Re: Baking Soda treatment

From: Roberto Devoti (roberto@caronte.mt.asi.it)
Date: Fri Aug 29 1997 - 12:39:50 PDT


Date: Fri, 29 Aug 1997 12:39:50 -0700
From: Roberto Devoti <roberto@caronte.mt.asi.it>
To: cp@opus.hpl.hp.com
Message-Id: <aabcdefg3285$foo@default>
Subject: Re: Baking Soda treatment

HI ALL,

Randall wrote:
>Have found that my plants seem to want more, they are not satisfied
>with one and only treatment. (talking about baking soda.)

I'm rather skeptical regarding artificial treatments of plants
and I don't like getting just "curious" plants by means of some
magical chemical treatment. It seems to me that Randall is just
trying to defend his belief, not arguing on objective facts.

Derek wrote:
> -- I'm curious if anyone has ever tried to grow plants in
> "plain old potting soil" that's neither particularly acidic nor base nor
Nevertheless I've tried to grow a sample of D_muscipula in a more
"plain" potting soil. I used a mix 1:1 of peat and "universal" potting
soil, I plant it in a 8in. pot and leave it outdoor (I live in Rome,
Italy) half shaddow. The plant looks very well, 1 in. traps, red inside,
it flowered and produced seeds.
In the same pot a few plants of Drosera_aliciae and D_binata thrive also
very well even if D_binata doesn't look as well as other plants that I
grow in a greenhouse. Does anybody try different potting soils for
growing any Drosera species?

Roberto Devoti



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