I used the leave powder to make tea which has - apart from treating malaria - a lot of beneficial properties. I can also make capsules to swallow. And I can make a tinkture with a wider variety of applications. Next I will make a video about post-harvest processing of Artemisia annua Anamed.
Artemisia helped me and my friends a lot in Zanzibar, when they got ill. Back home my partner took it, because he had quite a long time stomach problems. He took it a while and everything disappeared. I bless Artemisia Annua! Thank God!
@@AmandaSmith-od3ep Very aromatic but difficult to describe. Are you in doubt having the right species? Send me a pic of the leaves and I will try and tell you. mtaege@aol.com
I have been involved in growing and development of Aa program for management of malaria in schools and prisons in Kenya between 2010-9. Our methods included use of organic seeds and cuttings. We had potable nurseries and prepared nurseries on the ground. To be successful we use well drained composed soils with regular watering. Our problems included weeds, termites and cut worms. I like this presentation as it provide clear step by step instructions for beginners. Well done.
@@ManfredTaege Due to COVID pandemic outbreak our Aa program has almost come to a standstill, however am able to produce capsules both in formulations and in it's pure form. I will be pleased to get an interested partner to help with value addition, parkaging and marketing of the products. Where are you located?
Thank you for showing all this growing process! All the 40 people that didn’t like the video, please explain yourself! If you don’t have anything to say, don’t thumb down but click next video!
My parents had it growing wild every year. After my parents passed away, we tried to transplant a few plants to our respective homes but with mixed success. Right now I bought seeds from Etsy and will try to grow from germination. Thanks for the great video. In the Chinese Hakka cuisine, we make soup with it: wash a bunch of leaves and then add water. Add in a salted duck egg and voilà! Warning: not recommended for those with high blood pressure. Also ingesting it can cause very vivid dreaming.
My area has plenty artemisia vulgaris. Among others, very effective in correcting irregular female blood flow. One simple recipe: seep in hot water some soft leaves. After cooling drink as is. Nice aroma, slightly bitter. Pleasant. I make it a point to prepare and spread it to females to drink 🎉🎉🎉.
I love this plant. It’s so good for infections of all kinds. Just about 14 drops of the tincture in a tiny swallow of juice, for a few days, will help most infections. Wonderful video.
Thanks for your comment. I'm glad you liked it. I am using the plant, powder, tea, tincture myself and could treat malaria of my collegues in South Sudan successfully.
Very nice video with excellent voice over narration and the music choice is superb. Volume was perfect as well🙏🙏🙏thank you for wonderful instructions 👍
It's not yet proved scientifically but several research institutions work on it. First results have shown that it might relieve symptoms and alleviate the severity of the disease.
I have a Chinese friend. She said that the CCP had announced Artemisia annua as the antidote to covid. There are several peer-reviewed publications showing effect. As an anti-parasitic, it may act similarly on covid to HCQ and ivermectin. When a relative had covid they made a tea out of some wormwood they had gathered in the summer and found it very comforting for their symptoms.
I’m so happy that this plant is being used in its pure form for the people of Africa. 🙏🏻 If only the western world would count on Mother Earth for what she provides us, we could have a true health revolution! Manfred, you have encouraged me to research my local area (Zone 7b) to grow A. annua. I use to purchase herbs for distributing to my clients from reputable herbal companies, but I have started to grow them on my homestead for freshness. Unfortunately, most Westerners consider all of Nature’s goodness as weeds and use harmful chemicals to destroy them for aesthetically pleasing lawns. Unfortunately, these chemicals (i.e., glyphosate or Roundup) only promote tragic illness to both Nature (i.e., earth, animals, humans) and destroy the great medicinal value these plants bring. I pray that we get back to Nature for true health. 🌱
LifeIsOnlyRealWhen IAm, if you are replying to me, you make no sense or are not understanding what I’m saying. I never said that the western world or Mother Earth doesn’t have A. annua. I was referring to most Westerners relying on pharmaceutical drugs rather than Mother Earth. [Shaking my head.]
"All throughout for thousands of years; Africa has served as a blessed great granary for many ancient civilizations, whether it was taken freely or paid for. At present they produce one of many miracles. To conclued: Give them the intelligent distinction that is overdue!!"
Thank you for very nice instructions on how to grow this important plant. In response to some other commenters, it might be worth noting that A. annua is also being used for babesia, a malaria-like co-infection of Lyme disease.
My friend used it in preparing food for special occasion as wedding ceremony, and special holiday in China. The food is delicious with beautiful dark green color.
I have the herb in my garden for the third year now. This year it was difficult to grow new plants from seed. But fortunately, new plants are growing in the garden in the places where the herb grew last year. Maybe this is also because we haven't had very frosty winters in the last few years.
@@a.nefertiti6980 In the meantime - two years further on - I can report that the Artemisia seed also survives very frosty winters in the garden. If you leave a few branches until flowering, then it works that until April/May the seeds come up. I live in the northern part of Germany. I have already given seed to friends, but it did not work for everyone. Probably the condition of the soil is also crucial. Just try sowing some seed in a flower tray (outside) in spring. This might work better than pre-growing indoors.
Hi Paul Dooley. Thankyou so much. Very good video. I am growing the plant from cutting with some rooting powder in the greenhouse. Covered with clear plastic bottle cut bottom off and top cap off. Thank you.
Thanks for this video. Recently I tried to grow this plants,never see any of the seeds growing. Now I know my mistake and I will try to plant it again. 🙂
I grew a strong hybrid of this plant for a group in Africa, my neighbors also thought it was weed, though from pictures of weed I don't see how. No one stole it either, they just where watching to see what would happen until finally someone asked me while I was out checking the leaves for the time of harvest. I was like.... who would grow a crop of weed in plain sight when illegal?
@@charleswright7638 fresh organic turmeric, ginger and garlic are my medicine plus some more things like Lugol's iodine, ascorbic acid, colloidal silver, quercetin, zinc, vitamin D3, magnesium, NAC, sunshine, grounding, an alkaline diet working towards raw and away from grains and other junk plus this and other herbs and essential oils are also in my cabinet or rather on my menue nearly every day but not all together at the same time. Turpentine is also powerful! Do you know if artemisia annua essential oil is safe to ingest and at what dosage? I'm still researching! That's how l got here.
