Wystarczy jedna szklanka. Dziesiątki roślin będą rosnąć jak nigdy dotąd

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  • Опубликовано: 15 ноя 2024
  • ХоббиХобби

Комментарии • 4

  • @iwonadziublinska9823
    @iwonadziublinska9823 День назад +1

    Dziękuję ❤ Pozdrawiam serdecznie 🖐🏻😊👍🏻

  • @ewasiedlecka333
    @ewasiedlecka333 6 часов назад

    Wow. Jestem weganką i nie wyobrażam sobie swojej kuchni bez soczewicy . Ona jest skladnikiem potraw i można z niej zrobić nawet naleśniki. Jeśli odrobinę wody z namoczonej soczewicy podaruje moim kwiatkom, to bardzo die uciesze że zaczną lepiej kwitnąć Pozdrawiam

  • @viola8599
    @viola8599 12 часов назад +1

    Dziękuję 😊

  • @emwuprod
    @emwuprod День назад +2

    Hi, I'm pasting a copy of the comment from the original sound signal video. A short history lesson for anyone interested👍
    FULL BACKSTORY OF THE SOUND HERE
    This is actually not an EAS signal, it was just 'the jingle' of the Polish radio in the 1930s, but the history behind it goes a little deeper than this, so read on if you're interested.
    The collection of notes you're hearing comes from a Polish army song titled "Pierwsza brygada" (still considered the anthem of the Polish armed forces to this day). It sounds ethereal and maybe even creepy to some, because of the poor quality of radio transmissions at the time, but is actually just played on a normal piano. It was introduced in 1935 in honour of Marshal Piłsudski, following his death, in May of that year.
    An important thing to keep in mind is that in the 1930s radio technology was far less advanced and instead of having a national radio station (never mind several) people would just tune in to whichever radio tower was closest to them. The most important of these towers was 'Warsaw 1' which used this sound from 1935 to 6 September 1939. This is what people heard on the morning of 1 September 1939 right before the announcement of the German invasion of Poland. on 6 September, the station was blown up by the Polish army to prevent the invading Germans from taking over the Polish airways once they would inevitably reach the radio tower. From that point on, the broadcasts were made from 'Warsaw 2' which used a different jingle (in fact it was the one used by Warsaw 1 before the switch in 1935). The old jingle was taken from Chopin's Polonaise op. 40 no.1 in A major. This is the sound most associated with Polish war time radio, as that was the jingle which preceded the final announcement Warsaw made before the Germans took control of the tower.