01-27-2006, 01:54 PM
01-27-2006, 02:43 PM
wow darun hoashe bristir din e......... thanks for sharing.
01-28-2006, 11:16 AM
Dutora fhul:
Usage: Jimsonweed is occasionally grown as an ornamental. ..They attract bees, butterflies and moths...The thorny fruit capsules are used in dried arrangements...Jimsonweed is grown commercially in Europe for the alkaloidal drug, hyoscyamine...It also contains the powerful alkaloids atropine and scopolamine...Jimsonweed and its derivatives have several medicinal uses...At low doses it is used to treat asthma, muscle spasms and symptoms of Parkinson's disease...At higher doses it causes hallucinations...
Features: Jimson is a corruption of Jamestown, where early colonists noted jimsonweed growing in abundance. (Did they bring it to the New World themselves?)...The related Datura inoxia of the North American southwest is said to be the most universally used hallucinogenic and medicinal plant known to man...It was used by many if not most native American tribes to induce hallucinations in religious ceremonies and for various medical conditions...
WARNING
All parts of jimsonweed are very poisonous...Cattle and sheep have died from eating it, and children have been poisoned by censored nectar from the flowers...Symptoms include dilated pupils, thirst, fever, loss of coordination, confusion, rapid pulse, labored respiration, hallucinations, convulsions, and eventual coma...Death is rare however, and, if stomach contents are removed immediately, recovery usually follows in several days...Amnesia of the poisoning event is common...Even inhaling the sweet fragrance of the flowers can cause headaches and dizziness! ..The sap can cause a skin rash...Some states and municipalities ban the cultivation of jimsonweed and other species of Datura...
[attachment=1907]
Common names: Jimson Weed, Devil\'s Apple, Thorn Apple, Stinkweed, Devil's Weed, Malpitte, Moonflower, Toloache (D. inoxia)
Scientific name: Datura stramonium
Family: Solanaceae
Description: Jimsonweed is a rank, foul smelling annual with large purplish trumpet-shaped flowers and spiny, egg-shaped fruits...The plant gets about 3 or 4 ft (0.9-1.2 m) tall with a similar spread...It often falls over from its own weight...The stem is purplish and glabrous (smooth) and the leaves are ovate, irregularly lobed, to 8 in (20.3 cm) long, and have a foul odor...The flowers, however, are fragrant and sweet-smelling...They open for only one evening, but new ones continue to open throughout the summer and autumn...The flowers are white or pale lavender, shaped like a five-sided funnel, 2-4 in (5.1-10.2 cm) long...The green calyx covers about half the length of the corolla...The fruit is about 2 in (5.1 cm) long, egg-shaped and covered with spiny prickles...It starts out green and ripens to brown...It is full of black seeds...Common names: Jimson Weed, Devil\'s Apple, Thorn Apple, Stinkweed, Devil's Weed, Malpitte, Moonflower, Toloache (D. inoxia)
Scientific name: Datura stramonium
Family: Solanaceae
Usage: Jimsonweed is occasionally grown as an ornamental. ..They attract bees, butterflies and moths...The thorny fruit capsules are used in dried arrangements...Jimsonweed is grown commercially in Europe for the alkaloidal drug, hyoscyamine...It also contains the powerful alkaloids atropine and scopolamine...Jimsonweed and its derivatives have several medicinal uses...At low doses it is used to treat asthma, muscle spasms and symptoms of Parkinson's disease...At higher doses it causes hallucinations...
Features: Jimson is a corruption of Jamestown, where early colonists noted jimsonweed growing in abundance. (Did they bring it to the New World themselves?)...The related Datura inoxia of the North American southwest is said to be the most universally used hallucinogenic and medicinal plant known to man...It was used by many if not most native American tribes to induce hallucinations in religious ceremonies and for various medical conditions...
WARNING
All parts of jimsonweed are very poisonous...Cattle and sheep have died from eating it, and children have been poisoned by censored nectar from the flowers...Symptoms include dilated pupils, thirst, fever, loss of coordination, confusion, rapid pulse, labored respiration, hallucinations, convulsions, and eventual coma...Death is rare however, and, if stomach contents are removed immediately, recovery usually follows in several days...Amnesia of the poisoning event is common...Even inhaling the sweet fragrance of the flowers can cause headaches and dizziness! ..The sap can cause a skin rash...Some states and municipalities ban the cultivation of jimsonweed and other species of Datura...
01-28-2006, 11:25 AM
korobi- kodom- shondha maloti r shob sheshe dhutra diye to shobtuku-i puron kore dilen 
kodom darun miss korchhi

kodom darun miss korchhi
01-28-2006, 05:55 PM
~~DAISY~~
[attachment=1914]
Family: Asteraceae
Genus: Melampodium
Species: paludosum
[attachment=1915] [attachment=1916] [attachment=1917]
The humble yet cheerfully attractive daisy is familiar to most as a 'weed' of lawns and a feature of many children's games. The small, hairy, spoon-shaped leaves, which are green throughout the year, are arranged in flat, neat rosettes. The upturned flower heads look like single flowers, but actually consist of a number of small, tightly packed individual flowers or 'florets'; this arrangement is a type of inflorescence known as a 'capitulum' . The flower heads have bright golden-yellow central discs, composed of 'disk florets', which are surrounded by petal-like white 'ray-florets' that often have deep pink or reddish flushes on the underside. This species was described as the 'day’s eye', by Chaucer and 'the emperice and flour of floures alle'.
[attachment=1918] [attachment=1919] [attachment=1920]
[attachment=1921] [attachment=1922]
[attachment=1914]
Family: Asteraceae
Genus: Melampodium
Species: paludosum
[attachment=1915] [attachment=1916] [attachment=1917]
The humble yet cheerfully attractive daisy is familiar to most as a 'weed' of lawns and a feature of many children's games. The small, hairy, spoon-shaped leaves, which are green throughout the year, are arranged in flat, neat rosettes. The upturned flower heads look like single flowers, but actually consist of a number of small, tightly packed individual flowers or 'florets'; this arrangement is a type of inflorescence known as a 'capitulum' . The flower heads have bright golden-yellow central discs, composed of 'disk florets', which are surrounded by petal-like white 'ray-florets' that often have deep pink or reddish flushes on the underside. This species was described as the 'day’s eye', by Chaucer and 'the emperice and flour of floures alle'.
[attachment=1918] [attachment=1919] [attachment=1920]
[attachment=1921] [attachment=1922]
01-28-2006, 06:03 PM
Daisy flower search korte gea akta gaaner kotha mone pore galo!!!!!!
[attachment=1926]
"Daisy, Daisy, give me your answer true.
I'm half-crazy all for the love of you.
It won't be a stylish marriage,
I can't afford a carriage;
But you'll look sweet
Upon the seat
Of a bicycle built for two."
[attachment=1923] [attachment=1924] [attachment=1925]
[attachment=1926]
"Daisy, Daisy, give me your answer true.
I'm half-crazy all for the love of you.
It won't be a stylish marriage,
I can't afford a carriage;
But you'll look sweet
Upon the seat
Of a bicycle built for two."
[attachment=1923] [attachment=1924] [attachment=1925]