@@shantinaturechild6385 The plant has been used safely by mankind for thousands of years. The first recorded use seems to be in ancient Egypt around 3000 BC. I have used the whole leaf in capsule form without any side effects, inexpensively available on ebay. As for the oil, I don't know how the essential oil is made. There is some reason to believe that the herb is best prepared for consumption without heating it. Tu Youyou's team in 1967 in China used a cold-press method to derive "artemisinin" from the plant. It seems like a cold-press essential oil of the whole leaf, containing multiple antiviral compounds, would be safe and effective. I don't see an advantage of processing the plant in that manner over taking the whole leaf in capsule form, however, although I suppose the oils could be used in preparing food and such.
@@shantinaturechild6385 As for dosage, the best reference to it that I can find is in a WHO report: "The use of non-pharmaceutical forms of Artemisia." www.who.int/news/item/10-10-2019-the-use-of-non-pharmaceutical-forms-of-artemisia Here is relevant text on the dosage and results of whole leaf artemisia annua used to treat malaria: "A study of the safety and efficacy of A. annua and A. afra was conducted in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (67). The study consisted of three groups of adult patients with uncomplicated P. falciparum malaria who were treated with capsules containing powdered leaves of A. annua from Luxembourg (AAL) (20 patients), A. annua from Burundi (AAB) (37 patients), or A. afra (AAF) (25 patients). Each patient received 15 capsules: three administered on the first day and two capsules on each of the following six days, corresponding to a total of 15 g of AAL, 7.5 g of AAB, or 7.5 g of AAF. Fever clearance occurred within 48 hours, and 85% were free of parasites after seven days for AAL, 76% for AAB, and 40% for AAF. There is no information on whether patients were followed up beyond day seven and whether rescue treatment was given to patients who were still parasitaemic after their treatment course." Notably, the WHO argues AGAINST the use of the whole leaf herb. I purchased the whole leaf herb on Ebay. The cost for me of 15 capsules was $1.20 at the time. (I purchased 200 capsules). To me, this raises the serious question of whether the WHO is trying to protect pharmaceutical profits or save lives.
Manfred Taege, that you very much for sharing this great information with us all. Your Artemnis annua look fantastic. Living in the north east US I have not had much luck growing them. Maybe I should try it indoors. Do you or would you sell some of the plant after harvesting? Thank you sir
Thank you for this, I would like to know if yours smells like menthol like mine does. I've read scholar studies on it from the Netherlands and in the case reports they seemed very interested in the menthol strand. I didn't plant mine....It just arrived in my raised garden bed that is 3ft high, 4ft wide and 8ft long. The only thing I can think of is that I put rocks covered in Vicks vapor rub to keep raccoons away. next thing I know...this herb is growing next to my carrots and smells like menthol. I'm amazed, shocked, grateful, etc etc etc. Now.....I must learn how to care for it and harvest to keep this beauty going! I live in Cincinnati, OH - any info you can provide would be MOST appreciated! What a lovely garden you have!
Perhaps what you have is mugwort, wormwood the perennial. What we want is the sweet wormwood or sweet annie which is the annual. i was just reading the annual does not have frosty white looking leaves. Many benefits from this plant including results effective for a few cancers. Lyme as well.
Tolle Ernte, Manfred! Habe letztes Jahr zwei durchgebracht, und auch Tee davon gewonnen, der mir sehr gut tut. Dieses Jahr möchte ich deutlich mehr anbauen. Du hättest einen aus dem Gewächshaus als Christbaum aufheben sollen. 😆
Tolles Video, danke dafür! Ich baue dieses Jahr das erste Mal Artemisia Annua an. Die Pflanzen wachsen gut. Ich weiss nicht wann ich die Pflanzen ernten soll, deswegen würde ich gerne Ihre Meinung hören. Manche Quellen sagen Anfang August, kurz vor der Blüte, wäre der richtige Zeitpunkt, da die Pflanze in der Zeit die höchste Konzentration an Artemisin hat. Andere Quellen behaupten irgendwann in den Monaten August, September und Oktober. Das würde bedeuten auch während der Blüte und nach der Blüte, wenn die Pflanze schon Samen gebildet hat, könne man ernten. Was meinen Sie? Unterscheidet sich beispielsweise ein Tee, der vor der Blüte im August geerntet wurde von einem Tee der nach der Blüte im Oktober geerntet wurde, hinsichtlich Geschmack und Intensität? Möchte möglichst alles richtig machen! Um einen Rat wäre ich sehr dankbar! Ich sende sommerliche Grüße aus dem schönen Hohenlohekreis im Süden des Landes hoch in den Hamburger Raum! 😉🌿
Hey Manfred, i hope you are well. I loved this video. I have heard that you can store your artemisia harvest in apple cider vinegar. I have my own vinegar including the mother. Would I dry the leaves first or would I use the just harvested leaves? Thank you for your help 😊
Nice info. Excellent video!. Artemisia Annua is said to cure MDR-TB also. But this plant is also said to produce toxic effects on kidneys. Is it real? As far as my own study, if you use any Nephrotoxic plant as medicine in smaller doses it would not harm your kidneys. MIC for this plant to kill TB/Malaria germs is far lesser than its toxic dose. Hence for the use of this plant as medicine you must know the exact dose needed for your disease.
Thank you so much, when you give us the next video? I found that there's liquid form of sweet annie from St. Francis company do you recommend it ? Can we add afew drops in to our juice or tea ?
Yes, as long as you can stand the bitterness. It is a tonicum and strengthens your immune system. Number of drops depends on concentration of the tincture. Please read the instruction.
Hi, thanks for this excellent video. Can you please tell me where you are growing? I'm growing some in on the south coast of B.C, Canada and would like to know more about saving the seeds.
Hi Barbara, I the video I grew in Germany. However, I do not save the seeds. I use a special breed (not genetically manipulated) the Artemisia annua Anamed (A3) is a hybrid that can also grow in the tropics. I buy my seeds "Artemisia annua Anamed (AAA)" from www.anamed-edition.com/en/artemisia-annua-anamed.html One has to order the starter kit before (it contains 5000 seeds). Once you are registered, you can order refill packs (5000 seeds).
Hi, I never had any success with it self seeding and always started seeds in pots in a greenhouse. I'm no longer growing Sweet Annie as I had to move. Luckily I still have quite a ot of viable herb harvested 2 years ago. Good luck! @@a.nefertiti6980
on behalf of humanity thankyou manfred ! i am in south australia with moderate winters & want to get a garden started , from your experience when do you suggest we start our program ?
