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To: Diana in Wisconsin

More rain here in the Ozarks and this one is bringing in a cold front. Lettuce, peas and brassicas will love it. Maters and peppers not so much. Low of 47 tonight. Lost electric a couple of times in the past few days. Was windy the first time but yesterday just rainy. Unhealthy trees getting waterlogged and falling over. Happens every Spring.


22 posted on 05/21/2022 8:31:31 AM PDT by Pollard (Don't ask if there's a conspiracy. If you're not in one, you need to start one. CA Fitts)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin; Pollard; little jeremiah
Cold and watery....Not a garden plant, but something that can be grown, pitcher plants grow in Missouri and they do well in boggy areas. When I was young I hiked across a lake in Northern Wisconsin that was almost covered in spaghnum. You could jump up and down on it (carefully) and feel the the sphagnum mat sloshing up and down. There were all sorts of pitcher plants growing on top of the bog!

https://www4.uwsp.edu/biology/courses/plantid/cp-dicot-a/cp-dicot-a-063pitcher.htm

https://www.gardeningknowhow.com/houseplants/pitcher-plants/growing-pitcher-plants.htm

"Types of Pitcher Plants There are around 80 types of pitcher plants found in the genus names Sarracenia, Nepenthes and Darlingtonia. Not all of these are suitable for outdoor growing, as Nepenthes are tropical pitcher plants, but purple pitcher plant (Sarracenia purpurea) has a zonal tolerance of 2 to 9 and is exceptionally adaptable to a wide range of areas. The northern pitcher plant is another name for the purple type and grows wild in Canada. It is suited for temperate to cool regions.

Read more at Gardening Know How: Growing Pitcher Plants: Learn About The Care of Pitcher Plants https://www.gardeningknowhow.com/houseplants/pitcher-plants/growing-pitcher-plants.htm"

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Not sure how bad the newly released monkey pox will be, but this is an interesting article;

https://www.chemistryworld.com/news/rediscovered-native-american-remedy-kills-poxvirus/3003420.article

Sarracenia purpurea

"Herbal medicine used to treat smallpox in the 19th century found to halt viral replication in vitro

An old herbal remedy for treating smallpox that is thought to have been used by native Americans in the late 1800s has been rediscovered and found to kill the poxvirus. Smallpox has been eradicated, but the finding offers a possible treatment for poxvirus in the unlikely event of a bioterror attack or increased incidence of similar poxviruses such as monkey pox. .... Snip....

The team made extracts of S. purpurea and found that it was highly effective at inhibiting the replication of the virus in rabbit kidney cells. They then looked at the replication cycle of the virus and found that the herb inhibits mRNA synthesis, halting production of proteins vital for replication. ’Other drugs are being developed against smallpox, but S. purpurea is the only known therapy that will target the virus at this point in the replication cycle,’ says Langland.

’The extract blocks early transcription appearing to have a distinct mechanism of action from that of two other antivirals currently in clinical trials,’ says Mark Buller, a virologist at Saint Louis University, Missouri, US. ’The results are very compelling, and support the need to further evaluate the purified active ingredient in small animal studies.’

’With smallpox, it is obviously impossible to see if this herb is effective in the human body unless a bioterror release of the virus occurs,’ says Langland. ’We are in the process of doing animal studies to confirm our results in at least this type of whole animal system.’"

More at link.

Not being a Herbalist I cant really say how someone would process this...Tincture maybe?

24 posted on 05/21/2022 9:14:42 AM PDT by Pete from Shawnee Mission
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