
I'm here today to share three different ways of receiving three seedlings. Usually, we get seedlings, which are sort of two types, one small black belt, which is grown from yellow or red soil, and the other one is made of bags, planted from nutrient soil. For starters, i don't know how to go in a lot of times, so i'll share it today, using three ways, without destroying the earth. He's empty at the bottom of this knitting bag, and the little black belt is not, so the first thing to do is to tear it apart, and he's got a strong roots, but his weakness is that it's strong and it's easy to tie it. Dismantling leads to the appearance of thicker roots than those grown from trophic soil. The first small black belt, so it's dark, and i've got a relatively large percentage of the original soil on it, so it's very similar to the top of the yellow soil, so it can fill the earth with 90 percent of the ground. I'll take the second knitting bag off and protect it carefully. Because the nutrients used for seedlings are loose, this is only 50 percent of the soil, and the soil at the bottom must be half or more of the basin to have enough space to grow the roots. The third one, i don't take the knitting bag, as the merchants say, goes up to the generation, and two thirds of the ground on the bottom of the basin, and puts the seedling on it, and turns it around and fills it. Beware of the need to get the seedlings out at least two centimeters or half when filling. When you're done with the pelvis, you're gonna have to water the taps, see what happens in ten days. In the same place, the glue is not so dense except for the yellow soil, which is synchronized. This one's a better-looking one, and the yellow-earth roots aren't very obvious yet, but he's got a new bud, and it's just a little bit. See two. The only difference is that the main roots can pass through the unwieldy, but the fine roots are not allowed through the unwieldy, i. E. Weaves. Overall, the first two saplings, which are woven with the fabric, do grow faster, depending on later growth. That's it for today. Bye。




