Archive for July, 2010

 

Acne Program – Step 8 Vegetables to Eat and Drink

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

Eating and drinking vegetables is necessary for good health and for keeping your skin free from acne. Most people don’t eat enough vegetables and seldom drink their juices. Here is a list of vegetables and their juices that you need to eat and drink daily to help eliminate your acne.

Vegetable juices

Vegetable juices are absorbed quickly into your bloodstream. As a result, your cells are quickly provided with nutrients that feed them and that wash away waste. Vegetable juices give you the opportunity to get quick relief from various body conditions such as acne, skin disorders, and constipation.

Eating and drinking vegetables provide you with minerals and nutrients that build your blood, tissue, bones, and cells. It is minerals that build every part of your body. It is minerals that keep your body’s pH at the required level. It is minerals that keep your body alkaline by neutralizing body acids. Concentrate on putting minerals into your body by eating and drinking plenty of fruits and vegetables.

Carrot apple juice

Drink carrot juice every day. I like drinking carrot juice mixed with apple juice. My stomach can handle this combination better.

Carrot juice contains many vitamins and minerals. It is high in beta-carotene. Carrot juice will enhance your skins health and help you eliminate acne.

Carrot, spinach, and apple juice

A combination of carrot, spinach and apple juice is a powerful drink for cleaning the colon, relieving constipation and improving your skin conditions.

To make this drink, juice 3-4 carrots and a bunch of spinach. Then add juiced apples to make this drink more drinkable.

Vegetables

The word phytochemicals is used frequent here. Phytochemicals are all of the chemicals that exist in vegetables and fruits. There are so many phytochemicals that scientists have yet to investigate and learn about all of them.

Here are the vegetables that you should be eating the most of, so you can support the cleansing of your face and eliminating acne.

* Carrots – contain a rich source of vitamin A-like carotenoids. These phytochemicals have been shown to enhance the health of skin and repair it when it is damaged.

* Cabbage – helps to detoxify the body of harmful chemicals from the air and food additives.

* Celery – helps to reduce nervous tension. It contains many minerals that help to neutralize body acid waste and is high in fiber

* Cucumber – helps to reduce acne problems because it is high in silicon and sulfur. It is also a diuretic which helps flow more water through the kidney to clean out your blood

* Broccoli – is rich in beta carotene, a precursor to vitamin A, which is good for the skin

* Garlic – is a natural antibiotic and will help relieve skin bacterial infections

* Green pepper – The nutrients in green peppers are good for liver health and constipation. Its minerals are good for neutralizing acid waste.

* Radishes – help to digest your food. Good digestion is necessary to avoid constipation and to keep the liver and pancreas strong

* Sprouts – provide plenty of vitamins and minerals, which help to reduce body acids

* Watercress – helps to prevent vitamin and mineral deficiencies at the skin surface. It provides Vitamin A, B1, B2, C, iron, manganese, copper, and calcium.

Look this list of vegetable over, make a list of them, and head for your favorite store or farmers market. Concentrate in eating and drinking these natural products and you will see results in your health and a decrease in your skin disorders.

Rudy Silva
http://www.articlesbase.com/acne-articles/acne-program-step-8-vegetables-to-eat-and-drink-687011.html

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History Of Introduced Fruits Into America – Native American Fruit Trees And Hybrid Fruit Tree Improvements

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

Christopher Columbus in 1493 introduced citrus trees into America on the Island of Haiti, by planting the seed of the sweet orange tree, the sour orange, citron, lemon, lime, and pummelo fruit trees. Records show that citrus trees were well established by the Spanish in coastal South Carolina and Saint Augustine, Florida by the year 1563.

Historical English documents show that the Massachusetts Company in 1629 sent seeds of pear trees to plant and grow into fruit trees at the American colony located at Plymouth, Massachusetts. Captain John Smith reported in 1629 that seed-grown peach trees were growing in the American colony at Jamestown, Virginia. Apple trees were grown at Boston, Massachusetts, in 1629 by William Blackstone, an American colonist, and this practice of planting fruit trees rapidly spread among many other farmers there.

Other fruit tree seeds that were sent for colonist farmers to plant and grow were: cherry, peach, plum, filbert, apple, quince, and pomegranate, and according to documents, “they sprung up and flourished.”

