Corn cobs are thrown into the water and become smaller bonsai in the blink of an eye
If you haven't eaten all the corn you bought in the morning market, you might as well plant it into a small pot. It's strange and beautiful p>
We just need to peel off the skin of the wrapped corn cob and insert half of the corn into the water. Whether you want to insert it vertically or horizontally, it can germinate successfully p>
The selected corn does not need to distinguish varieties, and the old and hard corn is OK. It is too tender and difficult to germinate. Think about it, the farmer uncle grows corn with hard corn kernels~
In addition to sprouting when inserted in water, you can break the corn cob in half and grow into a small bonsai when inserted in the soil p>
Throw peanuts into the potted landscape
Buy raw peanuts, leave a few peanuts before cooking, soak them in water, wait until they germinate, throw them directly on the soil and pour them through p>
It can be seen in about 5 days that there are small green buds emerging one after another. If the seeds are too dense, you can take out the non germinated peanuts and throw them away p>
It can grow into a bonsai in less than 20 days, and the lush is particularly beautiful p>
A month and a half after sowing, you can see that peanut potted plants have successively opened small yellow flowers. It is definitely a fighter in vegetable bonsai p>
Sweet potato seed soil, long leaves
Sweet potato is what people call sweet potato. Stored at home for too long and sprouted accidentally? Bury it in the soil and plant it into a bonsai p>
If you expose the germinating end to the earth and bury the other end in the earth, you can grow into a small potted plant in a week, and the leaves can also be picked for cooking p>
In addition, we can also cultivate sweet potatoes in water. The sprouting end is exposed to the water and the other end is inserted into the water. The growth is not worse than that of soil culture p>
Taro when potted, comparable to dripping Guanyin
Yes, you heard right. Taro can also be planted, and the plant type is quite large. The leaves grow up, which is comparable to dripping Guanyin. It's silly to tell p>
We throw the taro into the water. The amount of water is more than half the height of the taro. We can find a shallow flowerpot to plant, put it in a row, and fix the spare part with stones p>
Buds can be sent out in a week. The tender green leaves expand slowly from the beginning. The longer they grow, the bigger they become, and the longer they grow, the more they look like dripping Guanyin p>
If we don't want to hydroponic culture, we can also cultivate taro in soil and bury it directly in the soil without burying it too deep. The sprouted taro can show its buds, and the non sprouted taro can be covered with soil for 5 ~ 10cm p>
In addition, soil culture will grow stronger and grow into large plants in two months, with leaves up to half a meter long p>