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#1
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Such as..H I can grow what I like, eat what I like, etc. What did you think I meant? Not many people grow marigolds as a crop! Pam in Bristol One never knows that which lurks in the minds of ladies these days.....as if any male did anyway |
#2
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In article ,
Harold Walker wrote: I can grow what I like, eat what I like, etc. What did you think I meant? Not many people grow marigolds as a crop! One never knows that which lurks in the minds of ladies these days.....as if any male did anyway That's true, but I have grown marigolds as a crop, too. SURELY you know what to do with them? Eer, ooh and all that. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#3
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"Nick Maclaren" wrote in message ... In article , Harold Walker wrote: I can grow what I like, eat what I like, etc. What did you think I meant? Not many people grow marigolds as a crop! One never knows that which lurks in the minds of ladies these days.....as if any male did anyway That's true, but I have grown marigolds as a crop, too. SURELY you know what to do with them? Eer, ooh and all that. Regards, Nick Maclaren. Nay lad I do not....prithee tell me...but not too plainly |
#4
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In article ,
Harold Walker wrote: That's true, but I have grown marigolds as a crop, too. SURELY you know what to do with them? Eer, ooh and all that. Nay lad I do not....prithee tell me...but not too plainly Well, since you have called my bluff :-) They are a traditional ingredient in hairwash, a flavouring used in cooking, the source of a tisane, and an ingredient in pot pourri. There may be other uses, too. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#5
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That's true, but I have grown marigolds as a crop, too. SURELY you know what to do with them? Eer, ooh and all that. Nay lad I do not....prithee tell me...but not too plainly Well, since you have called my bluff :-) They are a traditional ingredient in hairwash, a flavouring used in cooking, the source of a tisane, and an ingredient in pot pourri. There may be other uses, too. Regards, Nick Maclaren. Think I will stick to the likes of Rosemary...excuse the common name but I am in Yankee land |
#6
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Harold Walker wrote:
[...] Think I will stick to the likes of Rosemary...excuse the common name but I am in Yankee land You think Rosemary a common name? Hmm...no, I know flower names can be tricky, but I think it quite refined. Dear Rosemary Woolf, for example, a fine medievalist, certainly loved her fast cars and her tipple, but that kind of zing was surely rather dashing than vulgar: "common" would never have occurred to me in a thousand years. -- Mike. |
#7
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#8
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Hence also my quest earlier for collard greens, which are now being decimated by pigeons and caterpillars! Pam in Bristol Have you tried covering with floating row cover....keeps 'em both out.....H on CC |
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