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New Errata
Typo in main page heading: "flower heads cosisting"


Lettuce page, radicchio section, the link to Treviso is broken.


Green globe artichoke: I'm guessing "18 count" means 18 per pound?

Scotch thistle, this line is confusing: "While today it is grown mainly as a decorative and for medicinal properties, in times past the receptacles (flower bases), which can get up to 2 inches across, were eaten similar to how artichokes are eaten today." I'd change the second and third commas to dashes.


Salsify - black: typo - "you can was the latex off"

Dahlia - "It's obvious from it's name, D. coccinea, The red dahlia is one used for culinary tubers." Stray capital T. Also, why is it obvious from the name?


Heading of herbs page: "use the search engine" Link to it?

Common chinchweed, stray word "it": "In Mexico the herb it is sold"

Southern wormwood: I'd link "strewing herb" to the Wikipedia page. I'd never heard of it.

Cosmos: "blood circulation toner" WTF is that? Or rather, what do they think they mean by it?

Fuki, missing capital: "the back side"

Nipplewort, period should be comma: "in Medieval times. derived from"



And done.
--

Drew
Expand Edited by drook July 9, 2014, 12:13:19 PM EDT
Expand Edited by drook July 9, 2014, 12:25:45 PM EDT
Collapse Edited by drook July 9, 2014, 12:28:02 PM EDT
Errata
Typo in main page heading: "flower heads cosisting"


Lettuce page, radicchio section, the link to Treviso is broken.


Green globe artichoke: I'm guessing "18 count" means 18 per pound?

Scotch thistle, this line is confusing: "While today it is grown mainly as a decorative and for medicinal properties, in times past the receptacles (flower bases), which can get up to 2 inches across, were eaten similar to how artichokes are eaten today." I'd change the second and third commas to dashes.


Salsify - black: typo - "you can was the latex off"
--

Drew
Collapse Edited by drook July 9, 2014, 12:30:13 PM EDT
Errata
Typo in main page heading: "flower heads cosisting"


Lettuce page, radicchio section, the link to Treviso is broken.


Green globe artichoke: I'm guessing "18 count" means 18 per pound?

Scotch thistle, this line is confusing: "While today it is grown mainly as a decorative and for medicinal properties, in times past the receptacles (flower bases), which can get up to 2 inches across, were eaten similar to how artichokes are eaten today." I'd change the second and third commas to dashes.


Salsify - black: typo - "you can was the latex off"

Dahlia - "It's obvious from it's name, D. coccinea, The red dahlia is one used for culinary tubers." Stray capital T. Also, why is it obvious from the name?
--

Drew
Expand Edited by drook July 9, 2014, 12:41:29 PM EDT
Expand Edited by drook July 9, 2014, 12:46:52 PM EDT
Collapse Edited by drook July 9, 2014, 12:50:43 PM EDT
Errata
Typo in main page heading: "flower heads cosisting"


Lettuce page, radicchio section, the link to Treviso is broken.


Green globe artichoke: I'm guessing "18 count" means 18 per pound?

Scotch thistle, this line is confusing: "While today it is grown mainly as a decorative and for medicinal properties, in times past the receptacles (flower bases), which can get up to 2 inches across, were eaten similar to how artichokes are eaten today." I'd change the second and third commas to dashes.


Salsify - black: typo - "you can was the latex off"

Dahlia - "It's obvious from it's name, D. coccinea, The red dahlia is one used for culinary tubers." Stray capital T. Also, why is it obvious from the name?


Heading of herbs page: "use the search engine" Link to it?

Common chinchweed, stray word "it": "In Mexico the herb it is sold"

Southern wormwood: I'd link "strewing herb" to the Wikipedia page. I'd never heard of it.
--

Drew
Collapse Edited by drook July 9, 2014, 12:51:33 PM EDT
Errata
Typo in main page heading: "flower heads cosisting"


Lettuce page, radicchio section, the link to Treviso is broken.


Green globe artichoke: I'm guessing "18 count" means 18 per pound?

Scotch thistle, this line is confusing: "While today it is grown mainly as a decorative and for medicinal properties, in times past the receptacles (flower bases), which can get up to 2 inches across, were eaten similar to how artichokes are eaten today." I'd change the second and third commas to dashes.


Salsify - black: typo - "you can was the latex off"

Dahlia - "It's obvious from it's name, D. coccinea, The red dahlia is one used for culinary tubers." Stray capital T. Also, why is it obvious from the name?