Which plants do you plan to cultivate? For Artemisia and considering temperature and rainfall patterns, I would start planting pre-grown seedlings outdoor in April so to harvest around end of September. This grow-out period catches most of the rain. The temperatures, however are not so optimal and might result in a little slower growth. Just try it out and experiment. For Moringa I would consider the vegetation period for Moringa between beginning of October and end of April. However the relatively low minimum temperatures during this period, ranging between 17 degrees in summer and 7 degrees in winter could be a little problem for growing Moringa. Weather patterns are here: www.timeanddate.com/weather/australia/adelaide/climate
Moin Manfred. Ich baue Artemisia annua erstmals an. Ich habe mich umfassend belesen und bin bislang davon ausgegangen, dass die Ernte kurz vor der Blüte erfolgen muss. Ignorierst Du diesen gebräuchlichen Anbau- und Erntehinweis und wenn ja, auf welcher Grundlage oder Erfahrung Deinerseits? Gruß, WH
An easy herb to find , if you keep your eyes peeled...victoria Australia ...peoples gardens etc..even the local rail station has a bunch...I squeeze the leaves into gelatin capsules..take about 3 at a time a few times a day..for a week or two No side effects at all
In Kenya it is not common. When leafy with weeds or water stressed it may preflower at a hight of two inches. With good, well airrated red soil and enough sunlight we get it growing up to two plus meters in Kenya.
Du hast dir mit deinem Englisch sehr viel Mühe gegeben . Deutsche Untertitel hätten dieses Video bei den schönen Aufnahmen und Erklärungen noch wertvoller gemacht 😌
will the plant regrow after harvest, can it be kept over winter in countries like Greece where it rarely freezes, will it keep growing past 2-3 meters? Would be good also to know how to make the tea from the leaves, with a dehydrator? letting them dry naturally?
Pour 1 liter of boiling water over 5 gram dried leaves, steep, cool down and drink 4 times 250 ml equally distributed over the day. Repeat for 5 days. Malaria is gone. In most of my cases cases fever had already disappeared after the second day. Make sure you have the right plant.
Die Pflanzen im Video sind Artemisia annua ANAMED, eine besondere Sorte, die mehr Blätter erzeugt, besonders groß wird, auch in den Tropen gut wächst und eine bis zu 20-mal höhere Konzentration an sekundären Pflanzenstoffen, z. B. Artemisinin entwickelt. Die Samen kann man im Internet kaufen. Wenn interessiert, bitte fragen.. Man kann sie auch gut über bewurzelte Stecklinge vermehren.
In Kenya I have come up with various modes of propagation from trials in schools and prisons. For good results you should avoid shady areas, give it more direct sunlight. The soil should be well airrated and we'll drained. Deep red soils tend to provide heavy folliege than black cotton poorely drained soils.
@@klaradivlakovski1785 I buy my seeds here: www.anamed-edition.com/en/artemisia-annua-anamed.html However one has to buy a starter kit first (about 5000 seeds inclusive). You will get the variety Artemisia annua anamed (A3), bred for massive growth and high content of Artemisinin. After you got the starter kit, inclusive info materials, booklets etc. you will be registered and in the following years you can buy more seeds when needed. The seeds you find at Ebay or on other sides often don't meet the quality requirements.
You can leave the plant and harvest just the brunches, hold them on the end and strip from the outside to inside. So the brunch will grow more an you have more medicine. This you can do continouesly till you cut it.
What's the best time to sow the seeds? Autumn is ok ? Do the seeds need to be exposed to sunlight directly after sowing ? Or they need to be put into shade
It depends on where you live. I planted in the tropics (South Sudan) at the beginning of the rainy season. Here in Germany, I am presently trying a one-year cultivation because in winter they will not survive minus degrees .I hope for at lease three leave harvests - that is if the German summer gets warm.
Can you tell me how much in weight can I get from one plant of dried leaves for tea? Do you have any reports of using this plant against cancer with good results? Thanks
It shows at 8:25 of the video: One plant in my garden here in Germany yielded an average of 301 grams of fresh leaves. After drying 72 grams remained. Dry matter 23.9 %. One plant enough to treat 2 adult persons for malaria. I personally have no experience for using against cancer. But there are a lot publications about that. Some are flashed in the first video "Artemisia annua - Malaria, cancer and a Nobel Prize". Maybe you also can find some info here: www.anamed-edition.com/en/ I am going South Sudan next week, keep in contact. Do not expect immideate reply because I'll not have internet every day. Manfred taegemanfred@gmail.com
Wikipedia has some good general information on Artemisia annua L. including flowering, and when to harvest. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artemisia_annua I followed almost everything Dr. Heldga Clark wrote on Cancer back in the early 1990 including the use of this plant. No one needs to wait until they get cancer to use this plant as far as I am concerned! Much more is now known and being researched. You have got to read this! Wow. www.drclark.net/en-us/disease-a-protocols/cancer-page/research-articles/253-wormwood-
@@momzilla9491 hulda clark also doesnt advise anyone either having pets or close contact with animals in general because of the ready transfer of parasites from animals to humans; I assume eating meat would enable the same transfer? not sure.
How big were your plants when they started to flower? Once the flowerbuds are formed, the plant will not longer grow. Once they have started to build the flower buds, there is nothing you can do to reverse the process. Then I would harvest the leaves (and the flowerstands), dry and use. If the plants flower prematurely, means when still very small, I would think about what I did wrong: Plants in too small containers, plants that were kept too dry (even for a relatively short period) or plants grown under a deficiency of light usually start flowering before reaching their full size. As you could see in the video, the Artemisia annua Anamed (A3) that I have used can grow up to 2m and even more when given the right conditions.
Take some cuttings from side branches, remove all leaves except 2 or three of the top, put in water until roots appear. Plant into soil. continue to water regularly. Collecting the seeds is possible but I don't have experience in it. I am using a special variety (A. annua ANAMED) that grows bigger, developes more leaves and up to 20-times higher concentration of secondary phytochemicals e.g. Artemisinin. I buy the seeds at www.anamed-edition.com/en/seed-offers.html
Growing Aa from cuttings: 1. Cut the stems 6-8 inches. remove the lower leaves leaving three leaves at the top. 2. Have soil mixed with compost in tins, pots or prepared nurseries. 3. Insert the cuttings in soil leaving two thirds on top. 4. Place the cuttings protected from direct sunlight for around two weeks. Ones they start shooting, you should allow them to have more sunlight. 4. Soil must be well drained and airrated.