In 1707 historical Spanish mission documents show that fruit trees being grown by the Spanish-Americans were: oranges, fig trees, quince, pomegranates, peaches, apricots, apples, pear trees, mulberries, pecans and other trees.

General Oglethorpe, the first governor of the colony of Georgia, settled at Fort Frederica, located at Saint Simons Island, Georgia, in 1733, the same date that the city of Savannah, Georgia was founded, with the appointed purpose of introducing fruit trees that would grow valuable food sources for the Georgia farmers. John Bartram, the famous explorer and father of William Bartram traveled extensively, after the Spanish abandoned their lands, to take an inventory of plants, trees, and vines that might be useful to farmers in the American colonies.

General Oglethorpe imported 500 white mulberry trees, Morus alba, in 1733 to encourage and economically support the developing colonial interests in silk production at Fort Frederica, Georgia, colony of the English on the island of Saint Simons, Georgia.

Henry Laurens, a President of the American Continental Congress from South Carolina, introduced: olives, limes, everbearing strawberry, and red raspberry for culture in the colonies and from the south of France, he imported and introduced apples, pears, plums, and the white Chasselas grape which bore abundantly.

In 1763, George Mason recorded in his extensive fruit journal of his home orchard that he had planted an old French variety of pear tree, and he “grafted 10 black pear of Worchester.”

The Black Mission fig tree was made famous when it was found growing at a Spanish monastery in 1770.

The first American fruit tree nursery was opened in 1737 by Robert Prince at Flushing, New York who sold fruit to President George Washington, who visited the nursery. Prince Nursery advertised “42 pear trees for sale” in 1771 and “33 kinds of plums.” 500 white mulberry trees, Morus Alba, and 1000 black mulberry trees, Morus nigra, were bought by Robert Prince in 1774. Robert Prince sold an extensive list of grafted peach trees to President Thomas Jefferson, to be planted at the Jefferson home orchard at Monticello, Virginia. President Thomas Jefferson loved eating peaches, and he dried the peach slices into “peach chips” for his granddaughter and fermented fresh peaches into peach wine and distilled the mixture further into peach brandy. Jefferson also introduced the French mixture of tea and fresh peach juice called pesche (peach) tea. Jefferson experimented with the delightful “black plumb peach” of Georgia, well known today and still sold as the “Indian Blood Peach Tree.” Jefferson believed the Indian Blood Peach grew true to name from planted seed. Jefferson believed this celebrated peach tree had resulted from a natural hybrid cross between the French imported variety, “Sanguinole,” and naturalized peach trees, that were being grown by the Indians. Mulberry trees were planted at Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello home at a distance of 20 feet apart along with a list of other fruit trees, grapevines, and pecan trees.

William Bartram, in his book, Travels, wrote that he saw vigorous “two or three large apple trees” growing near Mobile, Alabama in 1773. These trees were likely grown from apple seed planted earlier by Indians, a gift from earlier American colonial farmers. Bartram also reported “the wild crabapple,” Pyrus coronaria, growing among the apple trees, probably a pollinator. William Bartram wrote that he visited near Mobile Alabama the remains of “ancient habitations, being there an abundance of peach and fig trees loaded with fruit.”

Bartram also reported that orange trees were grown and cultivated in large groves in 1790 and “3000 gallons of orange juice were exported.” Bartram mistakenly thought that the extensive orchards of citrus trees growing in Florida were native trees, but they had been planted by the Spanish explorers centuries before his book, Travels, was published.

William Bartram discovered the Ogeechee lime tree, Nyssa Ogeechee, growing near the Ogeechee River in Georgia, that “no tree exhibits a more desirable appears than this, in the autumn, when the fruit is ripe” and the fruit “containing an agreeable acid juice.” In his explorations, Bartram also reported seeing Chickasaw plum, Prunus chicasaw, and another wild plum, Prunus indica. In 1773, Bartram discovered fig trees planted and flourishing at Fort Frederica, Georgia, writing that after searching the ruins in the town, “only remain, peach trees, figs, pomegranates, and other shrubs, growing out of the ruinous walls of former spacious and expansive buildings, not only in the town, but at a distance in various parts of the island” of Saint Simons, Georgia.

