Natural Vibes - La natura è fonte di espansione e di bellezza

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Natural Vibes

Natural Vibes

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GROW SERENITY

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Nature is the teacher

Nature is the teacher

Awaken your ancestral connection with nature

Awaken your ancestral connection with nature

“The present is the only home”


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Herbal teas

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Oudoor plants

Matricaria chamomilla

Mentha piperita

Salvia Sclarea

Pimpinella anisum

Achillea

Malva

Foeniculum vulgare

Calendula


 


 

Now you have an excellent and specific selection of medicinal herbs for your garden.

 

This seed mix creates a complete medicinal ecosystem, ranging from aromatic herbs to edible flowers, combining digestive, relaxing, and balsamic properties.

 

The plants are divided into 3 height ranges, ideal for organizing pots and flowerbeds:

- giant plants (80-120 cm tall): wild fennel, anise, and mallow.

- medium plants (50-80 cm tall): yarrow

- short plants (20-50 cm tall): mint, chamomile, and marigold

 

This combination will transform your balcony or garden into a paradise for bees and butterflies, thanks to the variety of scalar blooms.

 

Your space will be characterized by a mix of sweet, balsamic, and floral notes.

The message of Serenity

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Grow Serenity

 

The Present is the only Abode of the Soul

 

The act of cultivating and sipping becomes a ritual of neural reconnection.

 

Anti-stress herbal tea is the vehicle that transports the mind from the chaos of linear time to the peace of the here and now.

 

Vibrational Interconnection

Recognize that serenity begins in the earth. Growing your future herbal tea plants means tuning into the rhythms of nature. Every leaf and flower grown in harmony with your environment carries within itself the frequency you need. Caring for these plants prepares your energy field to receive the same harmony you offer them.

 

Awakening Focus and Clarity

True serenity is absolute clarity. Anti-stress herbal tea works profoundly on a cognitive level, dissolving mental fog. It enhances focus and concentration, allowing the mind to function like a mirror of calm water: reflecting reality without distorting images through the filter of fear.

The power of these plants allows you to disconnect the rational mind from the incessant flow of calculations and worries.

Break the chains that bind you to past regrets and anxious projections of the future, interrupting the cycle of chronic stress that wears you down and exhausts you.

 

Expansion

A mind free from anxiety doesn't close itself off, but opens itself to the world with confidence. Serenity thus becomes a contagious vibration: by cultivating your inner peace through the plant ritual, you become a beacon of calm for all around you.

tisane in natura

 

 

Serenity is:

 

"When the mind stops traveling through time, you finally find your center. You become silence, you breathe light, you are present."

 

Instructions

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Seed characteristics:

It contains a supply of nutrients that, after germination, ensures that the young plant can develop its basic organs—roots, stems, and leaves—before it is able to photosynthesize and grow with its nourished green leafy organs (autotrophy).

Nutrient reserves are usually created in the cotyledons (first embryonic leaves), and in some species also in a special nutrient-rich tissue (endosperm) found within the seed.

 

 

The seedling initially grows thanks to the nutrients stored in the seed, which are transported to the growing parts and used there as building materials. A large seed contains many nutrients. The seedling is correspondingly large from the start. When the cotyledons are open, light for photosynthesis, temperature, and water supply play an important role in growth.

 

Even if the seedling suddenly appears to stop growing, there will be increased root growth in the soil as a basis for optimal care, which your seedling needs for vigorous above-ground growth.

Growing medium:

Ordinary potting soil is not particularly suitable for sowing. It contains too many fertilizer salts. This means that the seeds can rot in it, or the germinated plants will die because the fertilizer salts damage their delicate roots. The provided substrate is low in nutrients, germ-free, and water-permeable. At the beginning of growth, the seedling substrate is used primarily to anchor the seedling and provide uniform moisture. Minerals (fertilizers) are not initially necessary, as the seeds "bring" them with them.

 

 

There is another advantage to a seedling substrate with only a low fertilizer content: the plant then forms more root mass (main and lateral roots, nourished by the seed's nutritive tissue) and thus, to put it anthropomorphically, increasingly "seeks" minerals, which allows for vigorous growth after the start of photosynthetic activity.

Plants grown in well-fertilized soil (e.g., potting soil from gardening stores) invest more in shoot and leaf growth and less in root growth, which often leads to less plant stability after planting.

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Water and Proper Irrigation

Water should have as little limescale as possible. In most cities, water is unfortunately hard and calcareous.

 

 

Rainwater is ideal, or you can boil tap water and water your plants. It's best if the irrigation water is at room temperature.

 

 

After moistening the entire growing medium once at the beginning, it's best to prepare the water in a spray bottle and spray the growing medium daily. This way, the moisture is applied more evenly and prevents the seeds from washing away.

Air

Plants need water. However, the fact that plant roots also need air and breathe oxygen is often overlooked. Therefore, care must be taken to ensure that the soil is not compacted, that the pots are not directly in water, and that air can return to the roots after watering.

Protection:

Most pests, such as whiteflies, spider mites, red spiders, aphids, and scale insects, appear when the room air is too dry. In this case, ventilate more frequently or spray the plant leaves with water as low in lime as possible to increase humidity. This method is very successful.

 

Spray the leaves and soil surface with a vegetable broth, for example. To do this, add 100 g of fresh herbs to 1 liter of water and let it steep for 24 hours.