Heading of herbs page: "use the search engine" Link to it?

Common chinchweed, stray word "it": "In Mexico the herb it is sold"

Southern wormwood: I'd link "strewing herb" to the Wikipedia page. I'd never heard of it.

Cosmos: "blood circulation toner" WTF is that? Or rather, what do they think they mean by it?
--

Drew
Collapse Edited by drook July 9, 2014, 12:54:55 PM EDT
Errata
Typo in main page heading: "flower heads cosisting"


Lettuce page, radicchio section, the link to Treviso is broken.


Green globe artichoke: I'm guessing "18 count" means 18 per pound?

Scotch thistle, this line is confusing: "While today it is grown mainly as a decorative and for medicinal properties, in times past the receptacles (flower bases), which can get up to 2 inches across, were eaten similar to how artichokes are eaten today." I'd change the second and third commas to dashes.


Salsify - black: typo - "you can was the latex off"

Dahlia - "It's obvious from it's name, D. coccinea, The red dahlia is one used for culinary tubers." Stray capital T. Also, why is it obvious from the name?


Heading of herbs page: "use the search engine" Link to it?

Common chinchweed, stray word "it": "In Mexico the herb it is sold"

Southern wormwood: I'd link "strewing herb" to the Wikipedia page. I'd never heard of it.

Cosmos: "blood circulation toner" WTF is that? Or rather, what do they think they mean by it?

Fuki, missing capital: "the back side"
--

Drew
Collapse Edited by drook July 9, 2014, 12:57:36 PM EDT
Errata
Typo in main page heading: "flower heads cosisting"


Lettuce page, radicchio section, the link to Treviso is broken.


Green globe artichoke: I'm guessing "18 count" means 18 per pound?

Scotch thistle, this line is confusing: "While today it is grown mainly as a decorative and for medicinal properties, in times past the receptacles (flower bases), which can get up to 2 inches across, were eaten similar to how artichokes are eaten today." I'd change the second and third commas to dashes.


Salsify - black: typo - "you can was the latex off"

Dahlia - "It's obvious from it's name, D. coccinea, The red dahlia is one used for culinary tubers." Stray capital T. Also, why is it obvious from the name?


Heading of herbs page: "use the search engine" Link to it?

Common chinchweed, stray word "it": "In Mexico the herb it is sold"

Southern wormwood: I'd link "strewing herb" to the Wikipedia page. I'd never heard of it.

Cosmos: "blood circulation toner" WTF is that? Or rather, what do they think they mean by it?

Fuki, missing capital: "the back side"

Nipplewort, period should be comma: "in Medieval times. derived from"
--

Drew
New Thanks for those items - I'll get them rightly fixed.
As for "obvious from the name", perhaps that needs clarification for folks that don't live in a region with heavy exposure to Spanish (as we have here) or Italian.
     A little on Daisies. - (Andrew Grygus) - (9)
         Errata - (drook) - (1)
             Thanks for those items - I'll get them rightly fixed. - (Andrew Grygus)
         I found it a bit peculiar to see the flower picture under the topic of chocory root. - (a6l6e6x) - (6)
             What that means is . . . - (Andrew Grygus) - (5)
                 OK. So, Whole Foods doesn't carry the roots? - (a6l6e6x) - (4)
                     No. Chicory is just not a yuppie food item - yet . . . - (Andrew Grygus) - (3)
                         Or a coffee shortage -NT - (drook) - (2)
                             What? - (folkert)
                             They use it in jail - (crazy)

Remember, people in 1900 didn't know what an atom was. They didn't know its structure.

They also didn't know what a radio was, or an airport, or a movie, or a television, or a computer, or a cell phone, or a jet, an antibiotic, a rocket, a satellite, an MRI, ICU, IUD, IBM, IRA, ERA, EEG, EPA, IRS, DOD, PCP, HTML, internet. interferon, instant replay, remote sensing, remote control, speed dialing, gene therapy, gene splicing, genes, spot welding, heat-seeking, bipolar, prozac, leotards, lap dancing, email, tape recorder, CDs, airbags, plastic explosive, plastic, robots, cars, liposuction, transduction, superconduction, dish antennas, step aerobics, smoothies, twelve-step, ultrasound, nylon, rayon, teflon, fiber optics, carpal tunnel, laser surgery, laparoscopy, corneal transplant, kidney transplant, AIDS... None of this would have meant anything to a person in the year 1900. They wouldn't know what you are talking about.
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