Originally posted by Two_Sheds
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Deadheading Daffs?
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Originally posted by veggiechicken View PostThink about it this way, if you cut all your daffs for the house, the stems would be removed anyway, and this would not mean the end of the bulb, it would still grow again next year.
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I'm not a botanist/biologist or whatever so I don't know the answer.
The structure of a daff stem is hollow and full of sap and, in my simplistic mind, it is drawing up "food" to feed the flower, which then becomes a seed head. The leaf is quite different, it feeds the bulb.
I'm sure this is just me talking a load of twaddle but its the way I get my head around it!!
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Originally posted by veggiechicken View PostI'm not a botanist/biologist or whatever so I don't know the answer.
The structure of a daff stem is hollow and full of sap and, in my simplistic mind, it is drawing up "food" to feed the flower, which then becomes a seed head. The leaf is quite different, it feeds the bulb.
I'm sure this is just me talking a load of twaddle but its the way I get my head around it!!
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Originally posted by Capsid View Posta ... stem is green and contains chlorophyll so it can photosynthesise and feed the bulb/plant ...I'd argue that its contribution to photosynthesis is not insignificant.
I'm happy to be proved wrong thoughAll gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.
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I HAD TO DO IT!!! Just been out and counted the leaves on my daffodils. Four or six per bulb - therefore the stalk is one fifth or one seventh of the photosynthesis capability of the plant. However, this may not be entirely accurate as the leaves are flat and broader than the stem so I would think that the surface area of the stem is less than that of a leaf. Over to you ....................
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Originally posted by rustylady View PostI HAD TO DO IT!!! Just been out and counted the leaves on my daffodils. Four or six per bulb - therefore the stalk is one fifth or one seventh of the photosynthesis capability of the plant. However, this may not be entirely accurate as the leaves are flat and broader than the stem so I would think that the surface area of the stem is less than that of a leaf. Over to you ....................
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I think the best way to dead-head daffs was described by Harry Dodson (Victorian Kitchen Garden). Take one small boy, hand him a long whippy stick, and give him carte blanche in the daff bed to pretend he's a swashbuckling pirate!Location - Leicestershire - Chisit-land
Endless wonder.
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