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@oliver48.bsky.social
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"This was an experiment by a kindergarten class. They dropped seeds in the cracks of the sidewalk to see what would happen.
This would help our bees "
via I Love Bees
June 7, 2025 at 4:42 AM
"This was an experiment by a kindergarten class. They dropped seeds in the cracks of the sidewalk to see what would happen.
— Oliver (@oliver48.bsky.social) 2025-06-07T08:42:22.065Z
This would help our bees "
via I Love Bees
crim son
(27,549 posts)The roots will start to break down the pavement over time but the grass is doing that anyway. Why not marigolds?
speak easy
(12,595 posts)peacebuzzard
(5,797 posts)for posting directly here rather than a link to bluesky or twitter or X or someplace else.
I usually just close a window if I have to click on a link.
My world has enough spam as it is.
lovely post.
mahatmakanejeeves
(68,198 posts)SARose
(1,831 posts)Its the bees knees!
😉
samnsara
(18,718 posts)fargone
(547 posts)Reynolds is most famous for Little Boxes.
electric_blue68
(25,796 posts)Botany
(76,371 posts)
FakeNoose
(40,135 posts)I'm sure it would work in Pittsburgh, where we have rainy months in the spring and early summer. BUT we also have deer that would come along and munch like it's a free salad bar every night.
niyad
(129,505 posts)and people get to enjoy a little beauty. All for a handful of seeds. Lovely.
Everything is transitory, including beauty.
Let the world enjoy it while it can!
KPN
(17,141 posts)MyOwnPeace
(17,444 posts)they clean out my Lillies every year up the Allegheny - I try to save some (net fencing) - but they tend to defeat my anyhow
🙄🙄🙄
But Yea, kids!!!! 😁😁😁
FakeNoose
(40,135 posts)I see green buds on the stalks and the next day... they're all gone. And I live right in the city of Pittsburgh.
Our deer don't eat geraniums, marigolds or daffodils, and that's all I can plant now.
niyad
(129,505 posts)Clouds Passing
(6,957 posts)Collimator
(2,079 posts)Water is fluid, soft, and yielding. But water will wear away rock, which is rigid and cannot yield. As a rule, whatever is fluid, soft, and yielding will overcome whatever is rigid and hard. This is another paradox: what is soft is strong.
― Lao Tzu
QED
(3,267 posts)Took me a while to find it but finally...finally, I did. I thought it was from Dostoyevsky but it's from Tolstoy's Resurrection. I knew it was the first page of the novel. It has stuck with me all these years.
"THOUGH hundreds of thousands had done their very best to disfigure the small piece of land on which they were crowded together : paving the ground with stones, scraping away every vestige of vegetation, cutting down the trees, turning away birds and beasts, filling the air with the smoke of naphtha and coal : still spring was spring, even in the town.
The sun shone warm, the air was balmy, the grass, where it did not get scraped away, revived and sprang up everywhere, between the paving-stones as well as on the narrow strips of lawn on the boulevards."
Rose in Spanish Harlem
Figarosmom
(9,721 posts)Cracks between the bricks in her driveway.
malaise
(292,679 posts)Lovely😀
KPN
(17,141 posts)NJCher
(42,453 posts)I'm training all I can. Seed bombs: they love it. Their parents take them around to see how they are doing.
https://happyeconews.com/guerrilla-gardening-why-its-important-how-to-get-started/
snip
History of Seed Bombing
An ancient technique, seed bombing was used in ancient Egypt to repair farms after the annual spring flooding of the Nile. Seed bombing, known as nendo dango in Japanese, was re-discovered by natural farming pioneer Masanobu Fukuoka. The practice eventually spread to other parts of the world, including the United States, where it became a popular form of protest against unchecked development.
Now used as a tool for environmental activism and urban gardening, it has been employed in various cities worldwide to create green spaces and promote biodiversity. Seed bombing is a relatively easy and low-cost way to make a big impact in terms of both beautifying an area and increasing its ecological diversity.
snip
democrank
(12,121 posts)Quite a good idea to use a slingshot to propel the seed bombs in certain areas.
ailsagirl
(24,287 posts)And that's saying a lot, these days
😻🌻🌷
calimary
(89,028 posts)Thanks SO MUCH!
wendyb-NC
(4,603 posts)And every passer by gets to enjoy the beauty of a unique flower garden.