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Gardening, Afforestation & Agro-forestry - Printable Version

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Gardening, Afforestation & Agro-forestry - Rishi - 04-17-2018







Gardening, Afforestation & Agro-forestry - Rishi - 05-24-2018











RE: Forests and Jungles - Rishi - 03-21-2020

International Day of Forests, 21st March





Gardening & Afforestation - Rishi - 07-02-2020

After I got on Twitter few months ago, I had followed almost all of the Indian Forest Service officers who are there... I soon figured that most of their posts are related to afforestation & deforestation mitigation & soil or watershed management.


So I'm creating this thread to share the treasure troves here... Gardening can be covered too for those who are interested.

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RE: Gardening, Afforestation & Agro-forestry - Rishi - 07-16-2020









RE: Gardening, Afforestation & Agro-forestry - Rishi - 07-26-2020

Mangrove day special...





RE: Gardening, Afforestation & Agro-forestry - Rishi - 07-31-2020

https://www.quora.com/Is-it-legal-to-grow-small-amounts-of-cannabis-in-the-UK/answer/Joshua-Lawson-69
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/step-inside-worlds-most-dangerous-garden-if-you-dare-180952635/

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The UK is home to one of the strangest gardens in the world, the Alnwick Poison Garden at Alnwick Castle. Examples of the specimens grown here Include Atropa belladonna (deadly nightshade), Strychnos nux-vomica (strychnine), and Conium maculatum (hemlock).

With special government permission they also grow opium poppies, magic mushrooms, and cannabis as part of a drug education program. Due to the nature of the plants on display most of them are kept within cages all while being on 24 hour security.


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Visitors must walk through a poisin-ivy tunnel to enter.
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Visitors to the Poison Garden must walk through a tunnel to enter.
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The seeds of the Ricinus communis plant produce castor oil, but also contain the deadly toxin ricin.
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All parts of the laburnum tree are poisonous. If consumed in excess, they can bring on intense sleepiness, vomiting, coma and frothing at the mouth.
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Monkshood (left) is extremely poisonous—a person could kill an entire village by putting the plant's roots in a drinking well... In Victorian England, women used to put pollen from the angel's trumpet flower (right) in their tea to induce LSD-like hallucinations. In large doses, Angel's Trumpet is deadly.
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A cannabis plant in the Poison Garden. In addition to cannabis, the garden also grows cocaine and hallucinogenic mushrooms as part of a drug education program.
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