Seed collection from dried plant is tricky. Note that the seeds are super fine with one tea spoonful giving approximately equivalent of twelve thousand seeds. Take dry stems with seeds. Most of the seeds remain in the pods by slowly removing the pods from the stem, you will be collecting the seeds. If you place the remains of pods and press them by your fingers, the tiny white specks are the seeds. They may remain in soil for along time.
Sweet wormwood (_Artemisia annua_) is only the same as the *annual mugwort* but is *NOT* the same as the *mugwort* or *common mugwort* (_Artemisia vulgaris_). _Artemisia annua_ goes by a number of common names: Sweet wormwood, annual wormwood, sweet annie, sweet sagewort, annual mugwort, and the Chinese names piniyn, or huanghua hao. The chemical compound Artemisinin used in treatment of Malaria is only found in _Artemisia annua_, the sweet Wormwood. Some other species of the genus Artemisia are the Big sagebrush (_Artemisia tridentata_), the common wormwood (_Artemisia absinthium_), the southern wormwood (_Artemisia arbrotanum_), the Tarragon (_Artemisia dracunculus_). Many of these other species have also different medicinal properties.
Sweet wormwood (_Artemisia annua_) is only the same as the *annual mugwort* but is *NOT* the same as the *mugwort* or *common mugwort* (_Artemisia vulgaris_). _Artemisia annua_ goes by a number of common names: Sweet wormwood, annual wormwood, sweet annie, sweet sagewort, annual mugwort, and the Chinese names piniyn, or huanghua hao. The chemical compound Artemisinin used in treatment of Malaria is only found in _Artemisia annua_, the sweet Wormwood. Some other species of the genus Artemisia are the Big sagebrush (_Artemisia tridentata_), the common wormwood (_Artemisia absinthium_), the southern wormwood (_Artemisia arbrotanum_), the Tarragon (_Artemisia dracunculus_). Many of these other species have also different medicinal properties.
Never let them dry, water regularly. If once there is lack of water - even if only for a short period - it immediately starts flowering. Replant into bigger pots or in the field in time.
What are you doing with all the harvest?
I do make tea.
I used the leave powder to make tea which has - apart from treating malaria - a lot of beneficial properties.
I can also make capsules to swallow. And I can make a tinkture with a wider variety of applications.
Next I will make a video about post-harvest processing of Artemisia annua Anamed.
@@ManfredTaege I have some of mine now in drying process. Hot sure yet if I bring one over the winter period..
@@CB-stylez Life expectancy of the plant is only one year. That is why it is called A. annua. But let's wait and tell me how it worked. Interesting.
@@ManfredTaege will let you know :)
Artemisia helped me and my friends a lot in Zanzibar, when they got ill. Back home my partner took it, because he had quite a long time stomach problems. He took it a while and everything disappeared. I bless Artemisia Annua! Thank God!
Hi can you tell me how artemisia smells?
@@AmandaSmith-od3ep Very aromatic but difficult to describe. Are you in doubt having the right species? Send me a pic of the leaves and I will try and tell you. mtaege@aol.com
Kindly reply,how to take it.
Juice or soup.what should be amount.
@@rishirajchhetri9911 we use Artemisa Anua liquid from Adaptonics, here in Germany.
@@pattis25 👍
this helped me with lymes disease, it was part of my protocol. thank you..
A good use for most of united states, alot of insects for sure
I have been involved in growing and development of Aa program for management of malaria in schools and prisons in Kenya between 2010-9. Our methods included use of organic seeds and cuttings. We had potable nurseries and prepared nurseries on the ground.
To be successful we use well drained composed soils with regular watering.
Our problems included weeds, termites and cut worms.
I like this presentation as it provide clear step by step instructions for beginners.
Well done.
Thank you Tobias. I wish you continuous success
@@ManfredTaege Due to COVID pandemic outbreak our Aa program has almost come to a standstill, however am able to produce capsules both in formulations and in it's pure form.
I will be pleased to get an interested partner to help with value addition, parkaging and marketing of the products.
Where are you located?
@@tobiasarudo7315 did you try Neem as natural pesticide?
Thank you for showing all this growing process! All the 40 people that didn’t like the video, please explain yourself! If you don’t have anything to say, don’t thumb down but click next video!
They're probably people from the pharmaceutical companies. :)
Probably Baal Gates
people in general are stupid, ignorant and have nothing better to do. look every 4 minutes a rape occurs so hmm. we got problems.
My parents had it growing wild every year. After my parents passed away, we tried to transplant a few plants to our respective homes but with mixed success. Right now I bought seeds from Etsy and will try to grow from germination. Thanks for the great video. In the Chinese Hakka cuisine, we make soup with it: wash a bunch of leaves and then add water. Add in a salted duck egg and voilà! Warning: not recommended for those with high blood pressure. Also ingesting it can cause very vivid dreaming.
Thankyou for your wisdom. I am about to plant my first Wormwood Seeds. Health is freedom. 👍🌿
My area has plenty artemisia vulgaris. Among others, very effective in correcting irregular female blood flow.
One simple recipe: seep in hot water some soft leaves. After cooling drink as is. Nice aroma, slightly bitter. Pleasant.
I make it a point to prepare and spread it to females to drink 🎉🎉🎉.
I love this plant. It’s so good for infections of all kinds. Just about 14 drops of the tincture in a tiny swallow of juice, for a few days, will help most infections. Wonderful video.
Thanks for your comment. I'm glad you liked it. I am using the plant, powder, tea, tincture myself and could treat malaria of my collegues in South Sudan successfully.
Thank you sir 🙏. This is just the video I was looking for. I also really enjoyed your narration and musical choice as well.
Thank you very much for your comment.
Very nice video with excellent voice over narration and the music choice is superb. Volume was perfect as well🙏🙏🙏thank you for wonderful instructions 👍
Thanks for the compliment. I hope you will succeed in growing your own.
This is the medicine for covid 19, this revelation came from heaven.
It's not yet proved scientifically but several research institutions work on it. First results have shown that it might relieve symptoms and alleviate the severity of the disease.
In Revelation it says that the waters would be turned to Wormwood. Is that because we'd be fighting a parasite??
Yes. I read that on Revelaciones Marianas . I take the tea on occasion as prevention.
I have a Chinese friend. She said that the CCP had announced Artemisia annua as the antidote to covid. There are several peer-reviewed publications showing effect. As an anti-parasitic, it may act similarly on covid to HCQ and ivermectin. When a relative had covid they made a tea out of some wormwood they had gathered in the summer and found it very comforting for their symptoms.
