Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#76
|
|||
|
|||
Trying to ID a mysterious fruit
In message , Adrian
Tupper writes Hello blast-from-the-past. uk.r.w? -- Stewart Robert Hinsley |
#77
|
|||
|
|||
Trying to ID a mysterious fruit
Following up to Stewart Robert Hinsley
wrote: Hello blast-from-the-past. uk.r.w? yes, him, you and me! IIRC discussing how many true mountains* compose the hills surrounding Glencoe. *mountain as massif not sub peaks. -- Mike Remove clothing to email |
#78
|
|||
|
|||
Trying to ID a mysterious fruit
Stewart Robert Hinsley wrote in
: In message , Adrian Tupper writes Hello blast-from-the-past. uk.r.w? Yup. Haven't been there for a few years. I had a middle name in those days. -- Adrian Remove packaging and take out insurance before emailing me |
#79
|
|||
|
|||
Trying to ID a mysterious fruit
Following up to Adrian Tupper
wrote: uk.r.w? Yup. Haven't been there for a few years. I had a middle name in those days. "bog tupper" wasnt it? :-) -- Mike Remove clothing to email |
#80
|
|||
|
|||
Trying to ID a mysterious fruit
Mike..... wrote:
Following up to Adrian Tupper wrote: uk.r.w? Yup. Haven't been there for a few years. I had a middle name in those days. "bog tupper" wasnt it? :-) Now, now Mike, you know it was Marsh. Gosh how on earth did I remember that |
#81
|
|||
|
|||
Trying to ID a mysterious fruit
Following up to "Ophelia" wrote:
"bog tupper" wasnt it? :-) Now, now Mike, you know it was Marsh. Gosh how on earth did I remember that the question is why has Adrian drained his marsh? -- Mike Remove clothing to email |
#82
|
|||
|
|||
Trying to ID a mysterious fruit
Mike..... wrote:
Following up to "Ophelia" wrote: "bog tupper" wasnt it? :-) Now, now Mike, you know it was Marsh. Gosh how on earth did I remember that the question is why has Adrian drained his marsh? that sounds awfully personal Mike G |
#83
|
|||
|
|||
Trying to ID a mysterious fruit
In message , Ophelia
writes Mike..... wrote: Following up to Adrian Tupper wrote: uk.r.w? Yup. Haven't been there for a few years. I had a middle name in those days. "bog tupper" wasnt it? :-) Now, now Mike, you know it was Marsh. Gosh how on earth did I remember that I remember it now you've said it, O -- June Hughes |
#84
|
|||
|
|||
Trying to ID a mysterious fruit
On Dec 3, 11:20 pm, Sacha wrote:
On 3/12/07 17:00, in article , "Mike...." wrote: Following up to (Nick Maclaren) wrote: "Some sort of japonica", in normal usage, can mean only one of the Chaenomeles. Japonica as the name of a group of plants means that and nothing else. are there not various "japanese" quinces? I understood the meaning to be that. I had an ormamental one in the garden for a time. Japanese quinces are usually understood to be Chaenomeles and then there are named varieties of that. AFAIK, you can make jelly from them. Cydonia is the true quince with the large, golden, roughly pear-shaped fruit - these are real beauties when mature trees but they're not the 'mysterious fruit' I'm trying to ID. -- Sachahttp://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk South Devon (remove weeds from address) 'We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our children.' I have some quince in my back garden and I don't have the faintest if they are edible or not, my husband laughed when I bought quince at the local greengrocers to make quince jelly for Christmas, he swears we have the same thing in the garden, but I am not chancing it - with my slight knowledge - I am bound to get them confused. |
#85
|
|||
|
|||
Trying to ID a mysterious fruit
|
#86
|
|||
|
|||
Trying to ID a mysterious fruit
On Dec 10, 3:33 pm, Martin wrote:
On Mon, 10 Dec 2007 15:27:56 +0000, Sacha wrote: On 10/12/07 14:35, in article , "judith.lea" wrote: On Dec 3, 11:20 pm, Sacha wrote: On 3/12/07 17:00, in article , "Mike...." wrote: Following up to (Nick Maclaren) wrote: "Some sort of japonica", in normal usage, can mean only one of the Chaenomeles. Japonica as the name of a group of plants means that and nothing else. are there not various "japanese" quinces? I understood the meaning to be that. I had an ormamental one in the garden for a time. Japanese quinces are usually understood to be Chaenomeles and then there are named varieties of that. AFAIK, you can make jelly from them. Cydonia is the true quince with the large, golden, roughly pear-shaped fruit - these are real beauties when mature trees but they're not the 'mysterious fruit' I'm trying to ID. -- Sachahttp://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk South Devon (remove weeds from address) 'We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our children.' I have some quince in my back garden and I don't have the faintest if they are edible or not, my husband laughed when I bought quince at the local greengrocers to make quince jelly for Christmas, he swears we have the same thing in the garden, but I am not chancing it - with my slight knowledge - I am bound to get them confused. Take them to your local greengrocer, they'll tell you. The French and Italians are good at using whatever comes to hand and knowing how to use it safely, too. Let Judith's husband demonstrate that the proof is in the eating. -- Martin- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Martin, you are sooooooooo bad :-) |
#87
|
|||
|
|||
Trying to ID a mysterious fruit
On Dec 10, 3:27 pm, Sacha wrote:
