Category: Uncategorized (Page 12 of 25)

Festival of the Trees #50 hosted here this month

Dear Growing Readers,

I am hosting the 50th edition of the Festival of the Trees carnival here at Growing With Science blog at the end of the month. The theme is Trees Through a Child’s Eyes.

Let me know if you have any child-friendly posts about trees that you would like to share. Ideas include bark rubbings, children’s drawings of trees and leaves, ideas for or photographs of tree houses, nature journals with tree themes, photos from a favorite walk through the woods, science experiment ideas, etc. Of course, we would welcome reviews of good children’s books about trees as well.

Please send your links to growingwithscience {at} gmail (dot) com with Festival of the Trees in the subject line by June July 29.

Looking forwarding to hearing from you,

-Roberta

Festival of the Trees

tree-climbing

P.S. To those of you who subscribe to more than one of my blogs, I apologize for the duplicate post. Just trying to get the word out to everyone…

Seed of the Week: Sunflowers

Did you identify the mystery seeds last week as sunflower seeds?

sunflower-plant

In fact they were the black oil sunflower seeds sold as bird food. Those grow pretty easily.

sunflower-close-up

Did you know sunflowers were originally from the New World? There are about 80 different species, including the so-called Jerusalem artichoke, Helianthus tuberosus. The wild kinds often have many small flowers, and many are perennials.

sunflower-wild

The lesser goldfinches were having a field day in these sunflowers.

There are a lot of different varieties of annual sunflowers (Helianthus annuus).

sunflower-lemon-drop

This is a Lemon Queen, grown for the Great Sunflower Project last year.

Many animals benefit from the flowers and seeds.

sunflower-honeybee

Many bees and other insects enjoy the pollen and nectar from the flowers.

sunflower-bird

Of course, people enjoy eating sunflower seeds, too. Have you ever had sunflower seed butter? It is a nice change of pace from peanut butter.

sunflower-single

Sunflowers are cool because the buds of some varieties follow the sun throughout the day. As the flowers start to produce seed, however, I’ve noticed that they tend to stop moving. Often they begin to drop downwards.

Here in Arizona sunflowers will grow throughout the year and they are pretty drought tolerant, too.

Have you grown sunflowers? What varieties are your favorites?

If not, you should give them a try.

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