Date: 30/05/2020
By: Vernonsig
Subject: Try out, just a investigation
Rare daisy angianthus globuliformis 10000th native plant species. "It grows well as a house plant, but it isn't very easy to grow; you must use a water tank, which may cause problems with it."
"It's the'solar plant' in the household where you can add it to the fertilizer for best growth," says Hernan Lopes of the Department of Horticulture of the National Autonomous University of Mexico in Monterrey.
In Mexico, daisy-like plants have been added to both traditional medicines and the household use of plants containing vitamins and minerals. One of the most popular, the'sugar molecule' daisy leaf, has its roots deep inside a pine tree; the second is called the 'fruit tree' by the American colonists who brought the plant to this country during the mid-nineteenth century.
At least 100 species of these shrubs, all but the biggest ones, are found in Mexico.
Lopes and his co-workers were lucky. "Daisy is not a species with an expensive price tag," he says, "so nobody is ever buying them." For some of the plants, there can be no commercial or social value in growing them. However, other species with a high market value might sell for much more than the usual $1 an ounce, he says. "That's the case of the big pothos, which is a large, tall plant that sells for $100 [$4,300] per kilogram. It's a well-known local, widely used, native plant," he says.
"Daisy leaves have a much higher shelf-life. I don't know why we do not take the leaves as seeds, since it's so much more profitable to grow the root-coloured ones from the seed or the white blossoms," adds Lopes.
He adds that the same could be said for the 'bead' daisies: they're more expensive than the normal leaves; the flowers are very small and of poor quality, and the edible seeds often do not yield their full potential, but are instead dried, moulded, and roasted. "This makes them unsuitable for seed production, since the seeds lose their seed-productiveness in the roasting process," adds Lopes.
"There is something that gives us a special joy in growing daisies," says Lopes: that's their bright yellow petals. The petals give their foliage its purple colour, "which is like putting a blue ribbon on a red carpet." This unusual feature makes daisy leaves very attractive for a variety of people: they're very good for children, and children love to use them as umbrellas, and in various other decorative ways.
Lopes say
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Nightclub bashing victim wins damages in DUI case
An elderly woman from California, whose DUI arrest in February sparked nationwide controversy, has been awarded $15 million for emotional and other damages after she sued the former DJ, producer and other alleged assailants in a California court.
Sidney Johnson, 83, suffered permanent paralysis, memory loss, memory loss-related dementia and post-traumatic stress disorder when he was a police officer and a security guard at the infamous club in Burbank, California, in December 2011.
Johnson's legal claims allege that his ex-partners, which included DJ-producer Nick DiPaola and producer Scott Bure, set him up while he was sleeping with his wife at a Las Vegas strip club and later that night, tried to extort money from him. According to the suit, which was filed in a Los Angeles courtroom, the accused, who were all friends, then beat and beat and then drove him to his grave.
Johnson was unable to speak or remember much of the nightmarish incident. After an interview with TMZ.com, he began using a mobile phone, which he bought from a local store, to write lengthy accounts of his experience.
But he never really recovered. The Los Angeles County medical examiner's office ruled in Johnson's case that the beating, resulting in permanent disability, was a homicide because the victim died "without being able to breathe and his body was so badly bruised from the beatings that he could not walk."
The medical examiner's opinion could not be released on the grounds that it would violate Johnson's constitutional rights, but in January, Judge Michael Meehan ordered the medical examiner to send him his report to determine the cause of death for Johnson.
That finding is due next month in Orange County Superior Court for consideration.
Johnson, dressed in a white robe and carrying a white cane, was given $5 million on April 13, after being awarded a summary judgment in November 2010 by the Los Angeles County Superior Court judge, in the case against DiPaola, and the defendants in Johnson's own lawsuit. The money was part of a settlement agreement agreed to before the legal battle between DiPaola and the trio was publicly revealed in December 2011. Johnson's attorneys said