Plants

Sunday, 3 May 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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Carob
Carob wood is also used.
In some regions of Greece, such as Crete, it is used as firewood. It is also used to make fences, pa ...
Watercress
Watercress is also an anti-inflammatory agent for the oral mucosa.
It supports the treatment of rheumatism and has diuretic properties. An extract of this plant (glyconasturcin) is given for avitaminosis.
Stinging nettle
It is used in the treatment of dermatological diseases - for scalp seborrhea and dandruff, hair loss, aphthous stomatitis and dermatophytosis.
It is used in the production of creams, masks and tonics.
Turmeric
The turmeric rhizome consists of 60% starch, 20% fiber, 7% protein, and 5% fat.
Asparagus
Asparagus roots and rhizomes contain asparagine (an organic compound from the group of endogenous amino acids), steroidal saponins, coumarin, coniferin, vanillin, rutin, volatile oils, carotenoids, amino acids, and unusual carbohydrates.
Watercress
It is an edible and medicinal plant, one of the oldest plants in the world.
Its health-promoting properties have been known since ancient times. The Egyptians served workers th ...
Vanilla
Until the 19th century, Mexico was the homeland of vanilla, as it was the only place with varieties of stingless bees of the Melipona and Trigona genera that pollinated the plants.
It was not until Edmond Albius, a horticulturalist from Réunion (an island in the Indian Ocean about ...
Poinsettia
More than a hundred varieties of poinsettias are known.
The newest ones have spotted or crimson leaves.
Garlic
Garlic is also mentioned in the Bible in the Book of Numbers.
Chronicles say that the builders of the pyramids also used garlic to strengthen their bodies. When t ...
Forget-me-not
The common English name, forget-me-not, appeared for the first time in the 1500s.
The French equivalent–souvenez-vous de moi–was used by King Henry IV during his banishment in 1398.