my what well kept toes you have!
and i am not going to lie, i was recouperating from an organic chemistry test, writing a paper on Arnica montana, finishing a plant morphology quiz and finishing a lab write up on monday. so this monday will be a better day, lol.
i'm going to put it into my phone right now so i can't possibly forget.
good time, though?
look into the other species of Arnica, especially chammensis. i think that's the species name, anyway. it's really close to that, if nothing else. Arnica montana is a threatened species and is in a very tenuous position right before going into free-fall. basically it only grows in alpine meadows that haven't been fertilized at all. if there's fertilizer that field is basically ruined for 60 years or more for Arnica. and it's an old world native so there isn't much space that hasn't been fertilized at least a bit by airborn means.
anywho, the chammensis works the same way but it's a native to the States and it's much more plentiful. lol.
and i am not going to lie, i was recouperating from an organic chemistry test, writing a paper on Arnica montana, finishing a plant morphology quiz and finishing a lab write up on monday. so this monday will be a better day, lol.
i'm going to put it into my phone right now so i can't possibly forget.
good time, though?
anywho, the chammensis works the same way but it's a native to the States and it's much more plentiful. lol.