Wisteria

Wisteria is also known as vine and vine. It is a butterfly family and wisteria.

[Morphological characteristics]

In deciduous vines, stems are woody and large, with left-handedness. Odd pinnate compound leaves, alternate leaves, 13 leaflets, ovate oblong or ovate-lanceolate, entire. Racemes pendulous, butterfly-shaped, purple-blue, dense and scented. The fruit is big, densely villous, flowering is in June, and fruit is ripe in October.

Its cultivar: silver vine, also known as white wisteria, flowers white; pink roses, rose flowers. Has a high ornamental value.
[Customs]

Wisteria is a subtropical and temperate plant that has been cultivated and widely distributed. Hi sunshine, strong cold resistance. Strong adaptability to the climate and soil, resistant to water, wet and drought, hi deep, fertile, loose soil. Deep roots, less lateral roots, and intolerance to transplantation.

[Cultivation Techniques]

Reproduction: Cuttings (hard branches, roots), layering, ramets, sowing can be propagated.

(1) Seeding: After autumn, seeds are sown, dried and stored after harvesting, and soaked in warm water at 60°C during the spring and March-March of the following year. The seeds are expanded after 1- or 2-days and sowed on the sandy soil. Can germinate at 10-13°C. After the autumn when the stem is more than 1 meter, it can be transplanted.

(2) Cutting: It can be carried out in the spring of March-March or autumn. In the spring, a robust biennial branch is taken. In the autumn, the shoots of the stem are taken as cuttings, and the length is about 10 centimeters with cuttings. It is easier for the soil temperature to take root around 16°C.

(3) Beading: Should be carried out at the end of winter and early spring. Select strong long branches, scrape their skin at the bead, bury them in loose fine soil, often watering, keep moist, and promote rooting.

Management: The wisteria roots are strong, and it is recommended to carry more lateral roots and colonize with soil when transplanting. After the planting, in order to make flowering, it is necessary to pay attention to the management of loose soil, weeding, fertilization, and pruning. Before germination in early spring, phosphorus and potassium fertilizers such as calcium phosphate and ash may be applied, and the fertilizer may be topdressed for 2 to 3 times during growth. After flowering, the middle shoots may be left short by 5-6 buds and the thin and weak branches may be cut off to promote the formation of flower buds.

Wisteria with moths, aphids, Chinese stink bugs, dead leaf moth and other leaf-feeding pests can be killed by dipterex or phoxim 800 times when pests are found. The stems are harmful to the beetles, and the larvae have been deprived of stems. One can kill 0.5 parts of light diesel and use a cotton swab to block the wormholes and brush white trunks to prevent spawning.

[use]

Wisteria is a beautiful flower. It is an excellent scaffolding material that can green the porch; or it can be shrubby planted on the lawn. It can also climb old trees like dead trees. You can also pot and make piles.

The definition of Finished Pharmaceutical Product can be found in § 4 (1) of the Medicines Law. It reads: "Finished drugs are drugs that are prepared in advance and sold in specific packaging to the consumer..." The drugs are mostly in the form of tablets, capsules, drops, liquids, ointments and suppositories. For Phytotherapy (healing with plants) numerous drugs are also available in pharmacies in which drugs or drug preparations are processed. One distinguishes between the drug preparations: the chopped drug to prepare a tea, the milled drug (= drug powder) and the dried extract for the manufacture of tablets, capsules and pills, tincture for the preparation of drops and the fluid extract for juices, salves and other ointments to name a few. A finished drug with a drug formulation is called an "herbal medicine" or phytopharmacon (plural: phytopharmaceuticals).

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