Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... From a single species of plant comes many teas. The tea tree, a shrub called Camellia sinensis, produces white, green, black and oolong teas. The tea’s ...
It may come as a surprise, but yes, you can grow and make your own tea right here in San Diego County’s backyards and balconies. Traditional tea is harvested from the evergreen shrub Camellia sinensis ...
SOOTHING SIPS: Fennel, coriander, juniper and anise combined with spirits make an after-dinner schnapps that eases holiday overindulgence. Photo by Glenn English Feasting season is upon us and will ...
Q: Is it possible to propagate a new tea olive shrub from new-growth cuttings? A: Yes, tea olives may be propagated from new growth. Mix equal portions of potting soil, sand and peat (or Perlite) in a ...
Everyone who knows me knows I’m an armchair enthusiast of everything Northern. One entire section of the bookshelf in my library is devoted to books about Arctic wildlife, Arctic peoples and Arctic ...
* What it is: True Bloom is a new class of rose bred by famed breeder Ping Lim – a blend of the easy-care performance of shrub roses and the classic beauty of hybrid teas. Dubbed “hybrid tea shrub” ...
THE first Tea Party got one thing right: drinking tea is un-American. Camellia sinensis, the common tea shrub, will survive in most warm, humid climates. But tea plantations never took root in ...
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