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Across the Fence: WHERE DO I GET SWEET ANNIE?????? ![Next Topic Next Topic](icons/icon_go_right.gif) |
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Nancy Gartenman
True Blue Farmgirl
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9093 Posts
Nancy
West Seneca
New York
USA
9093 Posts |
Posted - Jan 20 2008 : 11:18:52 AM
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I would like some sweet annie, anybody know where I can get it? NANCY JO
www.Nancy-Jo.blogspot.com |
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DaisyFarm
True Blue Farmgirl
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1646 Posts
Diane
Victoria
BC
Canada
1646 Posts |
Posted - Jan 20 2008 : 11:59:43 AM
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I bought some seed for this spring, so hopefully it will grow. I love the scent. If anybody reading this knows about growing it, I'd appreciate that too.
Di |
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abbasgurl
True Blue Farmgirl
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1262 Posts
Rhonda
USA
1262 Posts |
Posted - Jan 20 2008 : 12:06:22 PM
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Do you want dried bundles or seed Nancy? I have dried bundles for sale, $8 for a nice size one. Not sure how many are left. Rhonda
I'm a one girl revolution. |
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miss wilma
True Blue Farmgirl
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3410 Posts
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Wilma
Knob Lick
Ky
USA
3410 Posts |
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KYgurlsrbest
True Blue Farmgirl
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4853 Posts
Jonni
Elsmere
Kentucky
USA
4853 Posts |
Posted - Jan 20 2008 : 4:53:52 PM
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Miss Wilma, I'll take some (if you can spare it :))...love that scent!
Farmgirl Sister #80, thanks to a very special farmgirl from the Bluegrass..."She was built like a watch, a study in balance ... with a neck and head so refined, like a drawing by DaVinci"... NY Newsday sportswriter Bill Nack describing filly, Ruffian. http://www.buyhandmade.org/ |
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miss wilma
True Blue Farmgirl
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3410 Posts
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Wilma
Knob Lick
Ky
USA
3410 Posts |
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farmgirl blessings
True Blue Farmgirl
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777 Posts
Lea
TN
777 Posts |
Posted - Jan 20 2008 : 7:39:47 PM
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Did you cultivate that Miss Wilma or does it grow naturally? Or is that a really silly question? I'd like to grow some myself this year!
Blessings, Lea www.farmhouseblessings.blogspot.com www.farmhouseblessings.etsy.com www "He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose." Jim Elliot |
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miss wilma
True Blue Farmgirl
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3410 Posts
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Wilma
Knob Lick
Ky
USA
3410 Posts |
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farmgirl blessings
True Blue Farmgirl
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777 Posts
Lea
TN
777 Posts |
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Nancy Gartenman
True Blue Farmgirl
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9093 Posts
Nancy
West Seneca
New York
USA
9093 Posts |
Posted - Jan 21 2008 : 05:44:26 AM
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Rhonda, I want some to use for filler for little bags and sachets. Would a bundle be what I'm looking for? I just know I love the scent. Thank you all for you help here, and Miss Wilma I might take you up on that offer come spring, because you don't have enough to do.HA. NANCY JO
www.Nancy-Jo.blogspot.com |
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miss wilma
True Blue Farmgirl
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3410 Posts
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Wilma
Knob Lick
Ky
USA
3410 Posts |
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Amie C.
True Blue Farmgirl
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2099 Posts
Finger Lakes Region
NY
2099 Posts |
Posted - Jan 21 2008 : 06:49:29 AM
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Miss Wilma, if you do send out slips in the spring would you put me on the list too? I'm not worried about it taking over my yard. I have trouble getting things other than ragweed to establish themselves. Let me know if there's anything you'd like in return, or just postage. Thanks! |
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country lawyer
True Blue Farmgirl
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1022 Posts
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1022 Posts |
Posted - Jan 21 2008 : 07:52:18 AM
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I would like some seeds. Any ideas on that? |
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miss wilma
True Blue Farmgirl
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3410 Posts
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Wilma
Knob Lick
Ky
USA
3410 Posts |
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CabinCreek-Kentucky
True Blue Farmgirl
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8529 Posts
Frannie
Green County
Kentucky
USA
8529 Posts |
Posted - Jan 21 2008 : 3:57:53 PM
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i found this info on a website .. it's strange .. but it only grows "in abundance" here at freedom valley farm every OTHER year .. get small plots of plants scattered here and there in alternate years .. but when it does grow every other year .. i have scads of it. xo, frannie
P.S. i have not had luck with 'planting' or even 'scattering' seeds where i 'think' it will grow every other year .. a huge field of it will pop in the most pleasantly unexpected places. (i personally think that birds digest it and 'poo-poo' it at will and with all the birdie 'fertilizer' .. WOWZER!!!) xo WEB SITE INFO:
Sweet Annie has to be one of my favorite herbs to use for drying and in herbal wreaths. Several other names for Sweet Annie include Sweet Wormwood, Chinese Fragrant Fern and Artemisia Annua. While most other Artemisia’s have a silvery gray foliage, Sweet Annie has a feathery green foliage. It holds it’s color very well when dried.