I’m so happy that this plant is being used in its pure form for the people of Africa. 🙏🏻 If only the western world would count on Mother Earth for what she provides us, we could have a true health revolution! Manfred, you have encouraged me to research my local area (Zone 7b) to grow A. annua. I use to purchase herbs for distributing to my clients from reputable herbal companies, but I have started to grow them on my homestead for freshness. Unfortunately, most Westerners consider all of Nature’s goodness as weeds and use harmful chemicals to destroy them for aesthetically pleasing lawns. Unfortunately, these chemicals (i.e., glyphosate or Roundup) only promote tragic illness to both Nature (i.e., earth, animals, humans) and destroy the great medicinal value these plants bring. I pray that we get back to Nature for true health. 🌱
LifeIsOnlyRealWhen IAm, if you are replying to me, you make no sense or are not understanding what I’m saying. I never said that the western world or Mother Earth doesn’t have A. annua. I was referring to most Westerners relying on pharmaceutical drugs rather than Mother Earth. [Shaking my head.]
mother earth? you mean Father GOD who created the earth and graciously provided us with all these wonderful plants!
Lauren I don’t do religious propaganda. May you find peace in the Grove. 🌲🌳🌲🌳🌲🌳🌲🌳🌲🌳🌲🌳🌲🌳🌲
@@Lauren-vd4qe In Polish "Bogini życia."
@@dr.campbell9196 there will b no peace once you find yourself left behind when the Rapture happens. good luck with that one.
"All throughout for thousands of years; Africa has served as a blessed great granary for many ancient civilizations, whether it was taken freely or paid for.
At present they produce one of many miracles. To conclued: Give them the intelligent distinction that is overdue!!"
Thank you for very nice instructions on how to grow this important plant. In response to some other commenters, it might be worth noting that A. annua is also being used for babesia, a malaria-like co-infection of Lyme disease.
Mine doesn't grow tall, rather spreads out. Is it a different plant?
@@artist254grafitti7 I'm wondering the same, does yours have flowers?
It is also used for several other parasitic, bacterial and viral diseases, particularly in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) Even for SARS CoVid 1.
@@ManfredTaege pls my dear I am having issues with malaria and Typhoid, can you pls help me with your number so I can order powdered As?
@@samsonokechukwu2116 added
How are you now?.
I just started some seeds using your method , thank you 🙏
That was quite a harvest. I just discovered I have it growing wild on my place.
@PressedEarth just discovered today ...wow
where do u live
Thank you sir, God bless you.
Amazing video! Thank you
Thanks for showing this here. Trying to grow in UK.
I am sure you will succeed. Last year I grew in Germany 55 plants, resulting in more than 3 kg leaf powder.
I'm in L9ndon and couldn't find anywhere tge plant, so I bought seeds from internet but haven't try to plant it yet.
My friend used it in preparing food for special occasion as wedding ceremony, and special holiday in China. The food is delicious with beautiful dark green color.
...and very bitter.
Nice video and music very pleasant to watch ..Thank you.
I bought one of these plants YEARS ago at a nursery and love it. I tried unsuccessfully growing from seed. I think I will try again.
I have the herb in my garden for the third year now. This year it was difficult to grow new plants from seed. But fortunately, new plants are growing in the garden in the places where the herb grew last year. Maybe this is also because we haven't had very frosty winters in the last few years.
Best of luck!
@@1fanitram463What growing zone are you in? I hope the same will happen for me.
@@a.nefertiti6980 In the meantime - two years further on - I can report that the Artemisia seed also survives very frosty winters in the garden. If you leave a few branches until flowering, then it works that until April/May the seeds come up. I live in the northern part of Germany. I have already given seed to friends, but it did not work for everyone. Probably the condition of the soil is also crucial. Just try sowing some seed in a flower tray (outside) in spring. This might work better than pre-growing indoors.
@@1fanitram463 Thank you so much! That's super interesting!
Excellent video footage.
A real commentary step by step..vividly explained..wonder if You tube could give five star rating like amazon.thanks Manfred.
Glad you enjoyed it.
Hi Paul Dooley. Thankyou so much. Very good video. I am growing the plant from cutting with some rooting powder in the greenhouse. Covered with clear plastic bottle cut bottom off and top cap off. Thank you.
Sounds great!
You are a good person for caring.
Beautiful I just bought seeds hopefully they work for me
I wish you good success. Last year I grew 55 plants in Germany giving more than 3 kg dry leave powder.
My seeds has germinated in 3 days ! , using your method 🙏
Thank you will attempt to grow this wonderful plant just order some seeds 🙏
Thanks for this video. Recently I tried to grow this plants,never see any of the seeds growing. Now I know my mistake and I will try to plant it again. 🙂
Best of luck
Thank You for sharing
Excellent source of into from seed to harvesting.
Thank you
😮❤. Congrats. I love ur video and explanation. You have blessed hands.
Very good tutorial, Thank you
Glad you liked it
Thank you for this information!
Thanks Manfred.
I'm glad you liked it.
You know this guy's neighbors think he's a nut guy that grows weeds lol , little do they know the power in this weed.
I grew a strong hybrid of this plant for a group in Africa, my neighbors also thought it was weed, though from pictures of weed I don't see how. No one stole it either, they just where watching to see what would happen until finally someone asked me while I was out checking the leaves for the time of harvest. I was like.... who would grow a crop of weed in plain sight when illegal?
GRACIAS POR LA INFORMACIÓN. MUY CLARA LA AYUDA. SALUDOS DESDE ARGENTINA.
Good video. Thank you
Glad you liked it!
The right medicine for covid-19
And Malaria, and SARS-COVID 1. Therefore, it is a wide-spectrum anti-viral plant. have it in my "medicine cabinet" along with echinacea and garlic.
A shame they are killing people with ventilators and experimental injections and uneducated hypnotised people get them...
@@charleswright7638 fresh organic turmeric, ginger and garlic are my medicine plus some more things like Lugol's iodine, ascorbic acid, colloidal silver, quercetin, zinc, vitamin D3, magnesium, NAC, sunshine, grounding, an alkaline diet working towards raw and away from grains and other junk plus this and other herbs and essential oils are also in my cabinet or rather on my menue nearly every day but not all together at the same time. Turpentine is also powerful!
Do you know if artemisia annua essential oil is safe to ingest and at what dosage?
