African Crops For The Future E13: Resurrection Bush/Mufandichimuka (Myrothamnus flabellifolius)

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  • Опубликовано: 9 янв 2025

Комментарии • 26

  • @dinkarpatel3663
    @dinkarpatel3663 16 дней назад

    Congrats, appreciate your hard work, Heard your above video, very helpful information...

  • @marcussamuels3699
    @marcussamuels3699 Год назад +2

    You make me miss home Gus!!

  • @wbrianna27
    @wbrianna27 3 года назад +3

    What an amazing little plant! Thanks for sharing your knowledge with us all, Gus.

  • @UNTAMEDVaughanVosloo
    @UNTAMEDVaughanVosloo 3 года назад +5

    Great episode Gus 👍 thoroughly enjoying the series

  • @satlinkdigital6035
    @satlinkdigital6035 3 месяца назад

    I do follow your episodes..happy that you have visited my my home area 😂

  • @Password20111
    @Password20111 Год назад

    Amazing plant. have always wondered how this plant survive

  • @nkosiemahlangu1158
    @nkosiemahlangu1158 3 года назад +1

    As usual this video utterly utterly informative.

  • @nyashamlambo1010
    @nyashamlambo1010 2 года назад +2

    Thanks .I love this

  • @NHAMBUT
    @NHAMBUT 2 года назад +1

    Thank you very much for these videos. We live and hope that Zimbabwe will commercially grow and sell these herbs

    • @AfricanPlantHunter
      @AfricanPlantHunter  2 года назад

      Thanks. We're working on the commercial growing of this plant for the benefit of rural Zimbabwean communities.

  • @fortytofit6738
    @fortytofit6738 3 года назад +4

    It's interesting how the Character of a Plant has a bearing in the human body, that is what my mother always says, She talks of a plant as medicinal Herbs is used on someone according to its characteristics, try finding a vine called Mumve your Audience will be captivated

    • @AfricanPlantHunter
      @AfricanPlantHunter  3 года назад +2

      Yes, it's fascinating. The earliest writings on medicinal plants, from the Greek physiciain Dioscorides, writing nearly 2,000 years ago, described a phenomenon he called the "Doctrine of Signatures" in which medicinal plants resembling parts of the body are used to treat ailments of that specific body part. I find it completely fascinating how this appears across all kinds of different cultures around our planet!

  • @kirkbrandt9255
    @kirkbrandt9255 2 года назад +1

    I drank it and shared it with friends feedback AMAZING

  • @Themechanics1
    @Themechanics1 3 года назад +1

    You are the best information so important to me

  • @dorismufara8494
    @dorismufara8494 2 года назад

    Love this.

  • @Rebel4Right
    @Rebel4Right Год назад

    Hello mkoma.
    Do you have zita remashamba in English?

  • @ignusgrobler2511
    @ignusgrobler2511 3 года назад +3

    I am in Namibia. Karibib. Zemi-desert area. I use it as a tea.
    They grow here alot. The mountains is covered with this plant.
    However i have tried to replant them in a pot and in the soil with absolutely no luck.
    Really hard to grow them

    • @AfricanPlantHunter
      @AfricanPlantHunter  3 года назад +2

      Thanks for sharing. Yes, nobody has really cracked the cultivation yet. But I don't think it is that difficult. There was a team in Pretoria a few years ago that successfully reproduced the plant from seed, but they didn't survive beyond 18 months, which they attributed to it not being the native environment. Have you tried from seed?

  • @villagewatermongu3199
    @villagewatermongu3199 2 месяца назад

    Waal