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#1
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"Bear Drummer" wrote in message ups.com... I am trying to find a source for sarsaparilla for us to grow - We are in Southern Mississippi... we love root beer, and my sister has started making teas with what she finds at the herb shops, but we want to grow it, not buy it in bulk... I have searched Burpee's, and done google searches looking for a source... does anyone have ideas on where to obtain some? that would be the sassafras tree. And you'd have to boil the whole damn thing to get a toxic ticturn. And the person saying there was something at the store, is speaking of the bottled concentrate (it's not THAT strong) is called "Pappy Sassafras" and it's safe to use. I would suspect living in Mississippi youi have it growing in the woods and just don't know it. Ask an older person. They'll point out the palmate leaves and you can dig up a sapling. I have six of them given me by the southern fairies and will encourage them to grow as they are also beautiful trees in the fall. madgardener |
#2
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"madgardener" wrote in message ... "Bear Drummer" wrote in message ups.com... I am trying to find a source for sarsaparilla for us to grow - We are in Southern Mississippi... we love root beer, and my sister has started making teas with what she finds at the herb shops, but we want to grow it, not buy it in bulk... I have searched Burpee's, and done google searches looking for a source... does anyone have ideas on where to obtain some? that would be the sassafras tree. And you'd have to boil the whole damn thing to get a toxic ticturn. And the person saying there was something at the store, is speaking of the bottled concentrate (it's not THAT strong) is called "Pappy Sassafras" and it's safe to use. I would suspect living in Mississippi youi have it growing in the woods and just don't know it. Ask an older person. They'll point out the palmate leaves and you can dig up a sapling. I have six of them given me by the southern fairies and will encourage them to grow as they are also beautiful trees in the fall. madgardener The Root Beer Concentrate I wrote about is called just that "Root Beer Concentrate" It is from McCormick. A 2.0 Ounce bottle of concentrate will make 5 Gallons of Root Beer. That seems pretty strong to me! A URL for this product may be found at: http://www.mccormick.com/productdetail.cfm?id=6033 |
#3
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"Hound Dog" writes in article dated Fri, 29 Apr 2005 23:59:46 -0500:
"madgardener" wrote in message ... "Bear Drummer" wrote in message ups.com... I am trying to find a source for sarsaparilla for us to grow - We are in Southern Mississippi... we love root beer, and my sister has started making teas with what she finds at the herb shops, but we want to grow it, not buy it in bulk... I have searched Burpee's, and done google searches looking for a source... does anyone have ideas on where to obtain some? that would be the sassafras tree. And you'd have to boil the whole damn thing to get a toxic ticturn. And the person saying there was something at the store, is speaking of the bottled concentrate (it's not THAT strong) is called "Pappy Sassafras" and it's safe to use. I would suspect living in Mississippi youi have it growing in the woods and just don't know it. Ask an older person. They'll point out the palmate leaves and you can dig up a sapling. I have six of them given me by the southern fairies and will encourage them to grow as they are also beautiful trees in the fall. madgardener The Root Beer Concentrate I wrote about is called just that "Root Beer Concentrate" It is from McCormick. A 2.0 Ounce bottle of concentrate will make 5 Gallons of Root Beer. That seems pretty strong to me! A URL for this product may be found at: http://www.mccormick.com/productdetail.cfm?id=6033 Contains no sassafras. Sassafras oil was banned as a food additive by the FDA. They said it was because it's a mild carcinogen, but probably the real reason is that the main chemical is a precursor to the recreational drug ecstacy, and the government wanted to shut down the X labs in the US. -- spud_demon -at- thundermaker.net The above may not (yet) represent the opinions of my employer. |
#4
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#5
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therein lies the problem... I don't know anyone who knows.... it does
make it difficult to locate... |
#6
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"Bear Drummer" wrote in message ps.com... therein lies the problem... I don't know anyone who knows.... it does make it difficult to locate... You may buy a Sassafras tree from Nature Hills Nursery. The price for a 4' tree is $21.95 + delivery. Copy the URL below into your browser for more details. http://www.naturehills.com/new/product/productdetails.aspx?proname=Sassafras+Tree&ovchn=G GL&ovcpn=Trees&ovcrn=sasafras+tree&ovtac=PPC |
#7
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#8
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#9
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lgb expounded:
OTOH, if you live where sassafras doesn't grow, make friends with a rebel, you damyankee :-). We're yankees up here, fer sher, and we've got plenty of sassafras growing around here... -- Ann, gardening in Zone 6a South of Boston, Massachusetts e-mail address is not checked ****************************** |
#10
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lgb wrote in
: In article om, says... therein lies the problem... I don't know anyone who knows.... it does make it difficult to locate... 1. Go to local library 2. Find botany section. 3. Copy picture of sassafras tree/leaves. 4. Good hunting! OTOH, if you live where sassafras doesn't grow, make friends with a rebel, you damyankee :-). the range for sassafrass is well up into NH, so being a damyankee shouldn't play into finding one look for the tree with leaves that look like mittens (some have two "thumbs") & has bright yellow/orange/red fall color. lee |
#11
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#12
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Hi lgb, I live in Spokane now, and I can guarantee that we have no sassafras
here, and no nurseries that would consider selling it - even in the arboretum....LOL. I guess it's the price we pay for having virtually no mosquitos from late June until October. "lgb" wrote in message I'm jealous. I live in Eastern Washington and I've never seen one around here. I admit to not looking that hard, but I think I'd recognize one if I saw it. After all, they were thick in Kentucky where I grew up - and dug sassafras every spring. Wild ginseng too :-). -- Homo sapiens is a goal, not a description |
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