@LoneWolf Hmm, not much in the vegetable category. those like lots of sunshine, warmth, and soil.
@LoneWolf Our site (GL) needs to get bigger. Maybe you can help us become the 'fittest' and survive! One thing we need the most is questions, so keep us in mind in case you have one. :P
Locally a horse-keeper uses sawdust in his stables instead of straw. While I don't know whether this is better or worse for horses it actually solved my problem of "purity".
The horse-owner just scrapes away the "produce" of the horse including a small amount of sawdust instead of replacing hug...
you are the 'Jon Skeet' of Gardening & Landscaping - If you're not familiar with him, he's got the highest rep of all time on stackoverflow. =) I'm always impressed by your thorough responses. — itsmattSep 29 at 23:49
Good I guess. It seems that no one cares enough about tags to answer your meta to create a new one, but OH BOY.... look out if you create one without a meta.
@LoneWolf The question was good, a few guidelines: I edited the title to make it more descriptive. We want every title to be as descriptive as possible, and be different from all the others. Also, try to describe the habitat to the best of your ability, and give your location. I couldn't edit this in, so please do. :P
@J.Musser More descriptive tags, you know? For example someone who is trying to find and identify the plant I was looking for, they'll use tags like: Green,light green, White edges, Spade shape.
@J.Musser Do you catch my drift?
@J.Musser Unfortunately I don't have the tag creating privilege yet. Because I would help.
@LoneWolf There is a 5 tag limit on questions, so you have to use a variety of possibly generic tags. It is best to put the keywords throughout the actual question body and title, in relevant places, for the search engines.
The tags are more for categorizing questions within the site. You can search for all the questions under any tag or combination of tags. It helps you find topics you are looking for.