Flowers Trivia

Flowers Trivia

The spice saffron comes from a certain type of crocus.

Tulip bulbs can be used in place of onions for cooking.

The creamy-white bloom of the magnolia tree was designated the state flower of Louisiana in 1900 because of the abundance of trees throughout the state. Magnolia is an evergreen and the flower is usually fragrant. After the six to twelve petals of the flower have fallen away the large cone shaped fruit of the magnolia is exposed.

Cats love sweet smells. Such as lotions and perfumes. That is why you will see cats smelling flowers.

All ponsetttia flowers are yellow. The large colorful parts of the poinsettia (usually red, pink, white, or multicolored) are actually modified leaves called bracts. The actual flower is the tiny yellow structure in the center of the bracts at the top of the stem.

In Ireland, St Patrick's Day is both a holy day and a national holiday. Saint Patrick is the patron saint of Ireland. It was he who brought Christianity to Ireland. According to legend, Saint Patrick used a shamrock to explain God. This small green plant that looks like a clover, has three leaves on it. Saint Patrick told the people that the shamrock was the idea of the Trinity- that in the one God there are three divine Persons: the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. The shamrock is also the national flower of Ireland. 'The wearing of the green' on Saint Patrick's day is a reminder of all the green countryside of Ireland. In fact, this island nation is so green it is often called the Emerald Isle.

Did you known that sunflowers can be used to help soak up radiation?

The word gem comes from the Latin gemma meaning bud. The story of the precious stones is much like that of the blooming of flowers. Like tiny buds that burst into beautiful blossoms, dull lumps of mineral matter can be cut and polished into brilliantly flashing or beautifully glowing gems.

The state flower of Texas is the Bluebonnet. The state tree of Texas is the pecan.

The strawberry is technically not a fruit at all. In botanical terms, fruits are seed-bearing structures which grow from a flower's ovaries, and a strawberry is merely the swollen base of the strawberry flower. The plant's true fruits are the small, hard, nut-like pips embedded on the outside of the flesh. The seeds are contained in the pips.

The rose is the best-known symbol of beauty and love. Red roses mean I love you. A dozen of them make the ultimate statement on Valentine's Day. A single rose signifies simplicity.

Women prefer pastel colored roses, men on the other hand prefer red.

The Peach Blossom became the State flower of Delaware on May 9, 1895. It was prompted by Delaware's reputation as the "Peach State," since her orchards contained more than 800,000 peach trees yielding a crop worth thousands of dollars at that time.

California is the source for nearly 60% of all USA-grown fresh cut flowers.

Americans bought more than 1.2 BILLION fresh cut roses in the year 1996. That's 4.67 roses for every man, woman, and child nationwide.

The number of Begonia hybrids is estimated between 1000 and 2000. Within this enormous family there are plants which are tiny enough to grow in an egg shell and others which can cover a greenhouse wall. If you become addicted to growing begonias you are called a begoniac.

The first recorded plant collectors were the soldiers in the army of Thothmes III, Pharaoh of Egypt, 3500 years ago. In the Temple of Karnak these soldiers are shown bringing back 300 plants as booty from Syria.

In 1990 about 250 ha. were cultivated with orchids in Malaysia, producing over 27.86 million stalks of cutflowers, valued at RM 18.30 million. Exports of orchids were valued at RM 3.4 million in 1991.

The cactus family is divided into more than 100 genera. For simplicity North American cacti are placed into five groups: the prickly pears, the saguaro cactus group, the hedgehog cacti, the barrel cacti, and the pin-cushion and fishhook cacti.

In 1890 Luther Burbank crossed oxeye field daisy and Japanese daisy to produce perhaps the quintessential chrysanthemum - The Shasta Daisy.

