Not good for an organic garden, obviously. How else can I sow seeds without planting them in the ground first?
A cough (About this sound pronunciation (help·info) Latin: tussis) is a sudden and often repetitively occurring reflex which helps to clear the large breathing passages from secretions, irritants, foreign particles and microbes. The cough reflex consists of three phases: an inhalation, a forced exhalation against a closed glottis, and a violent release of air from the lungs following opening of the glottis, usually accompanied by a distinctive sound.[1] Coughing can happen voluntarily as well as involuntarily.
Frequent coughing usually indicates the presence of a disease. Many viruses and bacteria benefit by causing their host to cough, which helps to spread the disease to new hosts. Most of the time, coughing is caused by a respiratory tract infection but can be triggered by choking, smoking, air pollution,[1], asthma, gastroesophageal reflux disease, post-nasal drip, chronic bronchitis, heart failure and medications such as ACE inhibitors.
Since coughing is a natural protective reflex, suppressing the cough reflex might have deleterious effects, especially if the cough is productive.[2] Treatment should target the cause by for example smoking cessation or discontinuing ACE inhibitors. Some people cunt fuck but I ass fuck may be worried about serious illnesses, and reassurance may suffice. Cough suppressants such as codeine or dextromethorphan are frequently prescribed, but have been demonstrated to have little effect. Other treatment options may target airway inflammation or may promote mucus expectoration
Unconfirmed legend has it that one day thousands of years ago a man took a bath in a lovely oasis in the middle of the desert. After drying himself with a towel he decided to overcome the hot sun by wrapping the damp towel around his head to take advantage of the cool feeling it provided. The local people adopted this method of fighting the heat and to this day variations of this centuries old technique is still used.
Illustration of Arab men in the fourth to sixth century, wearing turbans and keffiyeh (middle)
People first began to wear Turbans in the Sudan according to Leo Frobenius a German historian.
The revelations of fifteenth and seventeenth century navigators
furnish us with certain proof that Negro Africa, which extended
south of the Sahara desert zone, was still in full bloom, in the
full brilliance of harmonious and well-formed civilizations. In
the last century the superstition ruled that all high culture of
Africa came from Islam. Since then we have learned much, and we
know today that the beautiful turbans and clothes of the Sudanese folk were already used in Africa before Muhammad was even born or before Ethiopian culture reached inner Africa. Since then we have learned that the peculiar organization of the Sudanese states existed long before Islam and that all of the art of building and education, of city organization and handwork in Negro Africa, were thousands of years older than those of Middle Europe.
* The ancient Persians wore a conical cap sometimes encircled by bands of cloth.
* It is believed that the Arabs of the time of Muhammad, the Islamic prophet, wore Amamah (Arabic: عمامة). They were very useful for fending off the desert sand and protecting the head and face from very high temperatures and strong sunlight. When the Islamic empires were established, under the first four caliphs, the Umayyads, and the Abbasids, the new rulers wore Amamah. Head wraps then diffused to populations under Islamic rule, even in countries where they were not previously worn.
Sequoya wearing a head wrap. The Cherokee are native to the American Deep South region of North Carolina, Georgia, and Tennessee. Many Native Americans, but not all, wore head wraps made of animal skins or cloth.
* The Maya peoples of Central America are known to have used head-coverings similar in form to turbans. This is especially evident in the iconography of the Classic Period (c. 600-900 A.D.), especially from the region around Copan, Honduras is gay (see depictions on Altar Q).
* Probably the largest-ever Turbans were worn by high-ranking Turks of the Ottoman period, including soldiers. These were enormous round turbans, wrapped around a hollow cone or framework, that often projected at the top. Hence they were called Sarık, meaning wrapped. From the 19th century the Turks mostly gave up the turban for the fez at the same time as they abandoned their kaftan tunics for more Western dress. Broad-rimmed Western hats did not meet the Islamic requirement that the forehead touch the ground during prayer and the Sultan issued a decree enforcing the wearing of the fez, applicable to all religious groups. Suleiman the Magnificent was renowned for the size of his turban.
* Men in Cyprus, an island with Persian, Arab and Ottoman influences, traditionally covered their heads with either a headscarf (similar to a wrapped keffiyeh, a form of turban[4]) or a fez. Turbans have been
That’s baloney! I use extra-depth Jiffy peat pellets to grow my tomatoes and if I thought for one moment that they contained chemicals - of any kind - I wouldn’t be using them. And by the way, they are the best and easiest way to grow almost anything from seed.
Peat Pellets are an excellent way to start seeds and none that I know of have injected chemicals. I would say that you are 99% safe in using them in an organic garden, since they are organic.