Banana trees were introduced into America from Europe by the early Spanish explorers, and the plantain banana, that required cooking to eat, mutated from a green hard fruit to a sweet, fresh eating, yellow banana in the year 1836. A Jamaican, Jean Francois Poujot, discovered this outstanding banana cultivar growing quite distinctively different in appearance from the other plantain bananas planted in the field. Mr. Poujot multiplied this banana tree mutation into what would become the most popular and the most famous fruit tree in the world.

Apple tree orchards developed very rapidly in the 1800′s from the sale of apple seed for planting by the legendary Johnny Appleseed.

Perhaps the greatest developmental horticulturist and pomologist who ever lived was Luther Burbank, who settled in California and published a giant set of 10 volumes of books that outlined his fantastic experiments to improve fruit trees, berry plants, grapevines, nut trees, and many other perennials to include shade trees. Luther Burbank bred out the fuzz from peaches, which he stabilized into commercial nectarine trees. He also made many advances in hybridizing tasty varieties of plums and peach trees. Burbank imported Japanese, Oriental plum trees to be inbred with native American plum trees, that led to growing many commercial varieties that are top producers even today, such as: Burbank plum tree, Methley plum trees, Santa Rosa plum trees, and many others. Burbank strongly felt that the native American cherry trees that were extremely cold hardy should be intercrossed with commercial cherries in order to stabilize and inbreed the factor of cold hardiness. Burbank made numerous improvements on fruit trees involving pear trees and apple trees.

Fruit trees have provided food to wildlife, bird, and animals since the Biblical account of creation. Many birds are totally dependant on seeds of fruits, buts, berries, and grapes. Even when the pulpy, fleshy portions of fruits are gone, the seed remains preserved for months and sometimes for years to provide nourishment for wildlife birds and animals, and many of these seed being undigested germinate to grow later into pear trees, pecan trees, muscadine vines, or black raspberry bushes. The fruit trees of the world not only furnish calories for energetic living, but vitamins that are essential for growth are transplanted by the sunshine photosynthesis processes into forming fruits, berries, nuts, and grapes to insure a wonderful healthy lifestyle will continue. These fruit trees synthesize hormones and form the building blocks of proteins, fatty acids, and carbohydrates that chemically evolve into antioxidants. These antioxidants can help or suppress harmful body aging processes that often end in heart attacks, stroke, faulty blood pressure, and Alzheimer’s disease. Fruit trees, berry plants, nut trees, and grapevines are essential for man’s continued ability to maintain functional healthy bodies and to accumulate substantial agricultural wealth.

William Bartram reported in his book, Travels, the finding of fruit trees at a French plantation on an island at the Pearl River. Bartram wrote that he viewed “manured fruit trees arrive in this island to the utmost degree of perfection, as Pears, Peaches, Figs, Grape Vines, Plumbs & C.; the last mention genus, there is a native species that grows in this island, which produces its large…crimson frui…of a most enticing appearance.”

Pat Malcolm
http://www.articlesbase.com/advice-articles/history-of-introduced-fruits-into-america-native-american-fruit-trees-and-hybrid-fruit-tree-improvements-62917.html

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Gardening in Small Spaces

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

  • Develop a sense of space by including a patio area to place seating and dining furniture. Be careful not to make this area too congested with furniture, use planters wisely to add some colour.
  • Use devices to create a sense of space or perspective, for example arches, screen might indicate more depth. A pathway which leads to a focal point be it a plant, a statue or a birdbath will provide more perspective. Similarly a large mirror will help create an illusion of more plants and a larger garden. Be sure to frame the mirror with planting, this way it the edges will be well camouflaged and difficult to see.
  • A very useful way to create a sense of depth is to position taller plants at front of garden and use diminishing heights to smaller plants at rear. Alternatively try distorting perspective, make the lawn wider at front than at the back.
  • Use scale wisely, do not distort the overall design by using plants or features which are very big and perhaps out of scale, instead use one two as focal points. This way you’re likely to be more effective than using lots of small indistinct shrubs.   
  • Try incorporating features in amongst plants, a half concealed sculpture can create plenty of interest.
  • Avoid using shrubs which are too big and overpowering, select plants and shrubs with a sense of scale and balance. In smaller gardens it is much more important that the garden looks lush all year round, so it might be wiser to select shrubs which are evergreen and supplement this layout with bulbs and herbaceous planting for seasonal highlights.

