Project Green Birds

Project Green Birds Plantation of trees, Gifting trees, Tree adoption, Fresh air to next genarations

exprimenting red soil for some veggies...
05/09/2016

exprimenting red soil for some veggies...

31/08/2016

வேப்பம் பழம் விதை மரத்திலிருந்து விழுகின்ற பருவம் இது!
நீங்க வேப்ப மரத்துக்கு பக்கத்துல போகுறப்போ,உங்களால முடிஞ்ச வேப்பம்பழங்கள கையில எடுத்துக்கிடுங்க,
அதை சாலை ஓரங்களிலும் ஏறி குள கரையோரங்களிளும் போகுரப் போக்குல தெளித்து விடுட்டுப் போங்க!! அதுவா முளச்சு மரமா வந்திடும். . . .
மழை வரவேண்டிய பருவமும் நெருங்கிடுச்சி மரத்தை வளர்க்க இது நம்மாலான சிறு முயற்சி!!

இதை அலட்சியப்படுத்திடாதீங்க. . .
அடுத்த தலைமுறைக்கு நாம் செய்யும் உதவி. . .

I took care of her now its her turn...
20/08/2016

I took care of her now its her turn...

our trial of mango tree in a bucket. who said we need somuch of place to grow a Tree.
23/06/2016

our trial of mango tree in a bucket. who said we need somuch of place to grow a Tree.

Pure orgonic fruits from home plant. why should we spend 100s of Rs for this when you have 5 sq ft place in your home......
05/06/2016

Pure orgonic fruits from home plant. why should we spend 100s of Rs for this when you have 5 sq ft place in your home....

First day of seed i  home...
10/09/2015

First day of seed i home...

11/06/2015

One sunny morning coming soon, you’ll feel an irresistible urge to plant your garden. Before you pick up a trowel or open a seed packet, check out these hints to help you succeed.
Transplanting Seedlings
Whether it’s a flat of bedding plants from a nursery or seedlings started indoors, you don’t want the transition from pots to garden bed to induce transplant shock.

The first rule of thumb is to watch where you put your thumb. “Never pick up a seedling by the stem—it is the plant's lifeline,” cautions April Johnson, staff horticulturist at the Rodale Institute, near Kutztown, Pennsylvania. Always handle seedlings by their leaves. “Leaves will grow back,” Johnson says.

Hardening Off
Hardening off gradually introduces seedlings to the conditions in your garden. Bring all seedlings—store-bought and homegrown—outdoors and expose them to a steadily increasing amount of sun, wind, and temperatures lower or higher than what they were used to indoors. This will take about 2 weeks. Don’t rush it.

When to Plant
The ideal time to plant is when it’s overcast, with rain in the forecast and no frosts or heat waves expected. If conditions don’t cooperate, then try to plant in the late afternoon or early evening to minimize the time the seedlings bake in the sun. The day before planting, water the plants so that the soil in the pots is moist.

In the Ground
Keep your seedlings in the shade until you’re actually ready to plant each one. Don’t pull a plant out of its container until you’ve dug the hole for it. If you can’t easily pull it out of its container by the leaves, hold the pot in one hand as shown below, flip it upside down, and give it a sharp tap on the bottom. The rootball should slip out into your other hand. Snip away any damaged roots with scissors or pruners. If the roots are a solid mass, gently tease some away from the center, trying not to break them.

Carefully slice into peat or newspaper pots with a knife to give the roots an escape hatch in case the pot doesn’t break down quickly. Once the pot is in the ground, tear off any part of it that extends above the soil line. It will dry out and pull moisture from the soil.

Plant the seedling at about the depth it was in the container, or a bit deeper. If your soil is cold or very wet, planting too deeply could rot the stem. But plant tomatoes quite deep. Studies by the Southwest Florida Research and Education Center, in Immokalee, Florida, showed that tomatoes planted up to their first set of true leaves set fruit earlier, and yielded more and larger tomatoes, than tomatoes planted at rootball level. This held true when the studies were repeated in the colder soils of Ohio and Massachusetts.

Firm the soil around your seedlings, but don’t press so hard that you compact it. Give each seedling a thorough watering.

The First Days
Your seedlings have become established when you see healthy new growth. This can take a few days to a week, depending on the weather. Wilted leaves or drooping stems can be symptoms of transplant shock. Seedlings can go into transplant shock if they weren’t hardened off completely or if the weather is extreme. Most plants recover in a few days, but until they do:
Check that the soil is firmly around the plants so that no air pockets are drying out the roots.
Protect the transplants from sun and strong winds with row covers, sheets, or cloches.
Water only if the top inch of the soil is dry. Don't water if the soil is already wet; it won’t help.

PLEASE SHARE THIS.. AT LEAST U CAN MAKE SOME ONE TO PLANT A SINGLE TREE....
06/04/2013

PLEASE SHARE THIS.. AT LEAST U CAN MAKE SOME ONE TO PLANT A SINGLE TREE....

06/04/2013

How to Grow Plants Faster

1)Research for an appropriate native plant as natives tend to have few needs and don't pose a w**d risk. Find a type that you like and that will be suitable for your garden space.

2)It is not essential to chose a native however, most common plants are not native. Avoid plants that are known to be a w**d risk not only because it can destroy a local ecosystem, but also it will wreck your yard first.

3)Obtain that plant or a seed. Sometimes you might need to order it online or through a specialist nursery.

4)Plant the plant or seed in a good place in the garden. Take note of all its needs and supply these.

5)These needs can be:
Light - does it like full sun, or part sun?
Space - will this plant overgrow its place?
Heat - Some plants struggle below certain temperatures (such as desert, tropical and subtropical plants) and some struggle in hot temperatures.
Sowing times - some seeds or cuttings like to be planted in spring or summer, where some plants prefer to be planted when dormant in autumn/fall or winter. This can give your plant a huge head start.
Fertiliser & Soil needs - some plants are OK in weak sand, some prefer richer stuff or need free draining. Some plants also use a lot of nutrients so need compost or regular fertiliser to keep them happy.
Exposure - some plants don't like wind, frost or sea spray. They may need screening or planting amongst other plants. Shade plants are an example that prefer fairly sheltered environments.

6)Make sure it gets enough sunlight and water. If you have a short growing season, unless you can enclose your garden into a greenhouse, there is little that can help here. The opposite is true in hot climates with many plants struggling outside shade houses.

7)Talk to it or breathe on it to give it carbon dioxide. You might feel silly doing this, but it seems to help the plant and the gardener's well being

8)Keep an eye out for pests or diseases, they can slow the growth or even kill the plant.

This is our first batch of seeded bags. We have planned to give it for free of cost if you are ready to plant it... It's...
03/04/2013

This is our first batch of seeded bags. We have planned to give it for free of cost if you are ready to plant it... It's our time to give it back to earth...

03/04/2013

Hai, friends ,I am very happy to share we are in to start a organisation called
" Project green Birds" . We need all your supports and wishes to make it happen. we have dedicated this organisation for planting trees, gifting plants, and to gift wonderful fresh air to our next generation...Please share it. and i have started it with just 50 plant seeds from my home...join with us and do something to our world.

Address

JEYABALAMURUGAN, 432 GV Recidency
Coimbatore
641028

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