ご視聴いただきありがとうございます。 動画の感想をコメント欄に書いてもらえると嬉しいです。 これからもこのチャレンジを続けていく予定です。 その様子はXを見てください。 x.com/ishikokemusu1 Thank you for watching. I would be happy if you could write your thoughts on the video in the comments section. I plan to continue this challenge. Please check out X to see how it goes. x.com/ishikokemusu1
@Amocles5 ай бұрын
Yeah no offense man but screw x...
@Kate-oi6yt6 ай бұрын
I have utmost respect for anyone willing to grow moss over so many months. This is very interesting.
Not sure if a Japanese commenter has pointed this out yet, but the plant at 6:21 looks like it might be a liverwort. Liverworts have a similar life cycle to moss, and they grow in the same habitats. Thank you so much for your dedication to watering the moss rock daily, and for sharing it with the world!
¡Muchas Gracias por tu tiempo y paciencia ! Ami me come la ansiedad 😆 Tengo meses haciendo lo mismo y he visto apenas una "pelusita verde" sobre las rocas. Mas rápido crece sobre madera. Una vez mas: Gracias, ahora se que tengo que esperar un año ( por eso no recojo musgo de las piedras en el bosque, solo de troncos y manto orgánico en las calles de la ciudad). Saludos desde Caracas - Venezuela 🇻🇪
I guess pouring directly on the stone is harsh for the moss to grow. You could have just used a sprayer. Spray it like mist. Just enough to wet the stone. Also avoid too much light. Rain water is also a must not water from tap.❤😊
@teslainvestah50033 ай бұрын
Maybe this is what is meant by "Until the tiny pebbles grow into massive boulders lush with moss"! Bless you, and your patience, it is refreshing.
What a commitment to make! Very impressive, no vacations? Thanks for explaining protonema. Big smile when I saw the baby moss at 3:54, success! Love the offering box and shimenawa, now I want to go learn more about them too. Another beautiful video, well done and thank you! 👍❤️ Also, I would love to see the experiment continue 😊
@michikusa31935 ай бұрын
Thank you for your comment. I am not taking any time off for this project.
You are doing gods work for adding sub titles! Much appreciated 🙆🏻♀️
@michikusa31934 ай бұрын
Thank you for watching the video!
@Morgan-yl3ou3 ай бұрын
Fantastic! I,didnt know you could grow moss on stone on its own. I always thought moss only grew under plants, in the out doors Obvi9uspy water , wet conditions are important. I have loads of thick moss in the garden and let the birds use it for nests. The best place is around my fish pond ... ..the moss is like thick pillows...stunning... Moss is heavely Cant beleive it took a year to get iit going . Wow .
@mika902729 күн бұрын
苔って、こんなふうにできるのですね♡
@Kate-oi6yt6 ай бұрын
I’m gaving trouble finding moss to purchase in my area and cannit seem to grow in my apartment. Thank you for this video from Toronto, Canada.
@FELLCHARONGAMES6 ай бұрын
Don’t give up. I ended up finding a local supplier through an aquascapes store. Before that, couldn’t find anything and with Australian quarantine laws, meant I couldn’t even get it shipped over from another state. I planted half of my initial purchase and propagated the other half. The half I propagated has stimulated growth in about 90%. The other half I planted only about 40-50% though all of that 40-50% has been planted in with other plants, the rest that has shown no growth is by itself.
This is so thoroughly japanese in a delightful way. Taking a stone and tending to it day after day, diligent and patient in the hopes of growth and experiencing the wonder of nature. Having the humble record of this growth become popular as it taps into a very human fasciantion. Half jokingly, half sincerely surrounding this small miracle of nature with tools of worship. Thank you for letting us all see this quiet joy.
@lanasinapayen33545 ай бұрын
This is the cutest, most poetic video ever. 最高です。お疲れ様でした
This is awesome. I have recently visited Assisi (in Italy) where a beautiful kind of moss grows like pillows. This video inspired me to try and reproduce it! Thanks!!
Well done, great work. Mr. Moss is a celebrity like no other!
@michikusa31935 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@baikia7773 ай бұрын
That's really cool! For the next stage, continue watering until ferns grow on it 😂
@CooroApplez4 ай бұрын
I got worried when the show arrived! Stay warm little moss! Fight on!
