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Red Cranesbill, herb , Geranium/Germanium robertianum

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Hi Suzi,

I have only beets, carrots, potatos (regular celery and regular radishes). However, my sister in WA located the celeriac root and some Russian black radishes (think these are the same as the Chinese black radishes <HOPE!>), and as of 3 PM today they are winging their way to us here in Texas.

I have all the Kidney Tea (four herbs), except the Knotgrass but found this in Canada and it too is on the way.

Then, went to a site in Australia and found the other herbs, including the cranesbill tea BUT it didn't say what genus. I am going to have to assume they know of what they speak for they follow the Breuss Cancer Cure protocol also. Their site is hard to navigate because no matter how I tried, couldn't find the cranesbill tea so wrote them and received a reply quickly telling me what to order for the whole protocol. I will send the whole list in just a moment. Keep in mind AU money is about half of our US dollar so it isn't as bad as it sounds.

I am still going to find that plant and/or seeds and keep it on hand as an ornamental plant, of course! :)

Thank you,

Baugh

*************

What all do you have her on at this point?

Suzi

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Suzi wrote: >I don't think she does... but after you send some to Jean... I'll take some... I can add it to by herbal front yard... you needing anything that maybe I have that you could use? Great, on my walk through the woods tomorrow, I'll see if there are any seeds ready to harvest. If not, I'll get them when they are later. I noticed that seed-swaps are encouraged here, and I wondered how we would go about it on the list. I'm interested in heirloom varieties of veggies as I recently heard that they are more nutritious than hybrids. I never knew that before, but they say they have more nutrients because they are not bred just for one thing (like sweetness in corn and toms, or thin skin, or whatever). I will have some wine heirloom tomato seeds later. (They are not even red yet). I bought red and rose varieties of the seed (at vast expense(!) some years ago) and found that the red ones were consistently horrid with half of the fruit rotting on the vine. The rose ones were ok though. I'm also interested in getting some heirloom beans - I think - but I expect they would be stringy....... and the K9's

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