BLUE SPRING FLOWERS

ponedjeljak, 28.11.2011.

HOW TO KEEP CUT FLOWERS FRESH THE LONGEST. FLOWERS FRES


How to keep cut flowers fresh the longest. Bach flower essenses. Rose flowers delivery.



How To Keep Cut Flowers Fresh The Longest





how to keep cut flowers fresh the longest






    flowers
  • (of a plant) Produce flowers; bloom

  • Induce (a plant) to produce flowers

  • (flower) a plant cultivated for its blooms or blossoms

  • Be in or reach an optimum stage of development; develop fully and richly

  • (flower) bloom: produce or yield flowers; "The cherry tree bloomed"

  • (flower) reproductive organ of angiosperm plants especially one having showy or colorful parts





    longest
  • In questions about a period of time

  • At a time distant from a specified event or point of time

  • For a long time

  • for the most time; "she stayed longest"





    how to
  • Practical advice on a particular subject; that gives advice or instruction on a particular topic

  • Providing detailed and practical advice

  • A how-to or a how to is an informal, often short, description of how to accomplish some specific task. A how-to is usually meant to help non-experts, may leave out details that are only important to experts, and may also be greatly simplified from an overall discussion of the topic.

  • (How To’s) Multi-Speed Animations





    fresh
  • recently made, produced, or harvested; "fresh bread"; "a fresh scent"; "fresh lettuce"

  • Not previously known or used; new or different

  • Recently created or experienced and not faded or impaired

  • (of food) Recently made or obtained; not canned, frozen, or otherwise preserved

  • newly: very recently; "they are newly married"; "newly raised objections"; "a newly arranged hairdo"; "grass new washed by the rain"; "a freshly cleaned floor"; "we are fresh out of tomatoes"

  • (of a cycle) beginning or occurring again; "a fresh start"; "fresh ideas"





    cut
  • An act of cutting, in particular

  • A haircut

  • separated into parts or laid open or penetrated with a sharp edge or instrument; "the cut surface was mottled"; "cut tobacco"; "blood from his cut forehead"; "bandages on her cut wrists"

  • A stroke or blow given by a sharp-edged implement or by a whip or cane

  • a share of the profits; "everyone got a cut of the earnings"

  • separate with or as if with an instrument; "Cut the rope"











AD 2000




AD 2000





The story of Ely Cathedral begins in Saxon Times with the life of its founder,
St. Etheldreda.

St. EtheldredaEtheldreda (?thelthryth, Ediltrudis, Audrey) (d.679), queen, foundress and abbess of Ely.

She was the daughter of Anna, king of East Anglia, and was born, probably, at Exning, near Newmarket in Suffolk.

At an early age she was married (c.652) to Tondberht, ealdorman of the South Gyrwas, but she remained a virgin.

On his death, c.655, she retired to the Isle of Ely, her dowry.

In 660, for political reasons, she was married to Egfrith, the young king of Northumbria who was then only 15 years old, and several years younger than her.

He agreed that she should remain a virgin, as in her previous marriage, but 12 years later he wished their marital relationship to be normal.

Etheldreda, advised and aided by Wilfred, bishop of Northumbria, refused.

Egfrith offered bribes in vain.

Etheldreda left him and became a nun at Coldingham under her aunt Ebbe (672) and founded a double monastery at Ely in 673. (from FARMER, David: The Oxford Dictionary of Saints, 3rd ed. OUP, 1992.)

Etheldreda restored an old church at Ely, reputedly destroyed by Penda, pagan king of the Mercians, and built her monastery on the site of what is now Ely Cathedral.

After its restoration in 970 by Ethelwold it became the richest abbey in England except for Glastonbury.

Etheldreda's monastery flourished for 200 years until it was destroyed by the Danes.

It was refounded as a Benedictine community in 970.

Etheldreda died c.680 from a tumour on the neck, reputedly as a divine punishment for her vanity in wearing necklaces in her younger days; in reality it was the result of the plague which also killed several of her nuns, many of whom were her sisters or nieces.

At St Audrey's Fair necklaces of silk and lace were sold, often of very inferior quality, hence the derivation of the word tawdry from St Audrey.

Seventeen years after her death her body was found to be incorrupt: Wilfred and her physician Cynefrid were among the witnesses.

The tumour on her neck, cut by her doctor, was found to be healed.

The linen cloths in which her body was wrapped were as fresh as the day she had been buried. Her body was placed in a stone sarcophagus of Roman origin, found at Grantchester and reburied.

For centuries, Etheldreda's shrine was the focus for vast numbers of medieval pilgrims.

It was destroyed in 1541, but a slate in the Cathedral marks the spot where it stood, and the 23 June and 17 October are still kept as major festivals in the Cathedral.

Some relics are alleged to be in St Etheldreda's Church, Ely Place, London (where the bishops of Ely formerly had their London residence).

Her hand, which was discovered in a recusant hiding place near Arundel in 1811, is claimed by St Etheldreda's Roman Catholic church at Ely.

Eternal God,who bestowed such grace upon your servant Etheldreda
that she gave herself wholly to the life of prayer
and to the service of your true religion:
grant that we, like her,
may so live our lives on earth seeking your kingdom
that by your guiding
we may be joined to the glorious fellowship of your saints; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

Etheldreda Banner

Miss Yams of Bayswater in 1910Work on the present Cathedral began in the 11th century under the leadership of Abbot Simeon, and the monastic church became a cathedral in 1109 with the Diocese of Ely being carved out of the Diocese of Lincoln.

The monastery at Ely was dissolved by Henry VIII in 1539.

Ely suffered less than many other monasteries, but even so, statues were destroyed together with carvings and stained glass.

St Etheldreda's Shrine was destroyed.

The Cathedral was refounded with a Chapter of eight canons in 1541 as was the Kings School.

Robert Steward, the last Prior of the monastery, became the first Dean.

The first major restoration took place in the 18th Century under James Essex. With the arrival of Dean George Peacock in 1839 a second restoration project began.

Together with the architect Sir George Gilbert Scott, he restored the building to its former glory.

A third major restoration project, the most extensive to date, was begun in 1986 and was completed in the year 2000.

The Etheldreda Banner was made by Miss Yams of Bayswater in 1910 and is still used today during great processions at Ely Cathedral.

It depicts Saint Etheldreda with a crosier as first Abbess of Ely, and around her, are the coats of arms of the See (top left), the University of Cambridge (bottom left), the Dean and Chapter of Ely (top right), and the Borough (now City) of Cambridge (bottom right); the arms at the top are those of Frederick Henry Chase, Bishop of Ely 1905-1924.

THE ELY SEQUENCE or 'The Story of Etheldreda' is sung at Ely on her feast days, 23 June and 17 October

1. Now, our hymn to God upraising,
Sing we of a queen's amazing
Lowliness of mind, today;
Who her royal state rejected
And, impelled by love, elect











Fresh Wasabi




Fresh Wasabi





Fresh wasabi is soooo much better than all the cheap and fake wasabi paste you can get in Europe.
Here we've had it with simple soba noodles. I LOVE!









how to keep cut flowers fresh the longest







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