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>> No. 1130 Anonymous
18th July 2010
Sunday 11:48 pm
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I was wondering, what kind of flower seeds would be good to use in seedbombs at this time of year?
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>> No. 1131 Anonymous
19th July 2010
Monday 12:29 pm
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>>1130

Sprinkle japanese knotweed pieces around far and wide across the land. You'll be the British Johnny Appleseed.
>> No. 1132 Anonymous
19th July 2010
Monday 6:30 pm
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>>1131
Now that's just uncouth and, all in all, very un/eco/. What about hemp?
>> No. 1133 Anonymous
19th July 2010
Monday 7:20 pm
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>>1132
Make sure not to get caught if you do. Even drug-free hemp is illegal to plant without the Home Office's permission.
>> No. 1134 Anonymous
19th July 2010
Monday 8:24 pm
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>>1130

Poppies, old chap. Blooms beloved by old dears and all.
>> No. 1135 Anonymous
19th July 2010
Monday 11:06 pm
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>>1134

That's a good idea, they're bright, well-loved, and if they grew on no-mans-land they must be pretty tough little buggers.
>> No. 1136 Anonymous
19th July 2010
Monday 11:55 pm
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Poppies are lovely and brighten up areas everywhere. Make sure you get a nice mix of colours.

Nothing better than seeing an area that's looking rather bleak suddenly brightened up with a few flowers springing up.
>> No. 1223 Anonymous
7th August 2010
Saturday 5:08 pm
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>>1135
We had a couple come up in an untended patch in our garden; I have absolutely no clue how they got there (the closest poppies I could find are about 150yards away… behind a row of terraced houses), but they seemed to hold their own just fine against pretty much all other contenders where they grew. The only downside was that they seemed to flower for only a few days before dropping their petals and going to seed. The upside was that each pod produces a metric shed-ton of seeds, so we had enough to make some poppyseed bread using only 2-3 pods per loaf.

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