Evening Primrose

Written by Judi Singleton


I rememberrepparttar first time I saw Evening Primrose it was growing in an

old abandoned garden. I tried to dig it but it did not move well. I

lovedrepparttar 114985 way it looked. I didn't know what it was so I took a flower

to my favorite nursery and ask what it was they told me it was a weed. Could I get some for my yard. The guy atrepparttar 114986 nursery thought I was

nuts. I remember him telling me that it would take over my yard. But he

got me two plants and it did spread. Like many of my other herbs it is

prolific but I just cutrepparttar 114987 ones that get out of hand and put them in

my compost pile. For some reason unknown to me they help break down

compost at a faster rate. One ofrepparttar 114988 first things I learned about this herb was that it was a

night time flower. I love night time flowers they shine inrepparttar 114989

moonlight. Evening Primrose is especially beautiful in a moonlight

garden as it is phosphorescent in moonlight. It also has another name it is called evening star becauserepparttar 114990 petals seem to glow at night. It

is a perennial reaching about 4 inches in heighth with pale yellow

flowers it is especially fragrant. It can be eaten it is a true pot

herb becauserepparttar 114991 whole plant can be eaten. The root when boiled tastes

to me something like parsnips. The origin of Evening Primrose is North America but it spread to Europe

400,000 New Yorkers Breathed the most Toxic Pollutant. Asbestos Poisoning Symptoms. Are you at Risk?

Written by Tadas Talaikis


by http://www.thelioma.com

Recent study of U.S. government providesrepparttar latest evidence of a systematic cover-up ofrepparttar 114984 health toll from pollution afterrepparttar 114985 9/11 disaster, which doctors fear will cause more deaths thanrepparttar 114986 attacks themselves.

Belfast Telegraph says, The Bush administration suppressed evidence of increasing danger and officially announced thatrepparttar 114987 air aroundrepparttar 114988 felled buildings was "safe to breathe".

But results ofrepparttar 114989 government study, conducted by a consortium of researchers at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, Columbia University, New York University, Johns Hopkins University, The University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, andrepparttar 114990 University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, show exposure-related increases in new-onset cough, wheeze, shortness of breath, and bronchial hyperreactivity more than 2½ years afterrepparttar 114991 disaster.

Ambient air samples showed that asbestos levels inrepparttar 114992 WTC area were initially elevated followingrepparttar 114993 September 11 attacks, but fell to within federal standards afterrepparttar 114994 first few days.

"More research is needed to determine whether long-term exposure to asbestos fibers might lead to an increased risk of lung mesothelioma, a rare cancer that has been linked to asbestos exposure," said Landrigan. "Previous studies have shownrepparttar 114995 short chrysotile fibers found inrepparttar 114996 WTC dust to berepparttar 114997 predominant fiber in lung mesothelioma tissue."

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