When a daffodil sprouts and puts out leaves, stem and finally a bud depends entirely on the soil temperature. There is no set germination like you would find with summer annuals or veggies in your garden. Once the bulb starts to produce vegetation, it takes about 20 days before you get the bud and possibly a flower.
The seeds can develop into bulbs that produce a small flower in three years if you tend them carefully and have them growing in good soil. Generally, you can depend on having flowers after four years. Don't have any weeds growing in the area you plant the seeds because they they look like sprouts of grass when they start out - so you don't want to mistakenly pull them out.
The daffodil gets its food through photosynthesis. When the plant has leaves, it is making its food through the interaction between chlorophyll in its leaves and sunlight. It uses this food during the flowering process and stores some of the food in the bulb underground. The following year, the bulb will use this food to send new shoots up through the soil to develop a new green plant.
A hartstongue is a type of fern that has long, strap-like fronds, while a daffodil is a type of flowering plant from the Narcissus genus that produces yellow or white trumpet-shaped flowers. Hartstongues are non-flowering plants, while daffodils are flowering plants.
Venus Flytraps do have small white flowers but the traps form at the tips of the leaves and are not flowers. The traps are presumed to have developed from an ancestor that resembled the Sundew.
It depends on the variety. Some varieties take 90 days to produce fruit from seed, others take 120 days. Bloom is also influenced by the amount of water/food/sunlight the plant receives. Also, it's a curcubit, so it has male and female flowers. Male flowers tend to form first and these do not produce.
yes, garlic is a member of the onion family (Alium) and produce flowering umbles
Colorful flowers attract pollinators like bees and hummingbirds. The pollinators carry pollen from plant to plant, allowing them to be fertilized. While some flowers seem very plain and unappealing to humans they may have markers on the petals that reflect ultraviolet or infra red light which may be more visible to insects and birds. Other flowers produce a "reward" to pollinators in the form of nectar. Some flowers are shaped specifically to take advantage of specific insect or animal pollinators; flowers with extremely long tubular-shapes are normally pollinated by butterflies or moths as they are the only insects that have mouth parts long enough to reach the nectar glands at the base of the flower. Other plants such as "carrion flowers" produce the smell of rotting flesh to attract insects such as carrion flies and beetles to assist with pollination. Once fertilized, the plant can produce seed and/ or fruit which are then distributed to produce more plants.
The long stem of a plant from which leaves and flowers grow is called the main stem or the stalk. This part of the plant provides support and transports water, nutrients, and sugars to the leaves and flowers to help them grow and develop.
Yes, long bean plants do produce flowers. The flowers are usually white or light purple in color and are followed by the development of long bean pods.
Generally, yes. The flower will continue to produce nectar as long as it is fresh and there is sufficient water at the plant roots.
The flowering begins after 8-12 weeks. The buds are ready to be harvested when you can see the flowers dripping or oozing. After that, it's a long process to dry and cure the herb properly. Skipping the long method in order to save time will ruin the plant and make it worthless.
After the daffodil flowers have faded, the plant needs to restore the nutrients that were used, so it can bloom the next year. The leaves must remain as stay green for this to happen. It takes about 4 weeks. When the leaves begin to turn yellow, you can cut the leaves off.