I'm still researching! That's how l got here.
@@shantinaturechild6385 The plant has been used safely by mankind for thousands of years. The first recorded use seems to be in ancient Egypt around 3000 BC. I have used the whole leaf in capsule form without any side effects, inexpensively available on ebay. As for the oil, I don't know how the essential oil is made. There is some reason to believe that the herb is best prepared for consumption without heating it. Tu Youyou's team in 1967 in China used a cold-press method to derive "artemisinin" from the plant. It seems like a cold-press essential oil of the whole leaf, containing multiple antiviral compounds, would be safe and effective. I don't see an advantage of processing the plant in that manner over taking the whole leaf in capsule form, however, although I suppose the oils could be used in preparing food and such.
@@shantinaturechild6385 As for dosage, the best reference to it that I can find is in a WHO report: "The use of non-pharmaceutical forms of Artemisia." www.who.int/news/item/10-10-2019-the-use-of-non-pharmaceutical-forms-of-artemisia Here is relevant text on the dosage and results of whole leaf artemisia annua used to treat malaria: "A study of the safety and efficacy of A. annua and A. afra was conducted in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (67). The study consisted of three groups of adult patients with uncomplicated P. falciparum malaria who were treated with capsules containing powdered leaves of A. annua from Luxembourg (AAL) (20 patients), A. annua from Burundi (AAB) (37 patients), or A. afra (AAF) (25 patients). Each patient received 15 capsules: three administered on the first day and two capsules on each of the following six days, corresponding to a total of 15 g of AAL, 7.5 g of AAB, or 7.5 g of AAF. Fever clearance occurred within 48 hours, and 85% were free of parasites after seven days for AAL, 76% for AAB, and 40% for AAF. There is no information on whether patients were followed up beyond day seven and whether rescue treatment was given to patients who were still parasitaemic after their treatment course." Notably, the WHO argues AGAINST the use of the whole leaf herb. I purchased the whole leaf herb on Ebay. The cost for me of 15 capsules was $1.20 at the time. (I purchased 200 capsules). To me, this raises the serious question of whether the WHO is trying to protect pharmaceutical profits or save lives.
Crazy music . Thanks for posting
Glad you enjoyed it
Great, best l have seen.
Thank you very much, Eswari.
The leaves look like carrot's, parsley's and even daisy's, isn't it?
Manfred Taege, that you very much for sharing this great information with us all. Your Artemnis annua look fantastic. Living in the north east US I have not had much luck growing them. Maybe I should try it indoors. Do you or would you sell some of the plant after harvesting? Thank you sir
Danke Viel mal Monsieur
Thank you for this, I would like to know if yours smells like menthol like mine does. I've read scholar studies on it from the Netherlands and in the case reports they seemed very interested in the menthol strand. I didn't plant mine....It just arrived in my raised garden bed that is 3ft high, 4ft wide and 8ft long. The only thing I can think of is that I put rocks covered in Vicks vapor rub to keep raccoons away. next thing I know...this herb is growing next to my carrots and smells like menthol. I'm amazed, shocked, grateful, etc etc etc. Now.....I must learn how to care for it and harvest to keep this beauty going! I live in Cincinnati, OH - any info you can provide would be MOST appreciated! What a lovely garden you have!
No BDB, I never experienced this menthol-like aroma.
Are you sure it is not eucalyptus or a mint plant? Also, i noticed there are several varieties of wormwood available from seed companies.
Perhaps what you have is mugwort, wormwood the perennial. What we want is the sweet wormwood or sweet annie which is the annual. i was just reading the annual does not have frosty white looking leaves. Many benefits from this plant including results effective for a few cancers. Lyme as well.
Thank your for very detailed and good explained video, i would like to grow it in container, what dimensions for good bushy growth is needed?
Thank you 🦋
Tolle Ernte, Manfred! Habe letztes Jahr zwei durchgebracht, und auch Tee davon gewonnen, der mir sehr gut tut. Dieses Jahr möchte ich deutlich mehr anbauen. Du hättest einen aus dem Gewächshaus als Christbaum aufheben sollen. 😆
THIS PLANT COULD BE SUBSTITUTE FOR XMAS TREE. THANK YOU GOD BLESS YOU
Formidable,merci pour votre partage!
Muchas gracias, Danke, Thank you.
Thank you 💚💫💛
You are so welcome
great video - thank you
Glad you enjoyed it
Cool Stuff !
Thank you 😊
Thank your for very detailed and good explained video, i would like to grow it in container, what kind of fertilizer needed.?
Que amable en difundir estos vídeos
Thank you.
He said, let us enter the jungle. Lol. Great video
Glad you enjoyed
I liked the falling leaves effect:)
Thank you, it's just a symbolic cut to bridge a longer period.
Tolles Video, danke dafür!
Ich baue dieses Jahr das erste Mal Artemisia Annua an. Die Pflanzen wachsen gut. Ich weiss nicht wann ich die Pflanzen ernten soll, deswegen würde ich gerne Ihre Meinung hören. Manche Quellen sagen Anfang August, kurz vor der Blüte, wäre der richtige Zeitpunkt, da die Pflanze in der Zeit die höchste Konzentration an Artemisin hat. Andere Quellen behaupten irgendwann in den Monaten August, September und Oktober. Das würde bedeuten auch während der Blüte und nach der Blüte, wenn die Pflanze schon Samen gebildet hat, könne man ernten. Was meinen Sie? Unterscheidet sich beispielsweise ein Tee, der vor der Blüte im August geerntet wurde von einem Tee der nach der Blüte im Oktober geerntet wurde, hinsichtlich Geschmack und Intensität? Möchte möglichst alles richtig machen! Um einen Rat wäre ich sehr dankbar!
Ich sende sommerliche Grüße aus dem schönen Hohenlohekreis im Süden des Landes hoch in den Hamburger Raum! 😉🌿
Beautiful ☺
Hey Manfred, i hope you are well. I loved this video.
I have heard that you can store your artemisia harvest in apple cider vinegar. I have my own vinegar including the mother. Would I dry the leaves first or would I use the just harvested leaves? Thank you for your help 😊
I need some advice for green aphid in artemisa annua. Thanks
Nice info. Excellent video!. Artemisia Annua is said to cure MDR-TB also. But this plant is also said to produce toxic effects on kidneys. Is it real? As far as my own study, if you use any Nephrotoxic plant as medicine in smaller doses it would not harm your kidneys. MIC for this plant to kill TB/Malaria germs is far lesser than its toxic dose. Hence for the use of this plant as medicine you must know the exact dose needed for your disease.
