answer: yes, a plant that grows in sand grows stronger than a plant that grows in cotton or soil. =)
Planting in soil and cotton is not a good idea really. If you are doing a experiment then you cant rush it. If you are just planting a plant try to use soils with plant food inside of them and give it water daily.
Garlic will grow the fastest when it is grown in soil. It will grow the slowest if it is grown in sand.
No plant can grow in pure sand unless it is provided with water and nutrients.
Plants that can thrive in sandy soil include succulents, cacti, lavender, rosemary, and certain types of grasses like buffalo grass or Bermuda grass. These plants are adapted to tolerate the well-draining nature of sandy soil and can thrive in such conditions with proper care.
sand is more denser than cotton
No, plants usually grow the biggest in soil because it contains more nutritional elements under technical conditions. However, there are certain plant species which have adapted to the special conditions needed in order to grow in sand and therefore, these plants can grow bigger in sand. Moreover, there are "plant-social" reasons, e.g. when a plant is resistant to salt can grow better in sand than others which are not, so it grows alone and without "competition" and it grows better.
It grows better with soil. Soil has more Nutrients. I've done some test on it Sand doesn't really grow at all with just play sand from what I've tested.
I have sugar sand what grass will grow?
its a plant looks like sand
Uh, maybe because Sand weights more than cotton?im guessing .
Any soil that will hold water and nutrients enough to support it. Typically, cotton does best on well drained soils, which typically have a coarser texture (ie. sand). However cotton is grown everywhere from the light sands of South GA to heavy clays in Tennessee.
cause they like sand