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blue chalk sticks succulent

blue chalk sticks succulent Dwarf Blue Chalk Sticks

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Description

blue chalk sticks succulent Dwarf Blue Chalk SticksIntroducing the dwarf blue chalk sticks, known as Senecio serpens; with its blue grey color is a popular choice for gardens. It adds a great accent and gives a unique touch to any garden. Originating from South Africa, this Senecio serpens succulent plant has several other common names such as mini blue chalk stick, Curio repens, blue chalk fingers, compact blue chalk sticks, Cacalia repens, and Senecio serpens f. cristatus. The Mini blue chalk sticks

Introducing the dwarf blue chalk sticks, known as Senecio serpens; with its blue-grey color is a popular choice for gardens. It adds a great accent and gives a unique touch to any garden. Originating from South Africa, this Senecio serpens succulent plant has several other common names such as mini blue chalk stick, Curio repens, blue chalk fingers, compact blue chalk sticks, Cacalia repens, and Senecio serpens f. cristatus. The Mini blue chalk sticks Senecio serpens tend to have a more compact and mounding growth habit compared to the trailing habit of large blue chalk sticks Senecio mandraliscae. 

Senecio serpens is a dwarf semi-trailing succulent with short, cylindrical blue-green, finger-like fleshy leaves, branching from the base, suckering from roots, and rooting along prostrate stems. The Senecio serpens protective farina coating thickens in bright sunlight, causing it to take on a more silvery hue in summer. It has a low-growing and spreading habit, forming dense mats of foliage that can reach a height of about 12 inches and spread up to 3 feet wide. Its unique texture and color make it a popular choice for rock gardens, succulent arrangements, or as a ground cover. 

The Senecio serpens blooms in late spring or mid-summer, with small, daisy-like yellow or small white flowers on tall stalks. The flowers attract pollinators like bees and butterflies, making them a great addition to any garden. 

Senecio serpens can be propagated through stem cuttings or by division. To propagate through stem cuttings, simply take a healthy stem and let it dry for a few days to form a callus. Then, insert the stem into well-drained soil and keep it slightly moist until the roots develop. Division can be done by carefully separating the plant into smaller sections, ensuring each section has roots attached. 

Watering Needs 

Senecio serpens is a drought-tolerant succulent that requires minimal watering. It is critical to follow the "soak and dry" technique. This means that you should thoroughly water your dwarf blue chalk sticks until water drains out of the bottom of the pot and then allow the soil to dry out completely before watering again. Overwatering can lead to root rot, so it's best to err on the side of underwatering with this Senecio succulent. 

In the spring and summer, during the growing season, you'll typically water Senecio serpens about once every two to three weeks. However, it's important to adjust the watering schedule based on the specific conditions of your environment. 

During the dormant period in winter, you can reduce watering to once a month or even less. When watering, make sure to water the soil directly and avoid getting water on the leaves, as this can cause them to rot. 

Remember, it's always better to underwater than to overwater when it comes to succulents like Senecio serpens blue chalksticks. By providing just the right amount of water and allowing the soil to dry out between waterings, you'll help ensure the health and longevity of your dwarf blue chalk sticks plant. 

Light Requirements 

When it comes to light requirements for Senecio serpens, it thrives in bright, indirect light, whether you choose to grow it indoors or outdoors. When growing indoors, place your Senecio serpens in a location where it can receive bright, indirect sunlight for several hours a day. A south-facing window is usually a great spot, as it provides ample sunlight without the risk of scorching the leaves. If you don't have a south-facing window, east or west-facing windows can also work well. Just make sure to rotate the plant occasionally to ensure even growth. 

If you prefer to grow dwarf blue chalk sticks Senecio serpens outdoors; then it loves basking in full sun or partial shade. Ideally, find a spot that receives at least six hours of sun exposure per day. However, be cautious of intense afternoon sun, especially in hot climates, as it can cause sunburn on the leaves. Providing some light shade during the hottest part of the day can help protect the Senecio serpens plant. 

Remember, finding the right balance of light is crucial for the health and growth of Senecio serpens. With proper lighting, your Senecio serpens will thrive and display its beautiful blue-gray foliage for you to enjoy! 

Optimal Soil & Fertilizer 

Senecio serpens likes very airy, porous, nutrient-rich soil with a pH of 5.6 - 7.5. Senecio succulent requires fast-draining soil that dries completely between waterings. Your soil must have a sandy texture and a low water-holding capacity, just like desert soil. Soggy wet soil can damage your dwarf blue chalk sticks and contribute to bacterial and fungal rot. 