On 10/12/07 14:35, in article , "judith.lea" wrote: On Dec 3, 11:20 pm, Sacha wrote: On 3/12/07 17:00, in article , "Mike...." wrote: Following up to (Nick Maclaren) wrote: "Some sort of japonica", in normal usage, can mean only one of the Chaenomeles. Japonica as the name of a group of plants means that and nothing else. are there not various "japanese" quinces? I understood the meaning to be that. I had an ormamental one in the garden for a time. Japanese quinces are usually understood to be Chaenomeles and then there are named varieties of that. AFAIK, you can make jelly from them. Cydonia is the true quince with the large, golden, roughly pear-shaped fruit - these are real beauties when mature trees but they're not the 'mysterious fruit' I'm trying to ID. -- Sachahttp://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk South Devon (remove weeds from address) 'We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our children.' I have some quince in my back garden and I don't have the faintest if they are edible or not, my husband laughed when I bought quince at the local greengrocers to make quince jelly for Christmas, he swears we have the same thing in the garden, but I am not chancing it - with my slight knowledge - I am bound to get them confused. Take them to your local greengrocer, they'll tell you. The French and Italians are good at using whatever comes to hand and knowing how to use it safely, too. -- Sacha- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You are absolutely correct, do you know that mushrooms can be taken to the pharmacy for identification? Out of a whole basket, only one type of mine was edible! The others could be eaten, with the exception of one sounding like amoneta? but they would taste awful, so the pharmacist said. I will stick to buying them in the shop I think. |
#89
|
|||
|
|||
Trying to ID a mysterious fruit
In message
, judith.lea writes On Dec 10, 3:27 pm, Sacha wrote: On 10/12/07 14:35, in article , "judith.lea" wrote: On Dec 3, 11:20 pm, Sacha wrote: On 3/12/07 17:00, in article , "Mike...." wrote: Following up to (Nick Maclaren) wrote: "Some sort of japonica", in normal usage, can mean only one of the Chaenomeles. Japonica as the name of a group of plants means that and nothing else. are there not various "japanese" quinces? I understood the meaning to be that. I had an ormamental one in the garden for a time. Japanese quinces are usually understood to be Chaenomeles and then there are named varieties of that. AFAIK, you can make jelly from them. Cydonia is the true quince with the large, golden, roughly pear-shaped fruit - these are real beauties when mature trees but they're not the 'mysterious fruit' I'm trying to ID. -- Sachahttp://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk South Devon (remove weeds from address) 'We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our children.' I have some quince in my back garden and I don't have the faintest if they are edible or not, my husband laughed when I bought quince at the local greengrocers to make quince jelly for Christmas, he swears we have the same thing in the garden, but I am not chancing it - with my slight knowledge - I am bound to get them confused. Take them to your local greengrocer, they'll tell you. The French and Italians are good at using whatever comes to hand and knowing how to use it safely, too. -- Sacha- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You are absolutely correct, do you know that mushrooms can be taken to the pharmacy for identification? Out of a whole basket, only one type of mine was edible! The others could be eaten, with the exception of one sounding like amoneta? but they would taste awful, so the pharmacist said. I will stick to buying them in the shop I think. Amanita. That genus contains several deadly fungi, including the death cap, fool's mushroom and destroying angel. Wikipedia claims that Amanita accounts for 95% of deaths by mushroom poisoning. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amanita -- Stewart Robert Hinsley |
#90
|
|||
|
|||
Trying to ID a mysterious fruit
On 10/12/07 19:12, in article , "Stewart
Robert Hinsley" wrote: In message , judith.lea writes snip You are absolutely correct, do you know that mushrooms can be taken to the pharmacy for identification? Out of a whole basket, only one type of mine was edible! The others could be eaten, with the exception of one sounding like amoneta? but they would taste awful, so the pharmacist said. I will stick to buying them in the shop I think. Amanita. That genus contains several deadly fungi, including the death cap, fool's mushroom and destroying angel. Wikipedia claims that Amanita accounts for 95% of deaths by mushroom poisoning. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amanita Now that Judith is living in France full time - and in the right area - I think a friendly neighbour, who will show her what these fruits of the forest look like while growing, would be invaluable to her! -- Sacha http://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk South Devon (remove weeds from address) 'We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our children.' |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Trying to ID a mysterious fruit | United Kingdom | |||
Trying to ID a mysterious fruit | United Kingdom | |||
mysterious fast sprouting lilly! | North Carolina | |||
Mysterious necrosis of java fern | Freshwater Aquaria Plants | |||
Mysterious purple alga | Plant Science |