tip. The long lip is ovoid and widest at its apex. It shows a reddish lengthwise stripe. In rare cases, the synsepals may split, resulting in two separate sepals. The column has four pollinia.
Restrepia antennifera is well-known to orchid growers, although many other Restrepias are misidentified as "antennifera". The flower blooms for 1 to 2 weeks. They flower again and again in sequential order from the same growth.
Yes, most plants will grow at least a few centimeters within a week during their growth spurt. Some can grow several feet.
But if you are looking for something that will be an inch or taller within a week of planting from seed - as for a science project - some grasses might fill that requirement. Radish seeds can grow quickly, too
There is a member of the Mustard family called RCB (rapid-cycling brassica) Brassica rapa L. a.k.a Wisconsin Fast Plants. These have been bred to have a one month life cycle and can produce flower buds and even bloom in as little as 14 days.
A brown seed that grows in 2 weeks? Im not sure if it grows in exactly 2 weeks but a kidney bean seed seems to be what your thinking of.
no because it will not grow to full size yet, but it will be a short plant.
Well it depends on when you plant it because I planted Blue Bonnets in the summer and it took about 2 weeks to grow!!!
Restrepia antennifera
there not.
Hydroponics works about 20-30% better than plants soil growing with less problems. Plants grown in water are less likely to have pest problems.
Because most plants just in need some sunlight like they for water.
Cultivation Five or more plants --felony Incarceration 138 - 204 months --Fine variable
diet soda is best because there is less suger and suger is bad for plants
Islam is the fastest growing religion in the world. Even faster than the growth rate....
No, Bamboo is the fastest growing plant
the smaller ones are fresh meaning that they finished growing from little tiny plants. the bigger pumpkins have been growing for quite a while.
the smaller ones are fresh meaning that they finished growing from little tiny plants. the bigger pumpkins have been growing for quite a while.
It depends on your soil and climate, as well as on the particular plants and how you water them, but the answer is often less water than you think.
According to Adherents.com, the fastest growing religion in 2013 was Islam. It is thought that this might have more to do with muslim babies being counted at birth rather than actual conversions to the religion.
One possible reason is because sunlight dries out the ground (mostly during the summer) and can prevent plants from getting the moisture they need.