Wellness Wednesdays Everyday Mindfulness
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Wellness Wednesdays - Stress Less with Laughter
Wellness Wednesdays Stress Less With Laughter
Princeton area community website with events, comprehensive business listings, and local information
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2:00 PM
Stress is part of our daily lives, and finding ways to relieve stress is valuable to help maintain balance and go about our normal activities. Laughter exercise can be added to your personal toolbox of stress relievers. Join us for several laughter exercise that will leave you feeling energetic and stressed less!
Presenter: Joanne Kinsey, FCHS Educator, Atlantic and Ocean Counties
All sessions begin at 2 p.m., are FREE, and will last approximately 45 minutes with time for Q&A. To join, you will need to register at https://go.rutgers.edu/ufmeubbl and have either a computer, tablet, or smartphone with speakers.
The costs of learning horticulture | Gardener State
Bruce Crawford
View Comments
Based upon my experience, I suspect the average gardener kills a plant at least three times before understanding the proper conditions that lead to success. It is frustrating and discouraging, but simply one of the costs of learning horticulture.
I mention this since to my dismay I recently killed three pitcher plants, botanically called sarracenia. These are fascinating plants found growing in peat bogs. To accommodate for the infertile soils of a bog, the plants digest insects.
The leaves are rolled into tall tubes or pitchers with an overarching lid at the top and protease rich liquids at the bottom. The plants attract insects through nectaries along the upper rim of the pitcher, from which the insects slip and fall into the vessel. The overhanging lid hides the sun and disorients the insects who eventually tire, fall into the liquid and die. The enzymes partially dissolve the insects with t
Thank goodness for tough plants | Gardener State
Bruce Crawford
Contributor
I would not like to be a plant in late April. One day the weather is sunny and near 70 degrees, only to find the next day brings thunderstorms, hail and howling winds, followed a few days later with temperatures near 80 degrees. Undeniably, plants are tough.
Of course, some plants appear tougher than others, simply because they can take root in places that seem totally inhospitable or because they last and proliferate while others fade.
Focus for a moment on tulips. I love the color of a spring tulip display, but I do not plant them due to their typically short lifespan. However, there are a few tough exceptions. I have watched tulipa tarda or the late tulip, whose botanical name has been adjusted to the tongue twisting tulipa urumiensis, not only survive for over 20 years, but actually spread.
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