As an alternative, you can create your own potting mix by combining equal portions of perlite, coarse sand, and good natural potting soil. Ideally, you want to use our specialized succulent potting mix that contains 5 natural substrates and organic mycorrhizae to promote the development of a strong root system that helps your Senecio serpens plant to thrive. 

As for fertilizer needs, Senecio serpens doesn't require heavy feeding. A balanced (5-10-5), water-soluble NPK fertilizer formulated for succulents can be applied once a year during the growing season, which is typically spring. Follow the instructions for the correct dilution and frequency of application. Be cautious not to over-fertilize, as this can lead to salt build-up in the soil, harming the Senecio plant. 

By providing well-draining soil and a balanced fertilizer regimen, you'll help ensure that your Senecio serpens receives the nutrients it needs without risking overfeeding. This will contribute to its overall growth and vibrancy. 

Hardiness Zone & More  

If you are growing these beautiful succulents indoors, Senecio serpens prefer temperatures between 65°F to 75°F. It can tolerate slightly cooler temperatures, but it's important to avoid exposing it to extreme cold or drafts. As for humidity, this dwarf blue chalk sticks succulent is adaptable and can handle average indoor humidity levels without any issues. 

If you are living in USDA zones 9-11, you can grow your Senecio serpens blue chalk sticks outdoors year-round. This means that it thrives in warmer climates and may not tolerate freezing temperatures well. If you live in a colder region, it's best to grow Senecio serpens as an indoor plant or provide it with protection during the winter months. 

The Senecio serpens blue chalksticks are heat tolerant up to 100°F without any problems. However, it's important to note that it may not tolerate frost or prolonged exposure to freezing temperatures. If you live in a region with colder winters, it's best to bring your Senecio serpens indoors or provide them with protection during the colder months. 

Remember, understanding the hardiness zone and temperature preferences of Senecio serpens is essential for its overall health and well-being. By providing the right conditions, whether indoors or outdoors, you'll help ensure that your plant thrives and continues to display its stunning blue-gray foliage. 

The Bottom Line 

Overall, the Senecio serpens (dwarf blue Chalksticks) is a captivating plant with its striking blue-green foliage and low-growing, spreading habit. Originating from South Africa, it thrives in arid conditions and is a popular choice for rock gardens, succulent arrangements, or as a ground cover. It produces small yellow flowers in late spring or early summer, adding a beautiful touch to its overall appearance. However, it's important to note that Senecio serpens, like other succulents in the Senecio genus, contains toxic alkaloids if consumed. This low-maintenance succulent prefers minimal water, well-drained soil, and bright light. It can be grown outdoors in USDA zones 911. Don't miss out on adding the dwarf blue chalk sticks Senecio serpens to your garden! Order now and enjoy its beauty for years to come. 