Easily grown from seed, if left to go to seed in the fall, Sweet Annie will pop up in your garden year after year. Just sow your seeds after any danger of frost is past. This will grow best in a sunny location, but does not need any special soil. This will grow up to six feet in height, so be sure to plant near the back of a flower bed. I have also used Sweet Annie as a background plant in container gardening.
To harvest Sweet Annie, just cut the stems off close to the ground, if you wish to dry your herbs to use in potpourris, just bunch the stems together, tying a group together at the base, then hang upside down in a warm dark place. I generally use my Sweet Annie fresh, just after picking in wreaths and other groupings. This herb seems to keep its scent much longer than any other herb. I have taken wreaths apart after several years and the Sweet Annie’s fragrance is still very much the same as when fresh picked.
A word of warning though. People with allergies may have trouble working with Sweet Annie. If you discover any problems in this department, spraying a little hair spray on the greens before handling seems to take care of the problem.
As for using Sweet Annie, as I mentioned, I like to use this herb in herbal wreaths and other arrangements, but this herb is very versatile. It can be used in place of Babies Breath or any fern in dried or fresh floral arrangements. Another idea would be to place bunches of Sweet Annie on a grapevine or straw wreath (the Sweet Annie can be trimmed down from the full length plants, by using just the branches that sprout off the main stem), wire the bunches to the base, then decorate with dried flowers, such as roses or straw flowers.
Another way to use these plants is to make an actual wreath out of the fairly heavy, woody main stems. Just cut your Sweet Annie, you will need to choose stems that are similar in height or trim your stems down to get a grouping that is the same length. Start by wiring the base of all of the stems together. Now bend the stems around into a circle, wiring together every 6 to 8 inches to hold the shape. The branches and feathery foliage make a beautiful, natural looking wreath all on it’s own.
Sweet Annie also makes a wonderful smelling addition to sachet bags. Start out with a small piece of tulle or muslin, place a bit of crushed Sweet Annie, Lavender and Rosemary, in the center of your fabric. Now just tie up with a bit of ribbon. Place these little sachet bags in your drawers and linen closets to keep your clothes and linens smelling wonderful.
