Resurrecting a Rose of Jericho
Resurrecting a Rose of Jericho
Buy your own Rose of Jericho Resurrection Fern - Selaginella lepidophylla here: https://geni.us/roseofjericho
The Rose of Jericho - Selaginella lepidophylla, is also known as the Resurrection Plant and Dinosaur Plant.
It is a native fern of North Africa, Central and South America.
It can survive for years and even decades in it's dormant state and loose up to 95% of it's water content. Most plants will perish with 40% water loss.
When the Rose of Jericho has no water it goes into stress mode and stops photosynthesising.
I purchased this Resurrection Plant online as a novelty and in this video add a little rain water to see how long it would take to wake it up from it's deathly slumber.
Unfortunately, although the water did resurrect the plant, It did not show any signs of life or photosynthesize (change colour).
---
Please like, share and subscribe for more videos like this and visit our website at: https://ThinglishLifestyle.com
Kick your flip-flops off and let’s get social:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ThinglishLifestyle
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thinglishlifestyle/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/thinglish7
---
NOTE: Yes, some of those links above are affiliate links. What? Well, that just means we get a small commission if you actually click through that link and buy something. Hey, we figured if we’re gonna link to the actual stuff we use (and recommend) we might as well get a little dough from it, right? We don’t get much, but every little bit helps. Plus, We’re trying to earn a little to cover our time, money and energy we’re putting into video creation... You know, make it sustainable so that we can keep on growing.
1
view
Papaya, Permaculture, Pesticides and Poultry
Papaya, Permaculture, Pesticides and Poultry https://thinglishlifestyle.com/thinglish-lifestyle/home-garden/guide-growing-papaya-trees/
In this video, Perry catches up with the papaya tree he cut down a couple of months before to see if it died or sent up new growth.
The vlog starts with a look at our baby sunbirds in their nest in a cocoa tree.
He also muses over the use of pesticides, herbicides and hormones in Thai farming, the benefits of keeping chickens and how following permaculture principals has made his land an oasis for wildlife including sunbirds, amphibians, king fishers, lizards, bees and butterflies.
---
This video was shot on the DJI Pocket Osma camera. It's a remarkable camera on a gimbal that takes out all the shakes you usually get when walking and talking while filming. It retails at around $350 on Amazon. Check it out for your self here: https://geni.us/djipocketosmo
---
Please like, share and subscribe for more videos like this and visit our website at: https://ThinglishLifestyle.com
Kick your flip-flops off and let’s get social:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ThinglishLifestyle
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thinglishlifestyle/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/thinglish7
NOTE: Yes, some of those links above are affiliate links. What? Well, that just means we get a small commission if you actually click through that link and buy something. Hey, we figured if we’re gonna link to the actual stuff we use (and recommend) we might as well get a little dough from it, right? We don’t get much, but every little bit helps. Plus, We’re trying to earn a little to cover our time, money and energy we’re putting into video creation... You know, make it sustainable so that we can keep on growing.
Thinglish Lifestyle - For a Life Less Ordinary
2
views
Air Layering a Kaffir Lime Tree - Get Your Hands Dirty with Katae
Air Layering a Kaffir Lime Tree - Get Your Hands Dirty with Katae.
Get your dirty hands on a Kaffir Lime Tree - Fruit Bearing Size TX,FL,AZ,CA,LA,HI 5" Pot https://geni.us/kaffirlime
We have a grafted kaffir lime tree that is also a lime tree. Half of the tree produces limes and has the leaves of a lime tree. The other half has darker green leaves of a kaffir lime and produces, yep you guessed it... kaffir limes.
(Citrus hystrix), the kaffir lime AKA as makrut lime or Mauritius papeda, is a citrus fruit native to tropical Southeast Asia and southern China. Its fruit and leaves are used in Southeast Asian cuisine (Tom Yum is our fave!). Its rind and crushed leaves emit an intense citrus fragrance.
Katae decided to air layer a kaffir lime branch so we can start a new tree and produce more kaffir limes for use in our home and at the Thinglish Kitchen - https://www.facebook.com/thinglishkitchen/
--
This video was shot on a DJI Pocket Osmo camera. Check them out here: https://geni.us/djipocketosmo
--
Please like, share and subscribe for more videos like this and visit our website at: https://ThinglishLifestyle.com
---
Kick your flip-flops off and let’s get social:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ThinglishLifestyle
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thinglishlifestyle/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/thinglish7
NOTE: Yes, some of those links above are affiliate links. What? Well, that just means we get a small commission if you actually click through that link and buy something. Hey, we figured if we’re gonna link to the actual stuff we use (and recommend) we might as well get a little dough from it, right? We don’t get much, but every little bit helps. Plus, We’re trying to earn a little to cover our time, money and energy we’re putting into video creation... You know, make it sustainable so that we can keep on growing.
Thinglish Lifestyle - For a Life Less Ordinary
31
views
1
comment