Then boil for half an hour, let it cool, and pass it through a sieve. Dilute this broth with 2 liters of water and pour it into a spray bottle.

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A green thumb requires time and experience:

In nature, only a small fraction germinate successfully and/or subsequently become strong plants.

 

 

With an optimal growing environment and a few helpful tips, we try to significantly increase the success rate, but even then, 100 percent success is not guaranteed, and sometimes no seeds germinate at all.

 

 

We know firsthand that there are many failures on the road to becoming a green thumb, but we've never let this discourage us; on the contrary, every failure has always given us new energy to try again and again, even better.

Let's learn from the obstacles:

 

- If the growing medium is too moist, the seed can mold.

 

- If the growing medium is too dry, even briefly, the germination process can be interrupted, and many seeds will not resume the process later, even if there is sufficient moisture.

 

- The temperature ranges we specify during cultivation are based on experience, but seeds react individually and are sensitive to temperature changes.

 

- Germination time is also an empirical average and should not be interpreted too restrictively. Even in nature, there are sometimes significant delays, so much so that germination can occur very, very late.

Sowing Instructions:

 

It's best to sow seeds from March to May.

 

You can sow all eight varieties at the same time.

 

Indoors/in a seedbed: You can start as early as late February or early March to protect the seedlings from frost.

 

Outdoors: Wait until April or May, when temperatures are consistently above 15°C.

 

Planting depth: This is the critical point. Most of these seeds are "light germinators."

Golden rule: Don't cover the seeds with too much soil. Spread them on the surface and press them gently into the moist soil. At most, cover them with a very thin layer of soil (less than 0.5 cm).

 

Patience, perseverance, and waiting:

Cover the container with plastic wrap (which you will need to pierce) or with the box lid, which you will also need to pierce. This will protect the soil from drying out.

Every two or three days, remove the plastic wrap for two hours. This prevents mold from forming on the soil.

 

 

Week 2-3: Germination

Place the container in a warm, humid place between 20° and 22° C (68° and 72° F) and keep the soil moist, but not wet. The seeds will germinate after 2-3 weeks.

 

Once the seedlings reach 5-10 cm (2-4 inches) in height, you'll need to thin them out to make room for the roots:

Average spacing: Leave about 25-30 cm (10-12 inches) between plants.
Height: Consider that plants like fennel and mallow can grow to over 1 meter (3-3 feet) tall, while chamomile and mint remain shorter (30-50 cm). Place the tallest ones at the back.

 

Harvesting and Use for Herbal Teas:

The best time is during flowering (usually between June and September). For mint and fennel, you can harvest the leaves throughout the summer.
Natural drying: Tie the herbs into bunches and hang them upside down in a shaded, dry, and ventilated area.

Artificial drying: Use a dehydrator (set the temperature to 30°-40°C) or in the oven, setting the temperature to low and monitoring the condition.

 

Herbal tea preparation:

Use 1-2 teaspoons of dried herbs (or a handful of fresh leaves) per cup.

Pour boiling water and let steep for 8-10 minutes, covering the cup to preserve the essential oils.

 

Location:

A sunny location is preferred.

 

Soil:

Forget cheap, often lifeless, universal potting soil.

- 60% Organic professional potting soil: A blend of blond and brown peat moss that provides structure.

- 20% Earthworm humus: This is the key element. Humus provides microorganisms that make the soil "intelligent," capable of nourishing the plant in accordance with its needs.

- 20% Drainage material (river sand or pumice): prevents stagnation and allows water to flow.

 

Water:

No limescale: the most common mistake is using the right substrate but watering with hard (calcareous) tap water.

 

Winter:

Plants are completely frost-resistant.

Many seem to disappear in winter: the above-ground parts dry out and all the energy withdraws into the roots.

FAQ

Can I use the herbal tea waste as a seed starter?

Yes, let the residual part cool in the filter and then add it to the substrate as natural humus.

Can these plants live indoors?

No, they are medicinal plants. Their main benefit lies in the essential oils produced naturally with the benefit of sunlight and photosynthesis.

Better in a pot or in the ground?

In open ground, the roots grow freely and growth is explosive. In a pot, the plant self-limits.

Both solutions are fine, and the plants are not affected.

If after a few months I don't see any sprouting, what can I do?

Check the seed by digging it up slightly to make sure it is still there, that it hasn't rotted, and above all, that the substrate is moist.

How can I keep the soil moist during germination?

Spray daily or every other day.

Remove the film for half an hour approximately every three days to prevent mold growth.

Can I fertilize herbal tea plants?

Fertilization can be avoided or reduced to just once a year (spring).

I remind you that their "resilience" comes from difficulty.

It's precisely when the plant has to work a little that it produces the highest concentration of active ingredients. If you overfertilize these plants, they will become green and lush but lack a scent.

Does it grow fast?

Some have expansive growth, urgently needing to occupy the soil and regenerate.

Others grow in a structured and solid manner, with steady but measured growth, taking time to develop their woody stems.

How important is light?

Without sufficient light, plants attempt to "escape" upward (they're said to be "stretching").

They appear to be growing rapidly, but in reality, they're weakening.

True vital growth is compact and dense.

Does harvesting damage the plants?

For herbal tea plants, harvesting is a stimulus. Picking the leaves for your herbal tea communicates to the plant that its gift has been accepted, encouraging it to produce new sap.

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