Culture of karen

              Culture of karen

Karen (English: Oleander, organic name: Nerium oleander) is a blossoming plant usually found in gardens. The plant is six to ten feet tall and is an omnipresent blooming plant with four assortments of white, red, yellow and pink blossoms. 


There are three sorts of cranes: white, yellow and red [1], in which yellow cranes are more poisonous than others.

Creat by prajapati
Malaria fever is cured by digging up the root of Karen and tying it to the patient's ear.  The paralyzed limb is also gradually cured by massaging the bark of white cranberry root, white lentils and black datura leaves and boiling it in sesame oil.

Nerium

 Nerium oleander/ˈnɪəriəm ˈoʊliːændər/,[1] most ordinarily known as oleander or nerium, is a bush or little tree developed worldwide in calm and subtropical regions as an elaborate and finishing plant. It is the solitary species presently arranged in the class Nerium, having a place with subfamily Apocynoideae of the dogbane family Apocynaceae. It is so broadly developed that no exact area of beginning has been recognized, however it is typically connected with the Mediterranean Basin.

          


Description 

Oleander develops to 2–6 m (6.6–19.7 ft) tall, with erect stems that spread outward as they develop; first-year stems have a glaucous sprout, while develop stems have a grayish bark. The leaves are two by two or whorls of three, thick and rugged, dull green, slender lanceolate, 5–21 cm (2.0–8.3 in) long and 1–3.5 cm (0.39–1.38 in) wide, and with a whole edge loaded up with minute reticulate venation web average of eudicots. Leaves are light green and gleaming when youthful, prior to developing to a dull dim green. 

The blossoms fill in bunches toward the finish of each branch; they are white, pink to red,[Note 2] 2.5–5 cm (0.98–1.97 in) measurement, with a profoundly 5-lobed bordered corolla round the focal corolla tube. They are frequently, yet not generally, sweet-scented.[Note 3] The organic product is a long restricted pair of follicles 5–23 cm (2.0–9.1 in) long, what parts open at development to deliver various wool seeds.

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