Owen Chubb
http://www.articlesbase.com/gardening-articles/gardening-in-small-spaces-718433.html

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Plants, Plants All Around But Which Is Best for Me: Landscaping Plants Galore

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

One of the major aspects of landscaping is, of course, the type of flora that you place around your soon to be magnificent yard. A variety of choices exist for just about every taste and every possible desire and every location around the world in terms what kind of landscaping plants that you want to put in your yard. The question simply stands as to what works for you, what you want out of your landscaping plants, and what you want your yard to represent in the end.

What Kinds Of Landscaping Plants Are There?

There are tons of different kinds of landscaping plants out there and what you chose has a great deal to do with kind of landscaping that you want to do. If you want a more traditional flower bed, then there are the ever-popular roses, as well as Tulips, mums, daisies, lilly of the valley, among a multitude of other various colored flowers. This is more of a classic looking landscaping plant, and most likely goes with those homes that have a more rustic, old aged look to them. It reflects well in the plants themselves.

Next, we have the very popular variety of shrubs for our landscaping plants. A shrub is a woody plant that is shorter than a tree that has permanent stems coming out of the trunk close to the ground. A variety of conifers are often used as a tasteful shrubby accent to a home, but typically to those homes farther north as the charms of the conifer become even more apparent in the winter with the snows that pile so endearingly on the needs of the trees.

Other shrubs, which are more perennials, tend not to look nearly as pretty in the winter time in those climates that have drastic season changes because, in the winter, they hibernate and tend to look pretty dead and not very appealing to the eye. So the south tends to have better luck with the perennial shrubs while the north does better with the conifers.

Another thing to consider is the impression that you want to give your landscaping project from the plants. For example, in a southern plantation setting, a weeping willow tree can drastically add to the overall quality of any landscaping plant that you there, while in the north, a maple in the front yard gives the whole experience a farmhouse rustic feeling.

anonymous
http://www.articlesbase.com/gardening-articles/plants-plants-all-around-but-which-is-best-for-me-landscaping-plants-galore-111280.html

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Greet Someone With by Sending Flowers

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

Do you want to impress someone with a unique, lovely, elegant, but priceless presents? Then there is only one inexpensive thing you can do to impress that person and catch her heart totally. Send flowers! Watches, necklaces, rings, and other precious items are wonderful presents however they can be expensive and inappropriate in some occasions. But flowers, they are always appropriate and affordable.

Flowers express love. This is true and most of us would agree to it. We have fallen in love not just once in our lives, but many times and the only way to express that love is to send flowers. For men, flowers are very important bridges to the girl of our dream. The first thing that we can think of if we want to impress a girl is to send flowers in different ways. Teenagers often ask for flower delivery services to be anonymous to whom they have fallen.

We send flowers not just to our lovers, but also for other persons we care most. This is a good way of surprising people on days they do not expect. During Mother’s Day, most of us would prefer to inquire for flower delivery to bring special presents to our mothers as we remember them on this special day. We send flowers to show them that we care and we are theirs. We send flowers not just on Mother’s Day, but on any days that are special to us.

If we want to impress someone we tend to find precious things that the person likes and will value most. Well, the answer to that would be simple. Flowers is what most of us like and they are meaningful too. Once you receive a flower, the first thing that you can think of is love. By sending a flower to your special someone you show your love and affection.

You can send flowers such as Tulips, Roses, Orchids, Sunflowers, or any other types that you know will bring you closer to a woman’s heart. Saying “I love you” or “I’m sorry” is no longer difficult. You can look for flower delivery services to help you out with the best flower designs that you can give to the one who catches your heart.

You can send flowers on any occasion. Christmas, birthday, anniversaries, funeral, weddings, and even a simple thank you and congratulations can be addressed through flowers with their appropriate designs. Flower delivery services are reliable enough to give you the settings you need.

Roberta Groche
http://www.articlesbase.com/home-and-family-articles/greet-someone-with-by-sending-flowers-686216.html

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