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Everything posted by Rev
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Sent to the AFSR many years ago. i thought it would be dead for sure. but no it was very viable not sure if its arborea or aurea. i need the key to know heres some fresh sanguinea just coming up too
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variegated bits seems i have several more looking like this too these are williamsii but yes i am seeing it in diffusa too you need to grow lots to find the freaks what im hunting for most are cristates and monstrose forms
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living for life
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i have it and i think its a must for any serious researcher as above comment suggests the onus is on you as the critical researcher to take from it what you can - hence serious
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Rights and we responsibilities.
Rev replied to chilli's topic in Creativity, Spirituality & Philosophy
we are supposedly in the best times economically we have ever been in yet we are in the most debt we have ever been so what happens when the bubble bursts? if you want to rock the system i think you have to reduce your debt while reducing liabilities and costs also much much harder than 5 years ago now 5 years ago you could buy a house in a nice part of the country for a relative pittance - or even Perth, Hobart or Adelaide now you cant. its very much harder but still worth doing save save save reject anything you cant afford, plow every dollar you have into reducing debt and reducing reliance on rented/hired goods because you willlook back at now when times are tough and kick yourself for wasting all that money you had free on shit you didnt need being free is tied to having basic needs met, but being debt free it really costs SFA to live if all you need to do is pay bills based n your rate of consumption that is you can physically labour to meet those aims and still have time left in your day and not being tied to the millstone is my ticket to being able to go on in a few years and do the traveling and exploration i always wanted to, but couldnt cos i knew i didnt have a pot to piss in when i came home. -
1.Tea 2.Chocolate 3.Cactus 4.Coffee
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i need the lawn form of caespitose i have the clumper i have swapsies fricii cardona cuatrocienegas tecolote san antonio email me
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sure but they are outdated and its too dark to do again now maybe tomorrow the variegation comes out with age ive seen it increase in intensity signifivantly in the last week i think i have an albino too but its so young. dont place any bets on survival
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nice ones i have 3 definitley variegated lophs now grafted to peres
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on that note the best way to get big leaves is to be diligent with good compost dug in prior and side dressed through season these plant like it rich but well composted like cannabis im sure they were drawn to our wastes and gave us something in return by keeping soil mositure up - best by slow trickle to soak subsurface rather than a light sprinkle everyday most solanaceae (cept B sanguina) i know of like roots moist but not the tops and especially in all cases by pulling any flower buds. just like basil youll get an anormous amount of leaf off a plant so long as you are diligent in plucking every few days youll be amazed how a tiny leaf will continue to enlarge if the energy inst sucked into flowering
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N tabacum is suprisingly frost tolerant as an adult not sure about rustica but in perth (no frost but winter rain) it grew best self seeded in the compost heap over winter LARGE leaves, no bolting of course these days you arent alowed to grow so its all hypothetical right
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we had a land mullet that lived by a concrete ledge one day as watching a magpie swops down and stabs him in the head he gets away to live another day he heals and starst coming out again. again one day while weatching him bask out jumps a red bellied black snake and grabs him proceeding to swallow whole oh well thats the jungle i guess sorry bout your friends andy that wasnt fair i bet they didnt even eat them
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oh yes every rot that is black and causes death isnt the black rot there seems a quorum of agents rather than just one that gets around
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black rot isnt always lethal. in fact most often its not if its really fast then chop it. if it isnt then put it somewhere dry and leave it alone. it will heal itsef most times i dont have it as much this year partly cos the weather is drier, and part cos as the planst get older they arent as affected seems to be a correlation with fertiliser more fert equals higher susceptibility. as tissue ages it seem to harden up against it the most susceptible species ive found are scops. it can kill them very quickly all teh really fat trichs are a worry . terscheckii too but pachs and peru seem quite resistant, briudge less so although amongst seedlings some never get it, some get it bad and so get culled other time where i have 50 clones next to one another one gets it and collapses while those around it are untouched. so much for equal susceptbility among clones. there is much more to this than we know yet also i know for a fact my WA sourced pachs had it b4 comeing east cos they were packed inside boxes and furniture and when they emerged they had lesions i had never seen it expressed in perth b4 there is also a strong correlation with humidity. ive seen it on eileen once or twice but shes never ever succumbed or even sufferred. very water tolerant that strain is. mancozeb is quite effective against it if used topically. up to you though it is used on food crops but still isnt nice, always use PPE and obey the label
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fresh rhizomes i mean
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yeah well you guys got the source i have too i didnt make it - too much to do too little time grab me some or leave me some ey ;)
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Anyone got data on the alleged inefficiency of western opium production? i wont believe it less i see it they sow and harvest with machines, use fertilisers and chem weed control like a wheat crop they harvest teh whole pods when dry - no lancing labour- and take the whole biomass to be processed in giant vats full of solvent if it wasnt for the 80:20 rule i think alot of summer wheat growing areas would being growing it with the efficiency of well - wheat, whith which several wild poppies 'naturally' cohabit
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theyve known that for ages - hence the norman strains and thebaine production tassie has the benefit of machine harvesting and flatter land (transport) i know if i was a poppy farmer id not be wanting to comepete on teh internatonal codeine and morphine production markets - which india and turkey dominate through the help of the USA but poppies can throw out some pretty interesting other things if you bombard them with enough gamm radiation
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nah but its on my long list of to finds btw ist P alkekengii sorry no oxytocin its got hystonin which acts like oxytocin to cause uterine contraction but with faster action fruit used in TCM to induce labour sorry for the rough lead still.... therell be an oxytocin rich plant out there somewhere BTW WhereTF is a melatonin rich plant? you need so little. theres bound to be one, or several
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make your girlfriend very happy everytime you buy?
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Medicinal plant staves off thirst, promotes stamina
Rev replied to Gardener's topic in Australian Native Plants
tdnntbh -
Medicinal plant staves off thirst, promotes stamina
Rev replied to Gardener's topic in Australian Native Plants
tdnntbh -
Medicinal plant staves off thirst, promotes stamina
Rev replied to Gardener's topic in Australian Native Plants
tdnntbh -
Medicinal plant staves off thirst, promotes stamina
Rev replied to Gardener's topic in Australian Native Plants
Duboisia chemistry is varied and complex between populations and species - and hybrids There are nicotine, hyoscine, atropine and hyoscamine containing populations of D myoporoides up the coast and over to PNG The victorian D hopwoodii leaf ive tried is comparable to the Queensland material I havent tried the WA stuff yet but a nicotine containing populations does exist accodring to TLC -
possibly ill know by end of the week ill buy all i can and if id'd as correct - propagate it, if not ill b having lots of thai chicken dishes