Grass will not grow wild and kill weed in hot or cold environments. Weeds will often choke out healthy grass in any temperature.
Yes, weeds appear when daffodils start to grow. The flowering plant in question (Narcissus) counts among the first indicators that spring has sprung. Springtime growth indicates that soil temperatures are at the beginning of the grow-range, whose highs and lows are reached by cold-tolerant, drought-, flood-, heat-, shade-, sun-tolerant weeds.
No cold. This is because when cold, the body and all things in it regenerate faster to produce or accumulate heat.-A.S.
no bc it doesnt have the heat and all living things need heat
In heat because the moisture in the air will make the bread mold
It may but it won't kill the weeds. It the same way hot water burns you if you get scalded by too hot a water supply from the spigot. Grass seed has a heat limit or it cooks and kills the baby.
heat from building and more water falling from roof. also winds blows seeds against walls
Boiling water can effectively kill weeds by pouring it directly on the weeds, which will cause the plants to wither and die due to the extreme heat. Be careful when handling boiling water to avoid burns and only use this method in areas where you don't want any plants to grow.
Generally the summer heat will kill rye grass that is taking over. If it doesn't get hot enough in your area you can use a non persistent-contact herbicide made for weeds, not grass, and spray the rye grass. For more information on killing rye grass, visit http://www.ehow.com/how_6127641_kill-annual-rye-grass.html.
Yes, bread mold typically grows faster in warm and moist conditions compared to cold conditions. The heat provides an ideal environment for mold spores to germinate and thrive, leading to faster growth rates.
Competition for resources and space and representation of opposites on plant utility scales is the relationship between chamomile and weeds. Chamomile is an Asteraceae family member known aesthetic, culinary and medicinal uses whereas weeds generally grow where they are not wanted by cultivators, farmers, gardeners and orchardists. Chamomile and weeds that grow near each other will be competitive for adequate heat, light, moisture and nutrient levels to survive and sufficient above- and below-ground space to take in diluted nutrients by the roots.
Not naturally, no. However it is possible to grow bananas in a cold country, as long as the growing environment is warm. In Iceland, for example, bananas are grown in a large greenhouse. The greenhouse is fed heat from pipes passing through it, which have hot spring water from the nearby volcanoes flowing through them, to heat the greenhouses.
Greenhouse window panes are used to attract solar heat