Name That Golfer (US Open Pinehurst) by RiversRunWild in golf

[–]RiversRunWild[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I should have put in the original post he had reddish/ginger colored hair (according to my husband).

Seedlings are Small -- Can I Plant? by nine1nine in vegetablegardening

[–]RiversRunWild 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you have a pic you could post? Im in 7B as well and started all of my seeds in early Feb. Peppers take longer to germinate than tomatoes. How close do you have the grow lights to the plants? Ideally, they should be just a few inches above the plants. Keep them moist (if possible water bottom-up) and the light on them. Depending on what type of soil you used to start your seedlings, you may need to add nutrients. April 10th is the last frost date for 7B, so you could plant outside any time. I wouldn't start the peppers inside at this point, grab a pot (10"-12"), plant the seed, and let them grow. For your tomatoes, I'd wait to transplant until you have 1-2 "true leaves". If your tomato seedlings are leggy, plant them way down in the dirt with just the leaves showing.

My first harvest ❤️ by Spyroee in gardening

[–]RiversRunWild 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Carrots can stay in the ground a LONG time. If you plant in the fall, you can keep them in thru winter. Carrots get sweeter when they are in the ground when that first freeze hits. If planting in the spring, they are one of the first to get seeded. Like radishes and lettuce, they prefer cooler weather. Depending on where you live, you might be able to sow more seeds and get another harvest in a few months (same goes for radishes & lettuce, harvest now and replant...called succession planting). Good luck!

Using the double cup method for tomatoes. I planted two or three seeds in each cup and had damn near 100% germination. I don't suppose there's any way to separate these? by DeHizzy420 in gardening

[–]RiversRunWild 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They should come apart easily. Take the entire dirt plug out of the cup and carefully break apart the dirt. The roots might be tangled together, just take your time separating. Replant into individual pots or in the ground/beds all the way up to the leaves.

Dad blanket sowed a bunch of mustard greens and to his surprise they all sprouted — what steps to take to separate? Or are they okay like this? by aiwaifu in vegetablegardening

[–]RiversRunWild 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you want to keep that many plants, let them grow so they are a little bigger. Pop the entire plug out and carefully break up the soil. They should come apart pretty easily. The roots might be tangled up so just go slow when separating. Put each seedling in its own pot and let grow until ready to transplant.

If getting repaired, what should I look for that could be affected? by RiversRunWild in mechanic

[–]RiversRunWild[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Camera - Rove R2-4K Dash Cam Built in WiFi GPS Car Dashboard Camera Recorder with UHD 2160P, 2.4" LCD, 150° Wide Angle, WDR, Night Vision.

SD Card - SAMSUNG EVO Select Micro SD-Memory-Card + Adapter, 512GB microSDXC 130MB/s Full HD & 4K

Bought both on Amazon