here are some pictures..
The first is passiflora caerula that I got a few weeks back..I grew this a few years ago as well and it took over a whole area completely and survived a the winters as well and kept real green..grows well here in canada at least on the west coast here in zone 8.
The next one is acacia acuminata, growing in a pot outdoors. This one is like 6-8 weeks old now..it is a slow growing tree apparently..and you can see that one green spot on the stem where the rest is purple..that is where I snapped it when moving it from a little peat pellot to where it is now..I also busted part of the tap root off..that was like 5 or 6 weeks ago and it has recovered well and grown about double the size since then so hopefully this one has survivor genes..I will be doing some more acuminata both outdoors for half the year and indoors all year to see how each differs..
The 3rd photo is of one of my mimosa hostilis trees that is outdoors for the summer..you can see how near the bottom it lost some leaf in the winter before it went outdoors..and you can also see some of the leaf yellowing..all my mimosa trees seem to have gotten burnt durring a hot spell we just had on some parts so I stuck them in a shadier spot and cut them back..this one was about double the size but the top got all burnt and I want them to bush out anyway so I cut them all back. I just started some more mimosa's as well and will be experimenting with different growing conditions.
The last 2 photos are of phalaris brachystachys I started a little while ago outdoors. As you can see some of the grass is stringy and yellow while there is newer grass comming up with nice and thick green leaf blades..I had this grass in full sun most of the day to start and it seems to have hated that..within 3 days of being in the for the afternoon it started to put out this new growth..so this grass apparently does not like full sun all day unless maybe it is filtered though a window or something.
The first is passiflora caerula that I got a few weeks back..I grew this a few years ago as well and it took over a whole area completely and survived a the winters as well and kept real green..grows well here in canada at least on the west coast here in zone 8.
The next one is acacia acuminata, growing in a pot outdoors. This one is like 6-8 weeks old now..it is a slow growing tree apparently..and you can see that one green spot on the stem where the rest is purple..that is where I snapped it when moving it from a little peat pellot to where it is now..I also busted part of the tap root off..that was like 5 or 6 weeks ago and it has recovered well and grown about double the size since then so hopefully this one has survivor genes..I will be doing some more acuminata both outdoors for half the year and indoors all year to see how each differs..
The 3rd photo is of one of my mimosa hostilis trees that is outdoors for the summer..you can see how near the bottom it lost some leaf in the winter before it went outdoors..and you can also see some of the leaf yellowing..all my mimosa trees seem to have gotten burnt durring a hot spell we just had on some parts so I stuck them in a shadier spot and cut them back..this one was about double the size but the top got all burnt and I want them to bush out anyway so I cut them all back. I just started some more mimosa's as well and will be experimenting with different growing conditions.
The last 2 photos are of phalaris brachystachys I started a little while ago outdoors. As you can see some of the grass is stringy and yellow while there is newer grass comming up with nice and thick green leaf blades..I had this grass in full sun most of the day to start and it seems to have hated that..within 3 days of being in the for the afternoon it started to put out this new growth..so this grass apparently does not like full sun all day unless maybe it is filtered though a window or something.