English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2007-04-27 16:33:03 · 4 answers · asked by Carol J 1 in Home & Garden Garden & Landscape

4 answers

I suppose you are referring to some variety of Japanese snowball bush. Yes, but if it is a hybrid the plant you get may/will not be a true copy of the parent tree. To be more sure of the outcome you would do better to root a cutting.

2007-04-27 16:44:05 · answer #1 · answered by Mr. Bubba 1 · 0 0

Snowballs are tricky. They don't germinate and grow until they have undergone two different temperature treatments. Warm moist such as they have fallen to the ground and exposed to warm, moist weather will get start the process. However the seed must then undergo a cool, moist process (winter for example) before the plant will actually emerge from the ground.

Your best bet would be to construct a cold frame and sow the seeds in pots, giving the seeds their warm, moist summer. Then come winter keep them in the cold frame, outside, moist until they germinate next spring. Or you could just cast them into the ground and allow Mother Nature to work her wonders.

2007-04-27 17:55:48 · answer #2 · answered by fluffernut 7 · 0 0

start them in plastic soda bottles with seed starter dirt, cut plastic bottle in half and u have a greenhouse

2007-04-27 16:40:29 · answer #3 · answered by lukynluv 3 · 0 0

yes you can as long as its snowing hard

2007-04-27 16:48:26 · answer #4 · answered by freeman3905@sbcglobal.net 6 · 1 0

fedest.com, questions and answers