Plants

Saturday, 13 June 2026
21 facts about olives
21 facts about olives
"Where the olive refuses to grow, there the Mediterranean world ends"
It is not known exactly when and where the first olive tree, characteristic of the Mediterranean region, grew. Paleobotanists claim that wild olives g ...

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Pineapple
Pineapples are also used in cosmetics.
They are great in enzymatic peelings, creams for discoloration, and anti-cellulite lotions.
Poinsettia
Poinsettia, in addition to its decorative value, serves as a medicinal, cosmetic and dye plant.
In Mexico and Guatemala, the milky sap from poinsettias was used as shaving cream. In Guatemala, the ...
Ginkgo biloba
It is an endemic and relict species whose only natural habitat is Anhui Province in eastern China, in the Yangtze and Huang He river basins.
The natural habitat of the Ginkgo is an area of more than one thousand hectares, with 167 trees over 1,000 years old and 20 meters high, and several trees over 3,400 years old and 40 meters high.
Stinging nettle
Nettle restores elasticity to blood vessels, lowers blood pressure and cholesterol, and is a good dietary supplement for diabetics.
It is used as an adjunct in the treatment of type 2 diabetes.
Pomegranate
A pomegranate proper is a shrub or a small tree.
Its height ranges from 3 to 5 meters. It has many thorny branches and is long-lived–some specimens i ...
Watercress
It is low in calories, in 100 g it contains only 11 kcal. It also has a low glycemic index.
It helps with constipation, has anti-cancer effects, boosts immunity, helps with liver disorders, an ...
Stinging nettle
Nettle is high in protein - 24% dry weight, which is why it is recommended in vegetarian diets.
Mayflower
Mayflower is protected by law in many states.
They are extremely rare in the wild, thanks to the destruction of their habitat and peculiar growing requirements, so removing one from its habitat is strictly prohibited.
Jerusalem artichoke
French explorer Marc Lescarbot described Jerusalem artichoke as "as big as a turnip or truffle," fit to eat and tasting "like chard, but more pleasant."
In 1629, English herbalist and botanist John Parkinson wrote that widely grown Jerusalem artichoke h ...
Pears
They were cultivated in ancient China as early as the 20th century BC and in ancient Greece around the 8th century BC.
In the 12th century, methods for growing these trees were written down in an agricultural manual by ...