Re: Am. blooming
- Subject: Re: Am. blooming
- From: S*@t-online.de (StroWi)
- Date: Tue, 14 May 2002 13:41:07 -0500 (CDT)
Dear Lord P. and tsuh yang,
I have to correct my last comments.
Last night I had to keep my "wintergarten"-windows closed due to low temperatures and this morning I was irritated by a strange sweetand damp odor, when I entered the wintergarten. First I thought that it came from an insectizide I sprayed some days ago, but that smell is different. So it have been must been the tiny sumawongii that filled the room with it's scent - remarkable for such a small flower.
However, sniffing directly at the flower, I still do not notice that scent stronger.
So the Lord is probably right and tsuh yang has to put his sumawongii in a closed room.
Cheers,
Bernhard.
"StroWi" <StroWi@t-online.de> schrieb:
> <Piabinha@aol.com> schrieb:
> > In a message dated 5/12/2002 12:38:08 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
> > hetter@worldonline.nl writes:
> >
> > > Another guy who needs a serious nose job.............
> > > Lord P.
> >
> > no, really. there's no odor at all. it's also a tiny little thing so maybe
> > it needs to grow bigger first...
> >
> > tsuh yang in NY
>
> Dear tsuh yang,
>
> same thing over here in Germany; small flower, no odor.
>
> I guess Lord P. has some kind of hypersinsitivity to Amorph smells; some kind of special receptors binding a single molecule and creating an enthuthiastic storm between his his neurons.....
>
> Orinary people like us just have to freeze in admiration.... :o
>
>
> Bernhard.
> maybe truck with some kind of nose numbness :-(
>
> Dollbergen,
> Germany,
> approx. zone 6/7
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