True Friends * Frannie
HEAR MY STORIES come, visit my: "GATHERING ROOM" .. http://freedomvalleyfarm.blogspot.com
adopt a 'rag-chile' http://sistermercysfoundlinhome.blogspot.com
treasures .. new and olde .. up for adoption: http://mudpiemanormercantile.blogspot.com
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CabinCreek-Kentucky
True Blue Farmgirl
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8529 Posts
Frannie
Green County
Kentucky
USA
8529 Posts |
Posted - Jan 21 2008 : 4:00:46 PM
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another web-site for it .. i believe you can order seeds from here too:
General Sweet Annie Information
Dried Flowers Direct Home Sweet Annie Artemisia annua Sweet Annie (annual) is a very fragrant, feathery green to light brown dried flower foliage. Dyed Burgundy and Hunter Green . We also grow a new perennial 'scent-less' variety (shown) which looks very similar to the annual but finer in texture. Annual Herb Common Names Wormwood Height 36 - 60 inches. Cultivar Propagation By seed at 70°F, requires light to germinate. Will self-sow if you let it go to seed (ill advised). Cultivation Full sun in average soil. Disease Aphids love this plant. Harvest Cut Sweet Annie before flowers open. Drying Hang Sweet Annie upside down in dry, dark, open, airy place. Uses Sweet Annie is a excellent dried flower filler. Used extensively as a dried flower wreath and swag base. Comments Sweet Annie (annual) is an excellent deer deterrent (we grow it as a hedge for that reason). Notes We also have a scent-less variety of Sweet Annie , a perennial that we have yet to identify by genus species. Related
Dried Flowers Direct™ from Keuka Flower Farm 3597 Skyline Dr., Penn Yan, NY 14527 (315) 536-2736
www.DriedFlowersDirect.com
True Friends * Frannie
HEAR MY STORIES come, visit my: "GATHERING ROOM" .. http://freedomvalleyfarm.blogspot.com
adopt a 'rag-chile' http://sistermercysfoundlinhome.blogspot.com
treasures .. new and olde .. up for adoption: http://mudpiemanormercantile.blogspot.com
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CabinCreek-Kentucky
True Blue Farmgirl
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8529 Posts
Frannie
Green County
Kentucky
USA
8529 Posts |
Posted - Jan 21 2008 : 4:02:11 PM
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and from one more web-site:
Sweet Annie
Botanical name: Artemisia annua
Common names: Qinghao, Sweet wormwood
Botany Helpful for Traditional use How it works Amount to take Side Effects & Interactions References Parts of sweet annie used and where is sweet annie grown This inconspicuous herb originated in Europe and Asia and has since spread to North America. It is now a common weed around the world. The above ground parts of the plant are used medicinally.
True Friends * Frannie
HEAR MY STORIES come, visit my: "GATHERING ROOM" .. http://freedomvalleyfarm.blogspot.com
adopt a 'rag-chile' http://sistermercysfoundlinhome.blogspot.com
treasures .. new and olde .. up for adoption: http://mudpiemanormercantile.blogspot.com
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DaisyFarm
True Blue Farmgirl
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1646 Posts
Diane
Victoria
BC
Canada
1646 Posts |
Posted - Jan 21 2008 : 5:12:57 PM
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Thank you for the info Frannie, that's exactly what I needed.
Di |
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abbasgurl
True Blue Farmgirl
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1262 Posts
Rhonda
USA
1262 Posts |
Posted - Jan 21 2008 : 6:51:34 PM
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Nancy, I think a bundle would do nicely for what you need. You will need to snip it up into short pieces for your sachets. You should be able to take some of the little seeds from this & grow new plants too.
I was reading what Frannie said & if I recall correctly, I think sweet annie is a biennial, at least in some colder areas. It comes up, but only "blooms" the second year. Around here no one will sell it. Garden centers have deemed it an invasive weed. It will grow REALLY big if you give it room. Looks like a small evergreen at maturity. We used to grow about an acre each year.
I SO love the smell of sweet annie but it makes me terribly ill to work with it. I did find a no scent variety this year. I use that in my craft work. Hurray! I can at least enjoy the look!
Anyway Nancy, I will send you a nice bundle (scented) right away if you'd like.
Rhonda
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CabinCreek-Kentucky
True Blue Farmgirl
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8529 Posts
Frannie
Green County
Kentucky
USA
8529 Posts |
Posted - Jan 21 2008 : 6:57:03 PM
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rhonda .. i do believe you are correct .. at least here in kentucky! i had several gurlfrenz looking EVERYWHERE for the seeds .. and we were all told 'it's a WEED!!' .. i'm thinking a good 'herb' shoppe might have some viable seeds or plantlings .. oh gosh .. you should see me EVERY spring .. out in the lawn ... SMELLING the earth and running my hands all over the ground .. hoping that SOMETHING i smell will be 'sweet annie' ... HA! imagine if i end up sniffin' up some poison ivy!! xo
True Friends * Frannie
HEAR MY STORIES come, visit my: "GATHERING ROOM" .. http://freedomvalleyfarm.blogspot.com
adopt a 'rag-chile' http://sistermercysfoundlinhome.blogspot.com
treasures .. new and olde .. up for adoption: http://mudpiemanormercantile.blogspot.com
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Across the Fence: WHERE DO I GET SWEET ANNIE?????? ![Next Topic Next Topic](icons/icon_go_right.gif) |
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