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Flowers 2023 and 2024
Flowers 2023 and 2024 (9)
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Seeing the beauty of flowers
Akkach · 6 months ago
Little girl old pictures of the Susmita Akter 2021 
Small girl old pictures of the Susmita Akter Sosmita Shushmita Aktar Akter Akhtar Akhter Akthar Akther.

Sunday 11 December 2019 
Code number: LGOPSA2021 
Flowers on Sushmita's head
Akkach · 6 months ago
Little girl old pictures of the Susmita Akter 2021 
Small girl old pictures of the Susmita Akter Sosmita Shushmita Aktar Akter Akhtar Akhter Akthar Akther.

Sunday 11 December 2019 
Code number: LGOPSA2021 
Flower Dressing Billal Miah
Akkach · 6 months ago
Facebook Old Images Billal Miah Shalgara , Sagar Sagar Salgara, Prince BillalHadra, Prince Sagar Salgara Udaipur Gomati Tripura, Fb old Pictures, Facebook Old images...
sagarsagar55774@gmail.com billalmiah6389039@gmail.com

CODE: BLLM PBMFACEB 
National Wildflower Week, May 1-7
Information · 7 months ago
First established in 1987, National Wildflower Week is a celebration of the beauty of wildflowers, and it promotes the importance of native wildflowers in our ecosystems.
Flowering Tobacco
Nachima · 7 months ago
Two types of flowering tobacco, Nicotiana alata and Nicotiana sylvestris, offer fragrance in beds, borders, and containers. Old-fashioned varieties are your best bet; many newer hybrid bedding-plant varieties carry little scent. All are relatives of tomatoes and peppers, with white, pink, red, or pale green blooms that offer scent in late afternoon or evening.
Moonflower
Nachima · 7 months ago
The white morning-glory flowers of moonflower (Ipomoea alba) appear to glow at night when its luscious sweet scent attracts pollinators. The blooms of this annual vine open in the evening and close each morning. Grow in full sun.
Donnie Avocado, Flower type A, West Indies race
Prominentwriter · 8 months ago
This is one of the main cultivar in my grove in 2011 my 7 year old trees produced close to 100 lbs per tree. It is a peculiar fruit. Once the fruit sets and temperatures begins to warm up and rain or irrigation is regular they grow very fast and it is the earliest commercial variety to go to market in Florida. On 2011 I had Donie fruit the first week of June. Average fruit size is 16-28 oz. If you leave then on the tree the fruit keeps getting bigger, they start dropping off in August. I have seen this variety also spelled "Doni" "Donie".
Harvest 2012: My 8 year old trees produced an average of 110 lbs per tree.
December 26, 2012. The trees seem to be building the coli-flowers to get ready to flower very soon. In the top of the trees you can see a few opening flowers. The trees look clean, green and so far no white fly or sign of sooty mold like I had last year.
January 19, 2013: The trees are blooming and there are a lot of open flowers.
March 20, 2013: Looks like it will be a good year, fruit is setting very well. As good as I ever seen it. Flowers may have another 10-14 days to go.
April 14, 2013: The Donnies are off and running. Probably due to a mild and strange winter they set and are holding a good amount of fruit. Lets see it its true. I predict 140-150 lbs per tree on the average this year, We'll know by the end of July.
June 22, 2013: Seems like my Donnies are headed for a record year. I do notice this year their flavor is better than prior years.  So far I picked picked 110 lbs on the average per tree, may be I will not reach my prediction above.
August 1, 2013: I came in a bit off at 133 lbs per tree. A 20% increase over last year.
February 2, 2014: Some trees have open flowers, not a lot, seems to be behind last year. 
February 12, 2014: Flowering seems to be going slow this year,
February 27, 2014: Donnies are two to three days away to full bloom. Beta's are ahead of Donnies. This is the first time I see this. 
August 30, 2014: The Donnie season is over my trees produced and average of 200 lbs per tree. A very good and predictable early producer.
April 13, 2015: I have neglected to report on this variety. This year the late February cold snap, (I registered temperatures of 31 degrees in parts of my grove) cause all the fruit set to fall off along with flowers. The trees then set a second bloom that is just about finished. So this year there will be an light normal crop, with a not so large second crop. I have some fruit from the first set in the 3-4 oz range and some fruit the size of nickels and dimes.  No ideal how is going to play out in production.
Check out the page from Tropical Research and Education http://trec.ifas.ufl.edu/crane/avocado/donnie.shtml
Beetles are the primary pollinators of ancient flowers.
Nachima · 8 months ago
One interesting fact about beetles is that they use a form of pollination known as "mess and soil" pollination. Unlike bees and butterflies, these insects can eat all parts of a plant, from pollen and other floral tissues to even the bark of trees. They even poop within the flowers.

They are the primary pollinators of primitive flowering plants like cycads, magnolias, and water lilies. These plants often have large, bowl-shaped, or cup-shaped flowers that are more open and accessible to beetles than those targeted by bees or butterflies.
Chrysanthemums flowers
Lotfor · 8 months ago
Chrysanthemums are plants that repel bugs like Japanese beetles, cockroaches, ants, spider mites, bedbugs, fleas, silverfish, lice, and harlequin bugs. Chrysanthemum is an effective mosquito repellent because it contains pyrethrum.
Alliums flowers
Lotfor · 8 months ago
The allium family includes onions, chives, garlic, shallots, and leeks. An example of allium plants is the Allium giganteum, the giant onion, which grows up to six feet tall. It is a popular ingredient in Southeast Asian cooking. Allium plants repel pests like slugs, cabbage worms, carrot flies, Japanese beetles, aphids, ticks, and cabbage loopers.
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