Articles

Welcome to our comprehensive Articles section, where knowledge blooms and curiosity thrives. This category serves as a hub for exploring the fascinating worlds of cycads, aloes, and horticulture. From in-depth insights on specific cycad and aloe species to engaging articles about plant care, conservation, and industry news, you’ll find everything you need to deepen your understanding and appreciation of these remarkable plants. Whether you’re a gardening enthusiast, collector, or simply curious, our Articles category is your gateway to informed and inspired content.

501(c)(3) LGBTQ+ Community Land Trust Startup


Hey y’all, I’m looking to start a non-profit that focuses on providing safe and affordable housing for LGBTQ+ individuals and families in a sustainable and cooperative living structure, likely somewhere in Oregon.

This setup would allow people to hold a long-term lease of a part of land owned by the non-profit. Individuals and families will be able to build equity in improvements on their leased land while ensuring the land is continuously used for the non-profit mission of sustainability and affordable housing. I also imagine communal recreational areas and gardens where responsibilities and harvests are shared.

Right now, I am just a person with a dream and a potential source of a ~$50,000 donation. I truly do believe in this way of life and hope to utilize grants and donations to make this dream a reality for people who are often priced out of these communities. The LGBTQ+ community has been a safe and welcoming space for me and I’d like to help create a safe and welcoming space to give back.

I need as much help to make this a reality as y’all are willing to give. Hit me with your knowledge, wisdom, advice, successes, fails, things you wish you’d considered along the way. If anyone is willing to be a more long-term mentor, that would be much appreciated.

I am also looking for 4-6 likeminded individuals or families who are willing to put in the work with me to make this a reality for ourselves and others. While the financial burden for a setup like this is lower, we will need to spend much more time applying for grants, fundraising, and ensuring we’re compliant with federal non-profit regulations.

If you’re interested or have any questions, leave a comment or DM. Thanks to everyone in advance!

submitted by /u/Senior_Word4925
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Interplanting berry cultivars in native wind break (Kansas)?


I am planting a native windbreak utilizing elderberry, golden currant, serviceberry, persimmon, hazelnut, pine, buttonbush, ninebark and Ohio buckeye in appropriate short, medium, and tall rows, all seedlings. Pines are spaced 30ft apart between individual seedlings and between the nearest row.

Is it safe and worth it to interplant fruiting cultivars of gooseberry/currant and blackberry/raspberry in between the pine trees and/or in between the wind break rows?

submitted by /u/throwawaybsme
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Invasives to combat poison ivy?


Basically, I am wondering if there is something I could plant in a small stretch of woods in the northeast USA (zone 5b) that would outcompete and smother poison ivy without taking out everything else.

Ideally, something not adapted to frost, that would grow quickly and beat out the poison ivy but die off in the winter. Or at least something that could be manually ripped out without needing to suit up for handling it.

I don’t want to spray herbicide, salt etc in the woods, and leaning down is difficult for me because I have a neck impairment, so I’m not looking to hunt down and spray each individual poison ivy leaf.

Digging out the roots of the poison ivy last summer was a fruitless effort because those roots were crazy well established.

But I would really like to be able to clear a path down there and not have to worry about poison ivy. It hasn’t really started to take off yet but it definitely will over the next month. I planted some Nasturtium that took off really well around this time last year, but it grew in full sun. I’m not sure if that would be effective in an area that’s going to be largely shaded once the tree canopies fill out again.

submitted by /u/13chickeneater
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Understanding Drainage Differences in Raised Garden Beds vs. Small Containers: Why and How It Matters

Picture this scenario: you’ve just finished reading an article that clearly states, “Putting gravel in the bottom of pots doesn’t improve drainage.” Then you flip to another gardening guide that says, “Before adding soil to your raised bed, line the bottom with coarse gravel or […]

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Can we eat Cherry Tomatoes grown with quail manure?


Hi Y’all, wannabe permie here with a small garden bed that is currently exploding with cherry tomatoes that we would love to eat but I’m a bit hesitant. I setup this bed in March of last year – I dug down about 24″ into the native soil and did this kinda hugulkultur style – I layed down some palm logs and other big branches. I then added a couple inch layer of wood chip, and then a couple inches of fresh quail manure from a guy nearby. I covered that with a few more inches of wood chip, then another layer of quail shit, then another layer of woodchip. I then added some mycorrhizae, rock dusts, humic acid, bone meal, and whatever random amendments I could find in my shed. I then added about a 8″ layer of a quality garden soil mix from a local farm. I’ve sprayed the entire bed a couple times with homemade lacto bacillus serum. I planted this cherry tomato in the garden back in October – I’m in AZ – and thanks to a super mild winter it did well and now has exploded – it has literally taken over the entire 16’x3′ bed so its loving life, and I think all that N from the quail manure is a big part of this. My question – is there concern about possible pathogens from the quail manure since it was fresh when I added it last year? I’m leaning towards no with the bed hopefully ‘teeming with microbes’ that have outcompeted any bad guys, but what do you all think?

submitted by /u/Sea-Elk-2063
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Tell me about the plants you grow that provide materials for fencing, weaving, and basketry


I’m curious about what plants you grow to provide yourself with building materials to make things like fencing, baskets, garden supports, weaving. Also, what are you making and how are your harvesting? (pollarding?)

The obvious answer is willow, which I would really love to hear your experience with, but wondering what else you are growing and using as material sources.

submitted by /u/sevenmouse
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