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#1
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best smelling plant is Lilacs and best smelling pine is Scots
I am guessing that the worlds finest smelling plant is Lilac hedges in
potency and in quality. I suspect that the first perfume was the smell of lilacs but cannot judge for other than the northern temperate zone. Perhaps other zones have something else. One thing about the smell of lilac is that it is great, but I have a hard time of mentally remembering what the smell is and have to initiate myself every Spring. I do not know why the mind can remember a visual but has a difficult time of remembering a smell. Perhaps because a smell has no geometric component to it. As for pine smell, I have been to alot of forests and pine nurseries and find that Scots or Scotch pine seem to have the strongest pine smell. Without cutting or manipulating the trees, just the aroma they impart to the air surroundings. I wonder if anyone has made a Lilac smelling perfume? And I wonder if the Lilac has played any role in the history of perfumes. Whether the first perfume ever made was by some ancient group of people that stood around Lilac hedges and said we got to get some way of bottling this smell for year round. Archimedes Plutonium whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies www.archimedesplutonium.com www.iw.net/~a_plutonium |
#2
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best smelling plant is Lilacs and best smelling pine is Scots
"Scotch pine" a tree that smells of whisky !!
Where can I get one ? |
#3
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best smelling plant is Lilacs and best smelling pine is Scots
Archimedes Plutonium wrote in message ...
I am guessing that the worlds finest smelling plant is Lilac hedges in potency and in quality. I suspect that the first perfume was the smell of lilacs but cannot judge for other than the northern temperate zone. Perhaps other zones have something else. One thing about the smell of lilac is that it is great, but I have a hard time of mentally remembering what the smell is and have to initiate myself every Spring. I do not know why the mind can remember a visual but has a difficult time of remembering a smell. Perhaps because a smell has no geometric component to it. As for pine smell, I have been to alot of forests and pine nurseries and find that Scots or Scotch pine seem to have the strongest pine smell. Without cutting or manipulating the trees, just the aroma they impart to the air surroundings. Have you heard of flowering screwpines (Pandanus Odoratissmuss)? Though the personal choices may vary, it is said that Michelia champaca (orange variety), perhaps available in Florida in few nurseries, is said to have greatest fragrance and its essential oil is used for making the perfume JOY-supposed to be the most expensive one in the world. After reading about this much praised plant I bought (white variety) after paying a heavy price... and yet the frangrance is not-so-wonderful as claimed everywhere though a subtle fragrance can be felt in the garden from just few flowers. If you like heavily scented plants, which scent the air of your garden, some of my favourites, but still small in my garden are the Ylang-Ylang tree and some Asian plants like Pandanus flower (Screwpine), a single one foot yellow flower of this pine can scent a whole garden, it grows near the coastal areas of India, Tahitian Gardenia one of the rarer Gardenias, and Mimusops elengi again native to India, and many night blooming jasmines-- Jasminum sambac etc. Sadly all of these plants are of the temperate zone. By the way, is it possible to identify and isolate the frangrant components of "live" fragrant flowers by using modern analytical techniques just as in your case of Lilacs (what is the main chemical substance that is causing the smell)? |
#4
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best smelling plant is Lilacs and best smelling pine is Scots
Prov Bloke schreef
"Scotch pine" a tree that smells of whisky !! Where can I get one ? + + + Any nursery that missspells 'Scots pine' PvR |
#5
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best smelling plant is Lilacs and best smelling pine is Scots
Archimedes Plutonium wrote in message ...
As for pine smell, I have been to alot of forests and pine nurseries and find that Scots or Scotch pine seem to have the strongest pine smell. Without cutting or manipulating the trees, just the aroma they impart to the air surroundings. The best smelling pine is the ponderosa. Put your nose right up to the trunk and inhale. Ahhh, pure butterscothch! John |
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