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#1
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It'll be frost-time fairly soon here (Ottawa), so I'm planning what to
do. In past years I've kept my Black Magic Taro awake, in a small aquarium under grow-bulbs (interesting factoid: the deep dusky colour only appears under sunlight; under artificial light the leaves are dark green with only the veins showing maroon). However, I divided it this year, so I now have three healthy pots and can afford to experiment (ie. risk losing one). So: can taro be overwintered in a dormant state, and if so how? Should it be kept wet or dry, and at what temperature? And of course the followup Q is: how do I wake it up in Spring? I have a sunroom which would be good for "hardening off" (if that's something you can even do to taro). -- Kizhe |
#3
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![]() "Roy" wrote in message ... .. here we just let it clump up and get mushy and pull the stalks off as it will take up again in spring where it left off the previous year. ** How cold do your winters get? They sell dry taro tubers, ** The black or purple tubers? so I would assume if you dug it up and washed it, and placed it in a plastic bag or a container filled with dry peat and place it in a dark cool spot it will be right for next years go. ** I winter over my Caladium's, a related plant dry in their pots. But the black taro has a mass of roots the Caladium's don't have. Drying these roots may kill them - no? -- Carol.... the frugal ponder... "They laugh because I'm different, I laugh because they're all the same." http://www.heartoftn.net/users/windsong/index.html ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
#4
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On Tue, 21 Sep 2004 21:32:01 -0500, "~ Windsong ~"
wrote: === ==="Roy" wrote in message et... ===. here we just let it clump up === and get mushy and pull the stalks off as it will take up again in === spring where it left off the previous year. === ===** How cold do your winters get? === ===They sell dry taro === tubers, === ===** The black or purple tubers? === ===so I would assume if you dug it up and washed it, and placed === it in a plastic bag or a container filled with dry peat and place it === in a dark cool spot it will be right for next years go. === ===** I winter over my Caladium's, a related plant dry in their pots. But the ===black taro has a mass of roots the Caladium's don't have. Drying these ===roots may kill them - no? Not very cold really........no special precautions are used to thwart cold weather done in this area. Visit my website: http://www.frugalmachinist.com Opinions expressed are those of my wife, I had no input whatsoever. Remove "nospam" from email addy. |
#5
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I'd be very interested in your results, especially dry storage. I took
bring in my taros, in buckets, next to window and under lights. Would be so much easier to store dry, but I'm not brave enough to try. ~ jan On 21 Sep 2004 10:12:28 -0700, (Lt. Kizhe Catson) wrote: It'll be frost-time fairly soon here (Ottawa), so I'm planning what to do. In past years I've kept my Black Magic Taro awake, in a small aquarium under grow-bulbs (interesting factoid: the deep dusky colour only appears under sunlight; under artificial light the leaves are dark green with only the veins showing maroon). However, I divided it this year, so I now have three healthy pots and can afford to experiment (ie. risk losing one). So: can taro be overwintered in a dormant state, and if so how? Should it be kept wet or dry, and at what temperature? And of course the followup Q is: how do I wake it up in Spring? I have a sunroom which would be good for "hardening off" (if that's something you can even do to taro). -- Kizhe ~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~ |
#6
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![]() I have such a huge taro that i have decided not to bring it in this year. I am undecided what to do with it though. Cut the stalks and sink it? I am considering that. On Wed, 22 Sep 2004 14:53:45 -0700, ~ jan JJsPond.us wrote: I'd be very interested in your results, especially dry storage. I took bring in my taros, in buckets, next to window and under lights. Would be so much easier to store dry, but I'm not brave enough to try. ~ jan On 21 Sep 2004 10:12:28 -0700, (Lt. Kizhe Catson) wrote: It'll be frost-time fairly soon here (Ottawa), so I'm planning what to do. In past years I've kept my Black Magic Taro awake, in a small aquarium under grow-bulbs (interesting factoid: the deep dusky colour only appears under sunlight; under artificial light the leaves are dark green with only the veins showing maroon). However, I divided it this year, so I now have three healthy pots and can afford to experiment (ie. risk losing one). So: can taro be overwintered in a dormant state, and if so how? Should it be kept wet or dry, and at what temperature? And of course the followup Q is: how do I wake it up in Spring? I have a sunroom which would be good for "hardening off" (if that's something you can even do to taro). -- Kizhe ~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~ |
#7
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jammer wrote in message . ..
I have such a huge taro that i have decided not to bring it in this year. I am undecided what to do with it though. Cut the stalks and sink it? I am considering that. Best of luck. I don't know where you are, but in Ottawa it isn't an option: the pond freezes over solid from December thru early March and the water underneath will be at the canonical 3degC. I'm pretty sure that will kill anything tropical. -- Kizhe On Wed, 22 Sep 2004 14:53:45 -0700, ~ jan JJsPond.us wrote: I'd be very interested in your results, especially dry storage. I took bring in my taros, in buckets, next to window and under lights. Would be so much easier to store dry, but I'm not brave enough to try. ~ jan On 21 Sep 2004 10:12:28 -0700, (Lt. Kizhe Catson) wrote: It'll be frost-time fairly soon here (Ottawa), so I'm planning what to do. In past years I've kept my Black Magic Taro awake, in a small aquarium under grow-bulbs (interesting factoid: the deep dusky colour only appears under sunlight; under artificial light the leaves are dark green with only the veins showing maroon). However, I divided it this year, so I now have three healthy pots and can afford to experiment (ie. risk losing one). So: can taro be overwintered in a dormant state, and if so how? Should it be kept wet or dry, and at what temperature? And of course the followup Q is: how do I wake it up in Spring? I have a sunroom which would be good for "hardening off" (if that's something you can even do to taro). -- Kizhe ~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~ |
#8
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![]() A follow up on wintering over Taro as taken out of two aquatic gardening books I have. Both books give basically the same info and list only two ways. 1.....Bring plants in pots indoors , place in saucer in warn sunny room. 2.....Let plants dry out, dig up the corm, and store corm in a tighly sealed plastic bag filled with coarse vermiculite, in yet another sealed container in a cool but frostfree area. They also recomend transplanting yearly to keep plants healthy. Visit my website: http://www.frugalmachinist.com Opinions expressed are those of my wife, I had no input whatsoever. Remove "nospam" from email addy. |
#9
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