Ashutosh Mahajan
Thank you so much, when you give us the next video?
I found that there's liquid form of sweet annie from St. Francis company do you recommend it ? Can we add afew drops in to our juice or tea ?
Yes, as long as you can stand the bitterness. It is a tonicum and strengthens your immune system. Number of drops depends on concentration of the tincture. Please read the instruction.
Hi, thanks for this excellent video. Can you please tell me where you are growing? I'm growing some in on the south coast of B.C, Canada and would like to know more about saving the seeds.
Hi Barbara, I the video I grew in Germany. However, I do not save the seeds. I use a special breed (not genetically manipulated) the Artemisia annua Anamed (A3) is a hybrid that can also grow in the tropics.
I buy my seeds "Artemisia annua Anamed (AAA)" from www.anamed-edition.com/en/artemisia-annua-anamed.html
One has to order the starter kit before (it contains 5000 seeds). Once you are registered, you can order refill packs (5000 seeds).
Thanks a lot for replying Manfred. Our modest harvest was quite successful and I'll grow it again! @@ManfredTaege
I have organic seeds we have been growing from schools in Kenya. From Western Kenya we have achieved almost two meters hight with heavy folliege.
@@barbaramoore149Did you find that it self seeds? I'm in Montreal, zone 5B, and am hoping for the plant to come back next year.
Hi, I never had any success with it self seeding and always started seeds in pots in a greenhouse. I'm no longer growing Sweet Annie as I had to move. Luckily I still have quite a ot of viable herb harvested 2 years ago. Good luck! @@a.nefertiti6980
on behalf of humanity thankyou manfred ! i am in south australia with moderate winters & want to get a garden started , from your experience when do you suggest we start our program ?
Which plants do you plan to cultivate?
For Artemisia and considering temperature and rainfall patterns, I would start planting pre-grown seedlings outdoor in April so to harvest around end of September. This grow-out period catches most of the rain. The temperatures, however are not so optimal and might result in a little slower growth. Just try it out and experiment.
For Moringa I would consider the vegetation period for Moringa between beginning of October and end of April. However the relatively low minimum temperatures during this period, ranging between 17 degrees in summer and 7 degrees in winter could be a little problem for growing Moringa.
Weather patterns are here:
www.timeanddate.com/weather/australia/adelaide/climate
Nature Is Gods Medicine…
Moin Manfred. Ich baue Artemisia annua erstmals an. Ich habe mich umfassend belesen und bin bislang davon ausgegangen, dass die Ernte kurz vor der Blüte erfolgen muss. Ignorierst Du diesen gebräuchlichen Anbau- und Erntehinweis und wenn ja, auf welcher Grundlage oder Erfahrung Deinerseits? Gruß, WH
An easy herb to find , if you keep your eyes peeled...victoria Australia ...peoples gardens etc..even the local rail station has a bunch...I squeeze the leaves into gelatin capsules..take about 3 at a time a few times a day..for a week or two
No side effects at all
In Kenya it is not common. When leafy with weeds or water stressed it may preflower at a hight of two inches. With good, well airrated red soil and enough sunlight we get it growing up to two plus meters in Kenya.
Great video. Where can I find the seeds? I live in Kinshasa DRC. Thanks
I got mine online from 'Beekindreimagined'.
Excellent video.
Excuse me, where did you buy the seeds?
I WOULD LOVE TO KNOW WHEN WILL THEY SEED FOR FUTURE PLANTING?
Hi really good experience, but I did see the artemisia annua bloomed
Yes, the highest content of secondary phytochemicals (e.g. artemisinin) is known to be before blooming.
Mine seem to tend to grow upwards(they become long and fall over), rather then broad like yours do, any suggestions please?
Please send me picture to mtaege@aol.com
@@ManfredTaege I sent it
Du hast dir mit deinem Englisch sehr viel Mühe gegeben . Deutsche Untertitel hätten dieses Video bei den schönen Aufnahmen und Erklärungen noch wertvoller gemacht 😌
Danke für den Hinweis. Werde ihn beim nächsten Mal beherzigen.
will the plant regrow after harvest, can it be kept over winter in countries like Greece where it rarely freezes, will it keep growing past 2-3 meters? Would be good also to know how to make the tea from the leaves, with a dehydrator? letting them dry naturally?
Thanks for your question I will answer tomorrow.
Beautiful soul. God bless you 🙏. Can I use this plant for curing malaria
Pour 1 liter of boiling water over 5 gram dried leaves, steep, cool down and drink 4 times 250 ml equally distributed over the day. Repeat for 5 days. Malaria is gone.
In most of my cases cases fever had already disappeared after the second day.
Make sure you have the right plant.
Where did I get artamesia seeds?
Hello there! No more videos, what happened? Hope you are doing well!
Great video. Looks a lot like cannabis when you're harvesting it from the greenhouse haha
Thank you.
Hallo, wie kann mam diese Pflanze vermehren. Kann man die Samen sammeln und aussäen?
Die Pflanzen im Video sind Artemisia annua ANAMED, eine besondere Sorte, die mehr Blätter erzeugt, besonders groß wird, auch in den Tropen gut wächst und eine bis zu 20-mal höhere Konzentration an sekundären Pflanzenstoffen, z. B. Artemisinin entwickelt. Die Samen kann man im Internet kaufen. Wenn interessiert, bitte fragen..
Man kann sie auch gut über bewurzelte Stecklinge vermehren.
When did you keep it uncover?
I got it in one comment you said is between 68 to 77 fahrenheit thank you
I have been involved in growing of Aa in 136 schools
In Kenya I have come up with various modes of propagation from trials in schools and prisons.
For good results you should avoid shady areas, give it more direct sunlight. The soil should be well airrated and we'll drained. Deep red soils tend to provide heavy folliege than black cotton poorely drained soils.
I can not see the next video telling us how to process the leaves you just harvested. Could you attach or direct me please?
I will tell as soon as it is ready.
@@ManfredTaege we live in Canada where do you buy the seeds?
@@klaradivlakovski1785 I buy my seeds here:
www.anamed-edition.com/en/artemisia-annua-anamed.html
However one has to buy a starter kit first (about 5000 seeds inclusive). You will get the variety Artemisia annua anamed (A3), bred for massive growth and high content of Artemisinin. After you got the starter kit, inclusive info materials, booklets etc. you will be registered and in the following years you can buy more seeds when needed.