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Bri
Cuba, US
★★★★★ 3
good to a point
Format: Paperback
basically what could help democrats win.all well and good,but that side has much of the same donors(drug companies,defense contractors,oil industry,etc.)as the republicans.THAT'S why they don't push back fundamentally. one of my big problems with the author is his unapologetic.uneducated islamaphobia.he sounds like george bush when he mentions muslims actually.he fell for the propaganda.instead of drinking the koolaid of the cult,he should sip from the tea of informed tact. i know right-wingers wear their stances/prejudices on their sleeves,but the problem with the liberal side is the smugness they can exude towards everyone else,when,let's face,they're no better.they went to college to deepen THEIR prejudices with a more expanded vocabulary. otherwise,it's interesting from a psychological standpoint on how and what moves the masses.again,it's worth it to a point,just keep in mind that he's a bit of a meathead
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Reviewed in the United States on November 22, 2020
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Daniel Hahn
West Palm Beach, US
★★★★★ 4
The one-stars miss the point:
Format: Hardcover
Thomas J. Farrell and I may be two of a small handful who actually have read Aristotle's Rhetoric. There are good reasons for this. Aristotle's rhetoric is useful to know historically, and gives one the aroma of scholarship, yet only in the sense of one's being well-read but not particularly useful. Westen's point is that Democrats are starving for useful rhetorical advice. Grounding ourselves in material some 2,300 years old is just not sufficient. cglambdin also missed the whole point, but more bluntly and therefore clearly. I would paraphrase Westen's major point as being: as long as you go around thinking "reason, good/everything else, not so good," you lose. Not only do you lose, you DESERVE TO LOSE. Why? In a democracy, "nobody likes a smartass." The corollary to this is: "if you don't know the difference between being smart and being a smartass, you're probably the latter." Now to an ancient aristocrat like Aristotle, the distinction wouldn't have mattered. In the United States of America, it should matter to everyone aspiring to leadership. We common folk expect our leaders to resonate with our values and life conditions. We don't care whether your blood runs a bit blue (as with the Kennedys) as long as you can be with us in spirit when you need to be. It's only polite. In 1992 the smartass class had great fun with Bill Clinton's "I feel your pain" comment, but missed the point that Clinton resonated while President Bush the First's glance at his watch during the same town meeting debate ended the campaign then and there. Drew Westen evokes what I considered state of the art in the communication field when I was in graduate school twenty-five years ago. Because he's a psychologist, and also not a smartass, I didn't expect him to bring up the theoretical language of people ranging from George Herbert Mead to Kenneth Burke. Rather, he demonstrates their insights! We get it! His work also fits well in the tradition of Walter Fisher's groundbreaking . Two things about Westen's book take off a star. Yes, he does meander. Also, his repetitive bashing of Bob Shrum comes off, at last, as an extended hard-sell advertisement for his own political consulting business. Perfection is elusive. Nevertheless, The Political Brain is doggone useful!
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Reviewed in the United States on July 27, 2007
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The Godfather
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
Disturbing but necessary read
Format: Paperback
Feels strange saying that I love a book that is as disturbing as this one is but I love that it's well-written and documented and it exposes some horrendous events in the history of the Americas as well as the world. Americans may well point fingers at the Nazis (and deservedly so) but it's a case of people in glass houses throwing stones. There is no question as to the repulsiveness and inhumanity of the genocide and mass murders perpetrated in Nazi Germany, Stalin's Soviet Union, Mao's China, the Khmer Rouge's Cambodia, and in a host of African nations, to name a few; but in our own not too distant past similar atrocities were perpetrated on the native populations of the Americas by the Spanish, Portuguese, British, and colonists/Americans. While the inhumanity elsewhere in the world is touched upon to show where the mindset of this barbarity likely originated, the focus is on the impact in the Americas -- North, South, and Central. The book contains graphic, disturbing descriptions of the cruelty done to the natives by men who have long been esteemed for their alleged contributions in history. Most notably Christopher Columbus. In my time in grade school, he and the many other conquistadors and explorers were portrayed and men of courage and integrity. This book paints a different picture of them as greedy, bloodthirsty, remorseless killers of peoples who they considered inhuman or subhuman. More troubling is Christianity's participation in these actions. Not to blame Christianity for initiating it but to indict it for condoning and even commending the events. Peaceful races of people minding their own business, living in communities well planned and constructed and advanced for their time, and who welcomed the interlopers were obliterated them. Much of the death and destruction was caused by the introduction of European diseases such as smallpox that killed tens of millions but a large part was also caused by actions of odious proportions. Entire civilizations such as the Aztec and the Inca and the Arawak whose artifacts have since been admired and sought after were wiped off the face of the earth. Tens of millions of people slaughtered. Men, women, children butchered. In numbers likely to exceed those of the aforementioned genocides combined. The purpose being to acquire their lands and their riches. Considered to be no more than animals needed to be exterminated. This is our history. This book should be required reading for everyone. The graphic descriptions of the savagery should cause outrage not only for the acts themselves but for a cultures that has covered up their crimes for centuries. And the holocaust has not ended yet.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 23, 2018
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H S Marks
