When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Stratification (seeds) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stratification_(seeds)

    Seeds are placed in a medium such as vermiculite, peat, or sand and refrigerated in a plastic bag or sealed container. [1] Soaking the seeds in cold water for 6–12 hours before placing them in cold stratification can cut down on the amount of time needed for stratification, as the seed needs to absorb some moisture to enable the chemical ...

  3. When to Start Seeds Indoors for a Successful Spring Garden - AOL

    www.aol.com/start-seeds-indoors-successful...

    If your seed packets don’t contain planting instructions, here’s a general schedule for when you should start the most common flower, herb, and vegetable seeds. Mid-Winter

  4. Sowing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sowing

    Sowing is the process of planting seeds. An area that has had seeds planted in it will be described as a sowed or sown area. When sowing it is important to: Use quality seeds; Maintain proper distance between seeds; Plant at correct depth; Ensure the soil is clean , healthy , and free of pathogens (disease causing microorganisms)

  5. Melothria sphaerocarpa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melothria_sphaerocarpa

    Melothria sphaerocarpa is a species of melon native from southern Mexico and the Dominican Republic through Central America to tropical South America. It has been introduced to western tropical Africa, [1] where has been known under the synonym Cucumeropsis mannii, and is grown for food and as a source of oil, more often for the seed oil than for the fruit.

  6. Sprouting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sprouting

    The soaking increases the water content in the seeds and brings them out of quiescence. After draining and then rinsing seeds at regular intervals, the seeds then germinate , or sprout. For home sprouting, the seeds are soaked (big seeds) or moistened (small), then left at room temperature (13 to 21 °C or 55 to 70 °F) in a sprouting vessel.

  7. Kolkhoznitsa melon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kolkhoznitsa_melon

    The kolkhoznitsa melon was first bred by a Russian gardener in the 1930s, specifically for cool, shorter seasons. It then spread to other European countries such as Ukraine, eventually making its way to the United States. [2] The rind is thin and golden-orange in color and the interior flesh is white and dense. It is round to slightly oblong in ...

  8. Cucurbita palmata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cucurbita_palmata

    Cucurbita palmata is a species of flowering plant in the squash family known by the common names coyote melon and coyote gourd. [1] [2] It is similar to Cucurbita californica, Cucurbita cordata, Cucurbita cylindrata, and Cucurbita digitata and all these species hybridize readily. [3] It was first identified by Sereno Watson in 1876. [1]

  9. Egusi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egusi

    Egusi seeds are used in making egusi soup; the soup is thickened with the seeds. Melothria sphaerocarpa, which egusi seeds are from, grows throughout central to western Africa and is used by different ethnic groups in these regions to prepare the soup, and the origins of the soup are deeply rooted in the Yoruba culinary [6] Egusi soup is a very popular soup in West Africa, with considerable ...