OK folks... in the previous post, before I went off on a tangent about that stinking armpit of the metroplex known as Grapevine TX, I had told you about my visit to White Settlement and collecting a few fossils... here they are, mostly because I told you I would put the pics in more than anything else. They're not that impressive...
This first is a complete clamshell... although, it's probably more an impression of the inside of a shell rather than the shell itself. Or maybe not.. I'm not entirely sure. I like fossils, but I've never been totally inclined to do all the research neccesary... I'm more inclined to set them in the rock garden or a flower pot and not worry about it too much...
This first is a complete clamshell... although, it's probably more an impression of the inside of a shell rather than the shell itself. Or maybe not.. I'm not entirely sure. I like fossils, but I've never been totally inclined to do all the research neccesary... I'm more inclined to set them in the rock garden or a flower pot and not worry about it too much...
Let's just say I'm not inclined and leave it at that... here's the ammonite.
I'm not a big fossil hound, I think I fell into fossils as a side note to the gardening... as I mentioned I tend to set them in the rock gardens, and I found the first ones when I was looking for interesting rocks for the rock garden. This part of Texas isn't known for dramatic fossils... although parts of the state do have dinosaur fossils. Tyranosaurus and all that...
and that's it. I said I'd show them, so there they are.
do with them what you will...
This might be slightly more interesting...
I'm kind of an experimental gardener. I do things just to see what will happen... so I'd read about a technique on another blog - forget which one - where somebody was growing bonsai in pure spagnum moss. You wet the moss, pack it really really tight, and things will grow in it.
Well, I had some here... so I packed it really really tight, put it in an old selfwatering african violet pot, put 3 acorns in it and waited to see if any oak seedlings sprouted. They haven't yet... it's been about 2 months... just sitting on the kitchen counter not doing anything... or so I thought...
Also in the kitchen window were some Escobaria vivipara seeds drying. I have most of them in an envelope now, but at one point, some of them got tipped into that little pot of spagnum moss, and if you look closely in the next pic, you will see little pinhead green spots... they're cactus seedlings.
now that is a cool moss trick!!! i think you really should go into the businees of getting cactus seedlings up and going and then we can buy them from you!!! pleassseee.....
ReplyDeleteInteresting post. I'm not much of a fossil hound myself, but I like seeing found fossils. I've never had any spagnum moss--but I've read that some people use it in cactus mix. That's odd, because usually cacti don't like a lot of acidity.
ReplyDeleteAiyana