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The Orchid Is Also a Flower. The orchid’s secret properties for promoting youth, wellbeing and natural health.

20 April 2013 105,770 views 5 Comments
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Herbal Medicine Fresh Orchid in Mortar & Pestle. The Bridge MAG. image

Herbal Medicine Fresh Orchid in Mortar & Pestle.                                                                 
The Bridge MAG. image

The orchid flower might well prove to hold properties that could greatly enhance our health, skin quality, hair vitality, and even – if scientists can discover the secret to its long life span – our longevity.

 

The beauty and popularity of orchids has fascinated people throughout the centuries, but there is a lot more to this plant species than meets the eye.

 

It is a common truth that all orchids are tropical. They are believed to be one of the oldest species of plants in the world. Over a century ago, orchid foragers often died while collecting them in jungles –but eventually, gardeners unlocked the secret of propagating wild orchids in greenhouses.

 

The German physician and botanist, Jacob Breynius (1665- 1721), who first discovered the existence of sexes in plants, once described orchids in a highly poetic manner: “If nature ever showed her playfulness in the formation of plants, this is visible in the most striking way among the orchids. Nature has formed orchid flowers in such a way that, unless they make us laugh, they surely excite our greatest admiration.”

 

Breynius was the director of the botanical gardens at Tübingen, Germany. In 1687 he was one of the first botanists to discover sexual differentiation in plants by identifying and defining the male (anther) and female (pistil) reproductive parts, and, in turn, outlining their functions in fertilisation.

 

The first tropical orchids were imported to England in 1731. The first orchid nursery was established in London in 1812. The public were greatly surprised to find that the plant could grow and flower outside its natural rainforest habitat.

 

The orchid comes from the family of flowering plants known as Orchidaceae, a name which comes from the Greek word ‘orchis’, meaning ‘testicles’ –so called because of the bulbous shape of the plant’s root tubers. For that reason, the orchid has been associated in many cultures with sexuality, fertility, and procreation.

 

It was the Ancient Greek philosopher Theophrastus of Lesbos (c.371-c.287 BC) – known as the “father of botany” – who first coined the name ‘orchis’…

 

 

Follow the links below to read more:

 

 

1)  Beauty, Health and Wellbeing Global News That Never Fades: The Bridge Magazine Book – From Britain’s News to World Exclusives.

 

https://www.lulu.com/en/gb/shop/rachel-tcheungna/beauty-health-and-wellbeing-global-news-that-never-fades-the-bridge-magazine-book-from-britains-news-to-world-exclusives/paperback/product-znpgek.html?page=1&pageSize=4

 

 

 

 

2) Global News That Never Fades: From Britain’s News to World Exclusives.

 

https://www.lulu.com/en/gb/shop/rachel-tcheungna/global-news-that-never-fades-from-britains-news-to-world-exclusives/paperback/product-ennmdm.html?page=1&pageSize=4

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rachel Tcheungna, Author, Writer of 

The Bridge Books and 

The Bridge Magazine Editor.

 

 

 

 

5 Comments »

  • Rachel Tcheungna said:

    Dear Loretta,

    Many thanks for your comments.
    With best wishes
    Rachel

  • Rachel Tcheungna said:

    Dear Arturo,
    Thanks for your kind words
    With very best wishes
    Rachel

  • Rachel Tcheungna said:

    Dear Mariano,
    How kind, many thanks for your kind words and constructive comments
    Warmest wishes for the festive season

    Rachel

  • Caraq said:

    Thoughts and behaviors of a person allow him to know various aspects of life
    and nothing can be done without existence of both.
    Then, discover someone who’s shining brightly for
    Him and talk to them. You have a sense of an infinite source that will always provide.

    • Rachel Tcheungna said:

      Dear Cara,
      Many thanks for your kind words
      Very best

      Rachel

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