The shape of gladiolus is very beautiful. It has 1 1 leaves, rectangular and slender. There are 20 fine lines on each leaf, which are open on both sides, short inside and long outside, and closely arranged together.
But the plastic pot containing gladiolus was short and ugly, so my mother found a beautiful porcelain pot and transplanted it in it. Because the porcelain basin is relatively large and the plastic basin contains less soil, gladiolus is staggered in the porcelain basin. Mom wants to find some soil to fix gladiolus, but there are cement floors inside and outside the community. Where can I find soil? At this time, my mother suddenly thought that there were still some bugs at home, so my mother caught some mung beans and scattered them on the soil where gladiolus was planted, and finally fixed gladiolus.
After planting gladiolus, my mother watered the flowers, and some water droplets rolled down from the leaves like sliding elves. Some water drops on leaves, like transparent pearls, embedded in leaves. Gladiolus is also more green and charming.
In a beautiful porcelain basin, gladiolus is more vibrant and its leaves are greener. I am looking forward to the budding buds in the green leaves of gladiolus. I waited quietly. ...
The next afternoon, gladiolus did not sprout, but mung beans sprouted.
Mung beans have a high diameter, on which two tea-like leaves are supported. These mung bean sprouts are scrambling to grow up, standing tall and straight in the porcelain basin like soldiers, guarding this land from being invaded by others, as if this porcelain basin were their home.
The porcelain basin was originally made for gladiolus, but now it has become the home of mung beans. I expected gladiolus to blossom, but now mung beans germinate first, which is really unintentional.