This was outstanding! I learned so much, thank you. the production was awesome(photo references, text overlays etc.) Really liked the tag team element as well, looking fwd to next video.
I tested if JPW could be pinched and yes it can! As of 2024-09-04, three stems are growing out the pinched one! This will mean more blooms and a good way to control its height! I’ll definitely pinch my JPW patch next year! 💪
Looks like I have fistulola… Never seen them around my area but mine spread a lot of seeds that took and managed to bloom their first year so I think they’ll be spreading through the county 😁 It’s nice to grow native that way all those seeds and sprouts are a good thing, at least good ecologically even if my neighbors don’t appreciate it.
This was outstanding! I learned so much, thank you. the production was awesome(photo references, text overlays etc.) Really liked the tag team element as well, looking fwd to next video.
Thank you! As we grow, we are figuring this out. I spend more time botanizing than playing with the software. Ha!
I tested if JPW could be pinched and yes it can!
As of 2024-09-04, three stems are growing out the pinched one! This will mean more blooms and a good way to control its height!
I’ll definitely pinch my JPW patch next year! 💪
Very informative! I'm starting 2 kinds this season. What a wonderful creature: Beautiful, tall and medicinal.
Looks like I have fistulola…
Never seen them around my area but mine spread a lot of seeds that took and managed to bloom their first year so I think they’ll be spreading through the county 😁
It’s nice to grow native that way all those seeds and sprouts are a good thing, at least good ecologically even if my neighbors don’t appreciate it.
Ok Nate, so now I can go outside and tell which species I have. Thanks!
Loved it! I did weed and wine with this, rather than botany and beer. Hope that’s okay!
I should do a Weed and Wine special!
Nope, maculatum, counted over 10 flowers in a florescence.
Pretty sure it is fistulosum.
Planted 6 Joe pyes this year; just getting into native plants.
Like that these are first year blooming perennials. They’re doing quite well so far.
Which species? Eutrochiums usually do quite well in native gardens.
@@BotanyandBeer Eupatorium maculatum