It isn't possible for pods to form without the plant having at some time bloomed. The pods are formed from the flower. The plant should bloom in late spring or mid summer for about three weeks. What may be possible is that the pods are from another year and the plant has now failed to flower. This can happen if the soil is too rich, especially in nitrogen.
Another possibility is that the petal parts have been eaten by some pest, but the lower parts of the flower were not and so went on to produce the pods.
anal bloom? ask your doctor.
No, plant cells are not simple in design. They have complex structures and organelles that perform specific functions, such as chloroplasts for photosynthesis and mitochondria for respiration. These processes require intricate biochemical pathways and interactions within the cell.
African violet is a flowering plant that can bloom indoors year-round with proper care. It thrives in bright, indirect light and moderate temperatures. The plant requires regular watering and well-draining soil to keep it healthy and colorful.
Mixing orange and indigo would result in a shade of brown or dark gray, depending on the proportions of each color used.
The plant would die. Chloroplast turns light into energy and without energy the plant would eventually die.
The scientific or taxonomic name would be Baptisiaspp.
indigo, rice
indigo plant or the war
The scientific or taxonomic name would be Baptisiaspp.
Any number of reasons. It may have been exposed to cooler weather longer or maybe a younger plant. It will also depend on the amount of sunlight the plant receives each day.
Bloom
An indigo teen would be an indigo child, just as it grows up into a teenager.
Spring's first bloom
That would depend on which season the plant is meant for, planting in fall for spring means you wait untill spring, If you plant summer seeds in summer; about 2 weeks.
indigoes or just indigo...and why would you need the plural form of indigo??Weird.Hope I helped! :)
If it is idoors the atmosphere is too dry' If outdoors the roots are dry. The first thing a plant under stress will do is cast its buds.
Well, 12 of your tulips did not bloom. So in order to get at least 95 to bloom, plant about 12 more then 95, which would be 107. You could also plant more then 107 tulips just in case more then 12 happen to die. This would make sure that you have at least 95 tulips. I disagree with the methodology used above. The success rate in the past is 62/74 = 0.84, or 84%. To get a crop of 95 blooming plants, you would need to plant 0.84/95 = 113.4 tulips. Since you can't plant 0.4 plants, you would need to plant at least 114 plants to expect to get 95 successful blooming plants, assuming that conditions are similar in the future crop and the past crop (not a trivial assumption at all). -- Jen70563