@PtLeoJet4 ай бұрын
Very insightful! When you first started watering did you use tap water (chlorinated)? Or let the water stand for 24h so the chlorine dissipated? Or just rainwater? Curious to know, thanks!
@michikusa31934 ай бұрын
I use tap water without dechlorination. Occasionally, it gets rained on.
@Lando_Cruz2 ай бұрын
Watching from the Philippines 🇵🇭 glad it has eng sub.
@M.H.Q.A.6 ай бұрын
Wow. What a great consistently and effort you put.. ❤
@garnetgarcia32873 ай бұрын
Huge fan of the moss rock and your dedication to its growth. I am very happy that the internet has brought me to you from the other side of the world 🙌🏼
@savannadearing30205 ай бұрын
That was neat! I don't think I can grow moss in my climate, so it was fun to watch you be able to do it!
@川繝5 ай бұрын
毎日見てます! 動画おもしろかったです。センスある。。
@michikusa31935 ай бұрын
楽しんでいただき。ありがとうございます😊
@偽名太郎-k9g4 ай бұрын
これだけ多くの人から注目されてる石だから、もしかしたら本当に神様的なパワーが宿ってるかも笑
@michikusa31934 ай бұрын
えっ、もうすでに
@nathanmillard4 ай бұрын
Well done!!! Patience is certainly a virtue. I’ve been making terrariums as a hobby for a couple of years. I have 6 or 7 at home now and have made many, many more - mostly failures / experiments.
Vivo en México, el agua del suministro no me funciona, al contrario, hace que el musgo se ponga café. Pero el agua de lluvia y agua de una pecera de agua dulce me han funcionado bien, incluso el agua tratada con anticloro.
@odagorori6 ай бұрын
ただただ凄いっ🎉
@michikusa31936 ай бұрын
ありがとうございます!
@WaffleStein4 ай бұрын
I just watch 9 minutes of a man watering a stone for a year. Interesting
When a mommy moss and a daddy moss love each other very much…
@kzookid20512 ай бұрын
Very interesting experiment that shows the appreciation post-volcanic forests deserve. I'm wondering if your bin for the stones had drainage holes on the bottom?
@michikusa31932 ай бұрын
There is a hole in the bottom of the container.
@ginrou66613 ай бұрын
苔の生命力は凄いね! 見習って強く生きなければ
@klax5064 ай бұрын
so wonderful to see! I hope you and the moss have many more happy days growing 🌱
@michikusa31934 ай бұрын
Please continue to keep an eye on the moss.
@ohanafavorites5 ай бұрын
Where did you buy the bucket and ladle?
@michikusa31935 ай бұрын
I purchased it from an online shop.
@ohanafavorites5 ай бұрын
@@michikusa3193 Can you send me the link to the online shop?
@Nicken0o04 ай бұрын
We have them in my dad man made waterfall. It was only cement but there's a lot of moss on it. I often scrape them off and throw it away until one day i just stopped and thought "it looked kinda pretty" so i left them.. after i got married dad emptied the waterfall pond and there's no more moss on the wall of the waterfall. They all dried up and died
@michikusa31934 ай бұрын
That's a pity. I hope they reopen the moss-covered waterfall.
I'm surprised it took so long for the moss to grow. But I suppose it has nothing but bare rock, water, and air. Plants really are amazing when you think about it!
@WaIgeon5 ай бұрын
I have some stones lying in my garden. Its nice watching how the moss grows over them. Its a slow process but really beautiful. I will try it with a lava rock aswell, to study wich species will grow on their own.
@divinenonbinary4 ай бұрын
I would love to see more of the progress maybe a once a month update or so!!😻
@michikusa31934 ай бұрын
Please check out the daily updates posted on X. x.com/ishikokemusu1
@PlantsN2 ай бұрын
Can u show ur kokedamas?
@michikusa3193Ай бұрын
Please watch this video. kzbin.info/www/bejne/bmeomWuol69_pck
@ARandomClown3 ай бұрын
this was a cool video to watch. makes me wish i was still working on a farm
@deathrukia903 ай бұрын
Ahora también quiero intentarlo 😂❤ aunque no tenga espacio en casa para hacerlo veré la forma 👌
Ecological succession was always a topic I found interesting
@rubyesmerald66844 ай бұрын
I live in a dry tropical country, I tink the first green stuff is alga, tans normal, and if you try with red mud bricks, it be have more moss, try too with cement bricks, if you have luck, some ferms will be in the bricks