Garden Pictures Chat Corner

  • Erstellt am 2019-04-22 22:51:16

Tolentino

2022-09-05 10:47:32
  • #1
Who have I excluded or ridiculed? Yes, they changed the colors, but not from green to red, rather they introduced a different color spectrum with more gradations in general.

The site I mean does not make predictions. It verifies and falsifies claims and exposes grievances, by the way, initially independent of political camps.

No scientist has ever claimed that a vaccination provides 100% immunity! But it reduces the probability of falling ill and mitigates the course of the disease, so that the probability especially for risk groups increases to get through somewhat unharmed.

I think in a garden thread it’s also allowed to talk about climate (change), that totally belongs to it.

For example the question whether in view of climate change it might not make sense to deviate from the rule to only plant native plants? Doesn’t it make sense to include, for example, Mediterranean plants in your garden planning, especially where some species already settle independently in nature as neophytes...

Then you also wouldn’t have to water so much.
 

Snowy36

2022-09-05 11:02:28
  • #2

No thanks, that was the one where the man works at Merck.
But who cares about that nowadays anyway.
 

Snowy36

2022-09-05 11:04:44
  • #3

As I said, I didn’t mean anyone personally here, I’m concerned about the general mechanism.

But I find your suggestion regarding plant selection very appropriate here. Which plants should one, for example, definitely avoid taking dryness into account?
 

Tolentino

2022-09-05 11:10:49
  • #4
I don't really know much about it either, but I guess everything with big leaves that needs a lot of water. Unfortunately probably also bamboo, actually my absolute favorite garden plant. Does anyone know an alternative that looks similar but doesn't require so much water?
 

Snowy36

2022-09-05 11:21:14
  • #5
My hydrangeas have strangely survived quite well, I also thought they needed a lot of water…
 

Myrna_Loy

2022-09-05 11:25:03
  • #6
There are some tall grasses that can tolerate steppe climates.
 
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