I entertain you guys, I’m happy to be here with you.
Shrew … I had a shrew in one pot … I wondered why it is so small compared to the others. Do you think that was it? I have no idea how he could get there.
Any idea what the shrew was doing? stashing seeds there?
@JoeCrowe. Byl mrtví. Včera jsem hnojil, asi jsem ho tím hnojivem zabil. Jen nevím jak se tam mohl dostat a co mohl způsobit. Myslíte, že mohl jíst kořeny? Obrázek je ilustrativní
Online říkají, že rejsci většinou jedí hmyz. Možná tam pronásledoval brouka? Říká se, že budou jíst kořeny, vidíte nějaké kopání?
I’ll look at the digging in a few hours when I get out of work and get some sleep. I’m curious, but I don’t think digging was visible there, but it’s true that it’s hard to see there.
That’s got to be the craziest thing I’ve seen living in someone’s indoor!
Is that a mole?
You killed a shrew with fertilizer going to put that in my gardener hand book, I’m sure your roots are fine.
nop its a shrew
Shrews (family Soricidae) are small mole-like mammals classified in the order Eulipotyphla. True shrews are not to be confused with treeshrews, otter shrews, elephant shrews, or the West Indies shrews, which belong to different families or orders.
Although its external appearance is generally that of a long-nosed mouse, a shrew is not a rodent, as mice are. It is, in fact, a much closer relative of hedgehogs and moles, and shrews are related to rodents only to the extent that both belong to the Boreoeutheria magnorder – together with humans, monkeys, lemurs, bush babies, cats, dogs, bears, weasels, hyaenas, seals, civets, horses, tapirs, rhinos, cattle, goats, pigs, camels, whales, dolphins, bats, and others. Shrews have sharp, spike-like teeth, not the familiar gnawing front incisor teeth of rodents.
Shrews are distributed almost worldwide; of the major tropical and temperate land masses, only New Guinea, Australia, and New Zealand have no native shrews; in South America shrews appeared only relatively recently, as a result of the Great American Interchange, and are present only in the northern Andes. In terms of species diversity, the shrew family with its 385 known species is the fourth-most successful mammal family, being exceeded only by the muroid rodent families Muridae and Cricetidae and the bat family Vespertilionidae. In terms of population size, it is probably the most successful mammal family, with a typical population of a few shrews per forest acre, adding up to an order of magnitude of 100 billion shrews in the world.[2]
they are harmless guys, they eat bugs so they are good in gardens, in a small place, im not sure
I’m not sure if it’s so harmless. The flower grew slowly. The difference is about 20 cm in height. It looks better today. I’ll know more in time, but she’s relieved.
I wouldn’t keep it around. I would let it go. @curiouscat is right. It’s a Shrew.
Was there a hole in your tent ? Or did it hitch a ride with your soil . So they feed on fat juicy worms and bugs and shock your plants digging around the roots ?
Translated: He was dead. I fertilized yesterday, I probably killed him with that fertilizer. I just don’t know how he could get there and what he could have caused. Do you think he could eat the roots? The image is illustrative
@Lapolda 20cm is a big loss of growth, it will recover quickly. I definitely see it in the picture.
No hole. Most likely he got there with land. Yes, I think she was stressed at the roots.
Yes. There is a visible difference since yesterday. It slowly expands in width and overall massive. Well, at least I didn’t go down without explaining myself first. I’ll post a photo here tomorrow.Ps: The translator makes me tired. He can’t translate very well. You translated it very well.
Regular weekly update. Tutankhamon
Glueberry… The one in the back right is probably a herm.
And here’s the one where the shrew lived.
Looks like male parts on that plant, sorry. You can start trying to pull them off. Sometimes they don’t come back. Old growers will often say it’s not worth it, new growers usually don’t want to throw away whole grows. And that shrew might not have been eating your plant, but there isn’t very much room in that pot for him to share space with roots.
Is the shrew-plant the one that hermied?