Draper, US
★★★★★ 5
THE SINGLE FINEST AND MOST ESSENTIAL BOOK OF THE AGE
Format: Paperback
A masterpiece of scholarship and analysis. This book is nothing less than the single most important work that you will ever read. Our entire culture is built on Holocaust Denial while those most responsible for this abnesia drape themselves in the flag of holocaust memorialism but have little honesty in their true agenda. An agenda that allows in North America alone for there to be at least 50 Holocaust memorials, museums and monuments... only problem is they are ALL about the Holocaust that happened in Europe and NOT about the colossal extermination that took place where they live. It is not only denial on the part of the nations of the Americas and Europe but those responsible for this Holocaust Denial in relation to Indian America insist on an image of being the world's caretakers of holocaust memory. What a bloody audacity. Why do we let the Spanish off the hook so lightly? Why is there no demand for Spain to make its Mea Culpa? Why is there no AMERICAS HOLOCAUST memorial in Madrid, Washington, London and Ottawa ? This brilliant book re-addresses the imbalance. POST SCRIPT.... There is a reviewer further down who uses the monica of "history buff" who rejects the value and integrity of this work. In fact he utterly insults Mr Stannard and his thesis. So I thought I would check out his other reviews...oh boy! One of the remarks he makes in a book claiming that Saddam was behind 9/11 goes "But it is very difficult to argue with the facts that were available to the agencies which pointed to a direct link between Saddam and Al Qaeda." This example of his world view is the mild end of it. So people consider the character of the self-described "history buff" who rejects Stannard's brilliant thesis on the Holocaust in the Americas. The reviewer "history buff" has a world view that comes straight out of the 1950's HUAC committee (he associates all Left wing thought with the Soviet Union not knowing that the Bolshevik regime prohibited the platform of the revolution and that its first victims were in fact the most sincere and dedicated Left revolutionaries. Clearly he has never read the finest autobiography in the history of English language autobiography; Emma Goldman's LIVING MY LIFE volume 1 and volume 2. The latter volume includes a first hand account of the destruction NOT construction of socialism by Lenin and his cohorts ). .
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Reviewed in the United States on June 5, 2006
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AlanWarner
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 5
EXTINCTION
Format: Paperback
Normally when the word extinct is used it is in reference to animals but after reading this book this term can legitimately be used to describe what happened to the original citizens of America the American Indians. Christopher Columbus and his minions (I refuse to call them soldiers) savagely murdered and killed countless numbers of these Indians, a vivid example of this is given on page 83 " One favorite sport of the conquistadors was "dogging." Traveling as they did with packs of armored wolfhounds and mastiffs that were on a diet of human flesh and were trained to disembowel Indians, the Spanish used the dogs to terrorize slaves and to entertain the troops. An entire book Dogs of the Conquest, has been published recently, detailing the exploits of these animals as they accompanied their masters throughout the course of the Spanish depredations. "A properly fleshed dog," these authors say, "could pursue a 'savage' as zealously and effectively as a deer or a boar.... To many of the conquerors, the Indian was merely another savage animal, and the dogs were trained to pursue and rip apart their human quarry with the same zest as they felt when hunting wild beasts." And also on pages 83-84 "Just as the Spanish soldiers seem to have particularly enjoyed testing the sharpness of their yard-long rapier blades on the bodies of Indian children, so their dogs seemed to find the soft bodies of infants especially tasty, and thus the accounts of the invading conquistadors and the padres who traveled with them are filled with detailed descriptions of young Indian children routinely taken from their parents and fed to the hungry animals. Men who could take pleasure in this sort of thing had little trouble with less sensitive matters, such as the sacking and burning of entire cities and towns, and the destruction of books and tablets containing millennia of accumulated knowledge, wisdom, and religious belief." After page 146 there's an illustrated unnumbered section titled Genocide the first nine pages of this section contain pictures of how the Spanish tortured and killed Indian women and children as stated on the second page of this section "[The Spaniards] took babies from their mothers' breasts, grabbing them by the feet and smashing their heads against rocks...They built a long gibbet, low enough for the toes to touch the ground and prevent strangling, and hanged thirteen [natives] at a time in honor of Christ Our Saviour and the twelve Apostles. Then, straw was wrapped around their torn bodies and they were burned alive." Not to be outdone the good old American cavalry also engaged in its' fair share of savage murder and killing as can be seen from the bottom of page126 to the top of page 127 "They turned their guns, Hotchkiss guns, etc., upon the women who were in the lodges standing under a flag of truce, and of course as soon as they were fired upon they fled....There was a woman with an infant in her arms who was killed as she almost touched the flag of truce, and the women and children of course were strewn all along the circular village until they were dispatched. Right near the flag of truce a mother was shot down with her infant; the child not knowing that its mother was dead was still nursing, and that was especially a very sad sight. The women as they were fleeing with their babes were killed together, shot right through, and the women who were very heavy with child were also killed." I personally do not celebrate Columbus Day and Thanksgiving Day this book is ample proof and evidence as to why these two days should be set aside as a time for mourning not celebration, if you want your children to have a true understanding of American history then I strongly urge you to buy this book and have it as part of your home library.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 5, 2015

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