Leaves of Stevia = 100% Natural Sweetener

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gegyx
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by gegyx » 25/04/11, 10:14

uh, what do you mean twigs?

Olive branches for Easter?

On my ex,
https://www.econologie.com/forums/post169428.html#169428

There was a stem and leaves coming out ...

So you would have to cut a stem and replant it, but what interest?
:D

Should we cut a stem into 5 cm sections and replant them?

But not obvious from a total success, and from a miracle of the multiplication of sugars ...
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by Cuicui » 25/04/11, 10:41

gegyx wrote:So you would have to cut a stem and replant it, but what interest?

The advantage is to have 2 plants instead of one.
The cuttings are used to multiply the plants to distribute them to friends (or to trade them ...) Not all cuttings come necessarily, count one in two.
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by Obamot » 25/04/11, 11:08

Thank you. What does it matter if you cut before or after a branch?
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by dedeleco » 25/04/11, 18:00

A lot of plants are cut or lay fingers in the nose !!
but not all !!

Rosemary, honeysuckle, winter jasmine, roses, forsithia, ivy, thornless brambles, succulents, cacti, prickly pears, agaves, oleanders, raspberries, black currants, etc. a piece of good soil that is a little wet and finished, we forget it, it starts again, and the fig tree almost as easy, by cutting crosses in sand in autumn.
Layering is even easier !!


answer for stévia in beautiful photos:
http://www.fairesonjardin.fr/marcottage.html
http://www.gireaud.net/stevia_multiplication.htm
but if the greenhouse is too humid in the shade, it will rot !!!!!!!!!!

In fact the cuttings have the problem of rot which competes and therefore put a little charcoal as disinfectant in the water.


Aspartame: the sweetener that drives you crazy and blind
http://www.gireaud.net/stevia.htm#aspartame

Quite insane not when we know that aspartame is a powerful neurotoxicant whose approval in 1981 by the American Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for human consumption (and then by Health and Welfare Canada and all the other agencies equivalent in other countries) has been done despite studies showing its harmful and ultimately fatal effects.


But if you eat too much sugar or other things, instead of stevia, it is better to regularly do a lot of intense exercise, 0,5 hour per day, 200m of vertical drop in running or pedaling fast in hill, like me who more treat my sciatica !!
Last edited by dedeleco the 25 / 04 / 11, 22: 15, 1 edited once.
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gegyx
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by gegyx » 25/04/11, 18:25

Thank you Dedeleco, for your careful research

:D
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by Cuicui » 25/04/11, 19:58

dedeleco wrote:A lot of plants are cut or lay fingers in the nose !! Rosemary, honeysuckle, winter jasmine, roses, forsithia, ivy, thornless brambles, succulents, cacti, prickly pears, agaves, oleanders, raspberries, black currants, etc.

+ gooseberries, mackerel, geraniums ... But for raspberries I have so far never succeeded.
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by Christophe » 25/04/11, 20:33

dedeleco wrote:answer for stévia in beautiful photos:
http://www.gireaud.net/stevia_multiplication.htm
but if the greenhouse is too humid in the shade, it will rot !!!!!!!!!!


Great the technique of "forced layering"! What else does it know as a plant? (your 1st sentence we don't know if it's the cuttings or the layering)

As soon as I have a new Stevia plant, I practice ...

: Cheesy:
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dedeleco
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by dedeleco » 25/04/11, 21:44

Great the technique of "forced layering"! What else does it know as a plant?


An armada of plants (and hormone-free) !!
See gardener's books on layering and cuttings !!
Fig trees !!
Known for 10000 years, the fig tree is one of the first cultivated plants and I made a collection of it, layered and cuttings.
the geraniums, which I made (cuttings as easy), the honeysuckles, Nitida too, the rosemary, the strawberries, (runners), the wild vine do it spontaneously with a stem which falls back into the ground !!
Raspberries, agaves, wild plum trees, even vines, do it spontaneously underground, a bit like brambles and roses, making shoots all by themselves that come out and it is enough to replant in winter wherever you want!
!!!!

My lawn is overgrown with raspberries that I refuse to mow and that it is impossible to replant with the drought of summer.
So very visible if we tolerate the disorder of nature.
The layering is a cutting with the branch still fed enough time to take out the roots !!
Cacti, succulents, prickly pears even better, just drop a leaf on the ground which takes root all by itself !!
the basics of this gardening:
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcottage
http://www.lejardin-adlibitum.net/rubri ... 27906.html

http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bouturage# ... uturer_.3F
http://www.jardinoise.com/pages/page39.asp
http://forum.1jardin2plantes.info/rosier-t53.html
http://www.1jardin2plantes.info/articles/marcottage.php
Varied links and exciting videos:
http://www.google.fr/search?client=fire ... 0&aql=&oq=

http://www.videosurf.com/video/marcotta ... ?vlt=ffext
http://www.videosurf.com/video/marcotta ... 1238773760




With stem cells we can do this on all plants (industrial method) and partially on humans, skin, liver, teeth, even a good part of the eyes, see the journal Nature of April 7, 2011 page 42 and 51 Volume 472 on http://www.nature.com !!

In a few decades this will replace organ donation without any rejection !!
Last edited by dedeleco the 25 / 04 / 11, 22: 48, 2 edited once.
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by Cuicui » 25/04/11, 22:37

dedeleco wrote:My lawn is overgrown with raspberries that I refuse to mow and that it is impossible to replant with the drought of summer.

Raspberries actually produce many young plants. I offer around fifty each year (a very productive rising variety). They are easy to replant in summer (with harvest from fall) if they are watered enough. However, I have never managed to cut a raspberry plant without roots.
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by Christophe » 26/04/11, 11:52

dedeleco wrote:With stem cells we can do this on all plants (industrial method) and partially on humans, skin, liver, teeth, even a good part of the eyes, see the journal Nature of April 7, 2011 page 42 and 51 Volume 472 on http://www.nature.com !!

In a few decades this will replace organ donation without any rejection !!


In Mister Nobody (2092) they have stem cell compatible pigs :)... except Mister Nobody who thus becomes ... the last mortal ...

https://www.econologie.com/forums/mister-nob ... 10468.html

They call it "something-erization" (not the exact term).

Found on: http://www.longecity.org/forum/sujet/30 ... immortels/

What is interesting for those who want a world without old age is that this film popularizes the idea that a world without aging will one day be possible.

I also just finished reading the book (actually written like the script for a movie) "The last generation to die" (just released in April 2009, more info: http://www.lybrary.com/last-generation-p-12544.html ). The theme of the story that is happening in America today: technological research is on the way to beating old age, but the American authorities and multimillionaire owners of pharmaceutical companies are trying to prevent final breakthroughs. At the end of the very American "thriller and great compliment" style story, masses of demonstrators all over the world demand that stem cell research be accelerated to enable men to stop aging.


While waiting for this sweet dream ...eat cabbage this vegetable that wants us good and too bad for the greenhouse effect! : Cheesy: : Cheesy:
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