Weird plants

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Odsox
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Weird plants

Post: # 287100Post Odsox »

I think it must be the air down here, because I've grown some "interesting" things in my time. Some can be logically explained, like I've grown peas and found the peas have all germinated inside the pods, can be explained by my very humid air, but some are just plain odd.
I've posted 2 photos on here before, but to save you the trouble of finding them I'll repost them.

There was my weird sweetcorn with kernels maturing on MALE flowers .....
Sweetcorn.jpg
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Then there were my "alien" tomatoes with flowers sprouting from fruit. They didn't produce another tomato BTW, they just fell off after a while......
Alien.jpg
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Now I have a cross between my peas and tomatoes, that is tomato seeds germinating INSIDE a tomato fruit. That one has me beat, and although "interesting" I don't think I'll bother teasing out the little plantlets to grow on, it's not exactly a desirable trait.
Germinated Tom.jpg
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It's a good thing my wife is past childbearing age, you never know what might happen. :iconbiggrin:
Tony

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Flo
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Re: Weird plants

Post: # 287102Post Flo »

The answer lies in your potting compost as I've explained elsewhere. Oh dear.

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diggernotdreamer
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Re: Weird plants

Post: # 287109Post diggernotdreamer »

spooky goings on, have you had any strange looking clouds coming over, or rumours of radio active dust blowing across from Russia or North Korea

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Re: Weird plants

Post: # 287112Post Green Aura »

Sellafield runoff?
Maggie

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bonniethomas06
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Re: Weird plants

Post: # 287118Post bonniethomas06 »

I noticed that in the sweetcorn fields near me (Wiltshire) last year there were the same kernels growing from the tassles. Weird, very weird.
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Odsox
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Re: Weird plants

Post: # 287119Post Odsox »

Aah, it's all becoming clear now.
It's all spread from Porton Down, a devious plan by the English infidels to destroy my tomatoes :angry5:
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Re: Weird plants

Post: # 291724Post Odsox »

My sweetcorn has been at it again, not sure if it's trans-gender or bi-sexual, but whatever it is it's doing it in my tunnel.
Kernels on the male tassels that is ....
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Sweetcorn.jpg
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I suppose it might be handy to save those kernels for seed and see if I could grow them like that as normal, it would make it a lot easier to see when they are ready to harvest, instead of peeling back the wrappers on each cob. :iconbiggrin:
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Re: Weird plants

Post: # 291725Post Green Aura »

They are a bit bizarre - not sure I'd fancy eating them.
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Re: Weird plants

Post: # 291728Post Weedo »

I don't know what is happening with your corn Odsox, but it is not unusual for some grasses to produce apoximitic seeds, formed without pollen or fertilisation, in addition to sexually produced seeds.. These are usually a reproduction "insurance" strategy (grazing pressure avoidance) and occur before normal seed production and usually much lower on the plant. Perhaps your corn is frightened?
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Odsox
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Re: Weird plants

Post: # 291729Post Odsox »

Weedo wrote: Mon Aug 06, 2018 10:54 pm Perhaps your corn is frightened?
Well I do go and look at them on a daily basis. :lol:
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Odsox
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Re: Weird plants

Post: # 292857Post Odsox »

Resurrected this thread because I have yet another oddity.
One weird tomato, this is a Berkley Tie Dye tomato and this is it's first fruit, which is the result from one of those huge flowers you sometimes get on the first truss. Up until now nothing ever came from those huge flowers, but this time it produced this huge fruit.
Don't worry it's now been destroyed ... eaten for breakfast, fried on toast.
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Tom.jpg
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Tom2.jpg
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Tony

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Flo
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Re: Weird plants

Post: # 292858Post Flo »

That's not fair. I want a big tomato. There's a spate of marble sized tomatoes up here - and that's not on the cherry tomatoes either. Spread around the town and happening to experienced growers as well as novices. Oh and the sweetcorn is not doing as it should on a plot near mine - he didn't plant dwarf sweetcorn but that's what he seems to be growing. I hear that's wide spread problem this year mind. Our oddities are different to yours that's for sure.

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Re: Weird plants

Post: # 292859Post Green Aura »

We don't grow big tomatoes because we've been growing them on our windowsills for the last 2-3 years (the ex-therapy room/ now greenhouse is up and running at last so that might alter next year).
The crop, even SW facing, has been very disappointing though. The Bloody Butcher has been the star, but we've probably only had a couple of pounds of 5 plants. The others - a mix of cherries, and Marmande, have done very little other than shoot up to the top of the windows, desperately trying to get some sun presumably.
A neighbour gave us one Alicante and one Ailsa Craig that haven't even done anything yet, although they do have a much longer growing time than the ones we usually grow.
The peppers are also struggling - some lovely fruits but probably half, or less, previous years crops.
No strange shapes though - I'll leave that to Odsox. :lol:
Maggie

Never doubt that you can change history. You already have. Marge Piercy

Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage. Anais Nin

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