whataplantknows.blogspot.com
The Daily Plant: April 2013
http://whataplantknows.blogspot.com/2013_04_01_archive.html
A surprising look at the plants around us and how they've influenced our world. Monday, April 1, 2013. No sibling rivalry for Petunias. NOTE: THIS WAS ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED ON APRIL 1, 2013! Seeds of Petunia hybrida. Were germinated in two different environments. In the green house termed “Petunia Patch”, the seeds were sown 5 cm from each other. Petunias in the "Petunia Patch". Said, “They were just lonely little petunias in an onion patch”. Links to this post. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). Drop me a line.
blog.brighterstep.com
What's Nature Got To Do With It - BRIGHTER STEP
http://blog.brighterstep.com/whats-nature-got-to-do-with-it
Plan and fulfill your initiatives. Intention is a Tool for Wonder Woman. What’s Nature Got To Do With It. July 21, 2015. Why do we feel refreshed, inspired, and calmer after enjoying time outside in nature? Because nature is completely. Engage in unstructured time in Nature you’re. Headed in the direction of full. Self-expression and self-actualization, with your eyes wide open. You are ahead of the game. A powerful mentor, teacher and coach is waiting right outside your door. The buzz about Nature is am...
cybotanica.wordpress.com
Dolittle Discovery | Cybotanica
https://cybotanica.wordpress.com/2012/10/23/134
October 23, 2012. The Dr Dolittle books aren’t exactly renowned as authoritative sources of botanical knowledge. Secondly, the Doctor himself is not especially famous for knowing anything about the vegetable kingdom. The vast majority of the books are concerned with the ways in which Señor Dolittle and his loyal assistants encounter and learn to communicate with a wide range of inhabitants of the animal kingdom the Doctor is a linguist, and a zoologist, but definitely not a botanist. Other ways in which ...
whataplantknows.blogspot.com
The Daily Plant: November 2013
http://whataplantknows.blogspot.com/2013_11_01_archive.html
A surprising look at the plants around us and how they've influenced our world. Thursday, November 21, 2013. I did NOT write this pseudoscience mumbo-jumbo. What would you do when find that an article you had published was unlawfully copied by another website as if you were a guest writer, and then given free permission to republish by that same site? What do you do if not only had one of your articles has been unlawfully redistributed, but that its been altered with a paragraph you never wrote? Unless y...
whataplantknows.blogspot.com
The Daily Plant: I did NOT write this pseudoscience mumbo-jumbo
http://whataplantknows.blogspot.com/2013/11/i-did-not-write-this-pseudoscience.html
A surprising look at the plants around us and how they've influenced our world. Thursday, November 21, 2013. I did NOT write this pseudoscience mumbo-jumbo. What would you do when find that an article you had published was unlawfully copied by another website as if you were a guest writer, and then given free permission to republish by that same site? What do you do if not only had one of your articles has been unlawfully redistributed, but that its been altered with a paragraph you never wrote? Unless y...
whataplantknows.blogspot.com
The Daily Plant: January 2013
http://whataplantknows.blogspot.com/2013_01_01_archive.html
A surprising look at the plants around us and how they've influenced our world. Sunday, January 20, 2013. Guest Blog: Yunal Sapir and The Shy Red Bride. Is Director of the Tel Aviv University Botanical Gardens. The red-crowned anemone,. Links to this post. Sunday, January 6, 2013. Guest Blog: Yuval Sapir and 50 Shades of Pink. A field of wild anemones flowering in early January. Note that most of the flowers are not red. Is Director of the Tel Aviv University Botanical Gardens. Links to this post. I've b...
whataplantknows.blogspot.com
The Daily Plant: June 2012
http://whataplantknows.blogspot.com/2012_06_01_archive.html
A surprising look at the plants around us and how they've influenced our world. Thursday, June 28, 2012. Presumed extinct - WRONG! A Wollemi Pine at the U.S. Botanical Garden. In Washington D.C. Members of the public can view propagated plants at a number of botanical gardens around the world. Links to this post. Sunday, June 24, 2012. Revenge in a name - Sigesbeckia orientalis. Wondered "who would have thought that bluebells, lillies and onions could be up to such immorality? Links to this post. Among t...
whataplantknows.blogspot.com
The Daily Plant: July 2012
http://whataplantknows.blogspot.com/2012_07_01_archive.html
A surprising look at the plants around us and how they've influenced our world. Monday, July 30, 2012. Berry-Go-Round, July 2012. Features an eclectic collection of 11 posts from 10 contributors. Gives a great overview of the recently published banana genome. I agree with her that the Venn diagram in this article is one of the best, or at least most original, ever. From In the Company of Plants and Rocks. Has two interesting posts this past month. What's an old oak for? And migratory Orioles decorated it...
whataplantknows.blogspot.com
The Daily Plant: August 2012
http://whataplantknows.blogspot.com/2012_08_01_archive.html
A surprising look at the plants around us and how they've influenced our world. Sunday, August 26, 2012. Garlic mustard is native to Europe, western and central Asia, and nothern Africa. As a biennial, in the first year of growth, plants form clumps of round shaped, slightly wrinkled leaves, that when crushed smell like garlic (hence the name.). The next year plants flower in spring, producing white flowers that release seeds in mid-summer. Links to this post. Monday, August 20, 2012. How does the hatsav.
whataplantknows.blogspot.com
The Daily Plant: May 2012
http://whataplantknows.blogspot.com/2012_05_01_archive.html
A surprising look at the plants around us and how they've influenced our world. Wednesday, May 30, 2012. A Sensitive Plant in a garden grew,. And the young winds fed it with silver dew,. And it opened its fan-like leaves to the light. And closed them beneath the kisses of Night. By Percy Bysshe Shelley meanders on for 311 lines, and I recommend taking the time to read it not only for its lyric beauty, but also for its description of the senses of a garden. The most famous sensitive plant is Mimosa pudica.
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