The seeds you find at Ebay or on other sides often don't meet the quality requirements.
You can leave the plant and harvest just the brunches, hold them on the end and strip from the outside to inside. So the brunch will grow more an you have more medicine. This you can do continouesly till you cut it.
I have them all over my property from 1 plant i planted years ago...how do i harvest store and ise
Soon I will post a new video here that will answer your question.
What's the best time to sow the seeds? Autumn is ok ? Do the seeds need to be exposed to sunlight directly after sowing ? Or they need to be put into shade
It depends on where you live. I planted in the tropics (South Sudan) at the beginning of the rainy season. Here in Germany, I am presently trying a one-year cultivation because in winter they will not survive minus degrees .I hope for at lease three leave harvests - that is if the German summer gets warm.
Can you tell me how much in weight can I get from one plant of dried leaves for tea?
Do you have any reports of using this plant against cancer with good results?
Thanks
It shows at 8:25 of the video:
One plant in my garden here in Germany yielded an average of 301 grams of fresh leaves. After drying 72 grams remained. Dry matter 23.9 %. One plant enough to treat 2 adult persons for malaria.
I personally have no experience for using against cancer. But there are a lot publications about that. Some are flashed in the first video "Artemisia annua - Malaria, cancer and a Nobel Prize". Maybe you also can find some info here:
www.anamed-edition.com/en/
I am going South Sudan next week, keep in contact. Do not expect immideate reply because I'll not have internet every day.
Manfred
taegemanfred@gmail.com
Wikipedia has some good general information on Artemisia annua L. including flowering, and when to harvest.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artemisia_annua
I followed almost everything Dr. Heldga Clark wrote on Cancer back in the early
1990 including the use of this plant. No one needs to wait until they get cancer to use this plant as far as I am concerned! Much more is now known and being researched. You have got to read this! Wow.
www.drclark.net/en-us/disease-a-protocols/cancer-page/research-articles/253-wormwood-
@@ManfredTaege hello, just a question are you selling a dried leaves artemisia??
@@lanibabe1985 Sorry lanibabe, I don't sell.
@@momzilla9491 hulda clark also doesnt advise anyone either having pets or close contact with animals in general because of the ready transfer of parasites from animals to humans; I assume eating meat would enable the same transfer? not sure.
How about plants that start to form flower-like buds, how would you handle that please?
How big were your plants when they started to flower?
Once the flowerbuds are formed, the plant will not longer grow. Once they have started to build the flower buds, there is nothing you can do to reverse the process. Then I would harvest the leaves (and the flowerstands), dry and use.
If the plants flower prematurely, means when still very small, I would think about what I did wrong: Plants in too small containers, plants that were kept too dry (even for a relatively short period) or plants grown under a deficiency of light usually start flowering before reaching their full size.
As you could see in the video, the Artemisia annua Anamed (A3) that I have used can grow up to 2m and even more when given the right conditions.
We can use it as a vegetable.
How can I grow artemisia from cuttings? How can I collect seeds from my flowering artemisia plants?
Take some cuttings from side branches, remove all leaves except 2 or three of the top, put in water until roots appear. Plant into soil. continue to water regularly.
Collecting the seeds is possible but I don't have experience in it.
I am using a special variety (A. annua ANAMED) that grows bigger, developes more leaves and up to 20-times higher concentration of secondary phytochemicals e.g. Artemisinin. I buy the seeds at
www.anamed-edition.com/en/seed-offers.html
Growing Aa from cuttings:
1. Cut the stems 6-8 inches. remove the lower leaves leaving three leaves at the top.
2. Have soil mixed with compost in tins, pots or prepared nurseries.
3. Insert the cuttings in soil leaving two thirds on top.
4. Place the cuttings protected from direct sunlight for around two weeks. Ones they start shooting, you should allow them to have more sunlight.
4. Soil must be well drained and airrated.
Seed collection from dried plant is tricky. Note that the seeds are super fine with one tea spoonful giving approximately equivalent of twelve thousand seeds.
Take dry stems with seeds. Most of the seeds remain in the pods by slowly removing the pods from the stem, you will be collecting the seeds. If you place the remains of pods and press them by your fingers, the tiny white specks are the seeds. They may remain in soil for along time.
The vegetables are common for making teochew kuih.
Question... Is Sweet Wormwood and Mugwort the same? Or are they different.
Sweet wormwood (_Artemisia annua_) is only the same as the *annual mugwort* but is *NOT* the same as the *mugwort* or *common mugwort* (_Artemisia vulgaris_).
_Artemisia annua_ goes by a number of common names: Sweet wormwood, annual wormwood, sweet annie, sweet sagewort, annual mugwort, and the Chinese names piniyn, or huanghua hao.
The chemical compound Artemisinin used in treatment of Malaria is only found in _Artemisia annua_, the sweet Wormwood.
Some other species of the genus Artemisia are the Big sagebrush (_Artemisia tridentata_), the common wormwood (_Artemisia absinthium_), the southern wormwood (_Artemisia arbrotanum_), the Tarragon (_Artemisia dracunculus_).
Many of these other species have also different medicinal properties.
Sweet wormwood (_Artemisia annua_) is only the same as the *annual mugwort* but is *NOT* the same as the *mugwort* or *common mugwort* (_Artemisia vulgaris_).
_Artemisia annua_ goes by a number of common names: Sweet wormwood, annual wormwood, sweet annie, sweet sagewort, annual mugwort, and the Chinese names piniyn, or huanghua hao.
The chemical compound Artemisinin used in treatment of Malaria is only found in _Artemisia annua_, the sweet Wormwood.
Some other species of the genus Artemisia are the Big sagebrush (_Artemisia tridentata_), the common wormwood (_Artemisia absinthium_), the southern wormwood (_Artemisia arbrotanum_), the Tarragon (_Artemisia dracunculus_).
Many of these other species have also different medicinal properties.
Onde comprar as sementes da ARTEMISIA ANNUA? Grata
Which purpose it's using
how come your artemisia didnt flower? I had tried growing it but it flowers right away when in 4" container...then it dries out.
Never let them dry, water regularly. If once there is lack of water - even if only for a short period - it immediately starts flowering. Replant into bigger pots or in the field in time.
Can i get at the chemist in South Africa
Shall we start growing this lovely plant?
Yes, definitely
💚💚💚💗💚