The point I want to make is that, in caring for plants of any kind, anywhere, we shouldn’t look for one-size-fits-all advice. Instead, seek answers based on how plants actually work. The question of ‘how often should I?’ shows a very different approach. It says, let’s keep this simple, give me a schedule and I’ll follow it. Often it also means, I can’t be bothered to know more than that; if it can’t be that simple, I don’t want the plant. (Incidentally, this is why I say just water your plants when they’re clearly getting dry, because at least that’s relatively simple.) https://dirtwise.substack.com/p/why-is-houseplant-advice-so-bad
Dirt Wise
Why is Houseplant Advice So Bad?
In a realm with no experts, everyone's an expert
Forwarded from Hacker News
AP News
Study finds California condors can have "virgin births"
A new study says endangered California condors can have “’virgin births.” Researchers with the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance say genetic testing confirmed that two male chicks hatched from unfertilized eggs in 2001 and 2009 were related to their mothers.
good points about the complexity of environmentally conscious decisions https://twitter.com/Botanygeek/status/1455074854017933316?s=20
Twitter
James Wong
Wrapping broccoli in a material that slows down its respiratory rate doubles it shelf life. Going for the unwrapped version not only potentially doubles food waste (probably the greatest environmental threat to humanity), it can cause a nutrient decline of…
Forwarded from Cool Guides