The rose of Great Britain was the symbol of the Royal Family. As time passed, it became the national flower. The rose of Scotland was a kind of weed called "the wild thistle". A long time ago, when Vikings invaded Scotland, they were slowed in their attack by the thorns of the wild thistle. This allowed the people of Scotland time to escape from the Viking's sudden attack. Because of this legend, "the wild thistle" became the national flower of Scotland. The national flower of Wales was a kind of a smelly Leek. When the English sneer at someone, they say "Eat the Leek". That is the reason, Wales has changed their national flower to a narcissus.

Germany's national flower, centaurea is related with the emperor of old Germany. It has been called the "Emperor's flower". Because of the authoritative language of the flower's name, it naturally has been considered the national flower. Its status was not changed after the republic of Germany was established.

Egypt is known as the starting place of the ancient civilizations. "A water lily" has been Egypt's national flower for about 4000 years. It can be seen anywhere on the river Nile, especially the "blue water lily". The blue water lily has been loved by Egyptians for a long time. It was also considered the "God of the Resurrection", so it is sometimes laid on the tomb of "Mica". A few pieces of blue and white water lily flower picture have been found in the tomb of Rames II (ca. B.C. 13th century). Most of the Arab countries have followed Egypt's custom of adopting a water lily as the national flower.


The World's Largest Flower
The Titan Arum is not only the world's largest flower it is also the world's smelliest. This native of the central Sumatran rainforests is known affectionately as the Corpse Flower for its heady perfume of rotting flesh. It is 3 metres high

The World's Smallest Flower
A bouquet of a dozen Wolffia blooms would comfortably fit on the head of a pin.
A type of duckweed, Wolffia grows on the surface of ponds and slow moving streams.
This very minute flowering plant is native to Australia and Malaysia. The plant body is 0.6-0.9 mm long and only 0.2-0.5 mm wide. Not only is it one of the smallest flowering plants on earth, but it also produces one of the smallest fruits.

The World's Largest Bouquet
70, 000 roses went into the making of the world's largest flower bouquet.
The 23.4 metre arrangement was the work of Ashrita Furman

The World's Oldest Flower
In 2002 scientists in north-east China discovered a fossilised flower that blossomed about 125 million years ago. Called "the mother of all flowers", Archaefructus sinensis resembles the modern water lily

The largest recorded flower in the world belongs to the Sumatran Calla Lily, more commonly called the corpse flower. A specimen bloomed at the New York Botanical Gardens on June 8, 1937. The flower measured eight and a half feet tall, four feet in diameter, and had a twevle foot circumference. Don't get too close though.... the flower's fragrance resembles that of rotting meat... hence the 'Corpse Flower' name.

When you are eating a piece of fruit, you are eating a swollen ovary! Yes, that's right...fruit comes from a flowering plant which contains an ovary which will become the fruit! Food for thought: When you are drinking coffee you are drinking fruit juice!

The 'Staman and 'Pistil' in a flower refers to the male and female reproductive organs.

The poinsetta is the most common flower used at Christmas!

The children's famous rhyme,'Ring around the Rosie' was actually a small story on fact. Back when the 'Black (Bubonic) Plague' was around, a ring would appear around the rosey part of the actually boil-like spot, hence 'Ring around the rosey,' People smelled very badly when having this disease , so they carried posies (type of flower) in their pockets to camoflage the smell hence 'Pocket full of posies,' When the people died, because the plague was contagious, they would burn the corpses to ashes hence 'Ashes, ashes' 'We all fall down.' was added because no one was surviving. Interesting, yeah?

The largest flower in the world (the Rufflesia) grows to over 3 metres in diameter.

Over the course of its 6-week lifespan, a honeybee will collect enough nectar to make 1/12th of a teaspoon of honey. A honeybee would have to visit over 2,000,000 (2 million) flowers in order to collect enough nectar to produce 1 pound of honey. The bee would have to travel 55,000 miles total to accomplish this feat.

The reason a dog curls up with its tail covering its nose is to keep it warm during cold weather. In hotter weather they tend to stretch out to get rid of the heat. Some dogs also tend to dig holes in cool, shaded spots to give off heat. One place might be a flower bed where the soil is softer and easier to manuver around.

In 1986 Congress voted to make the rose America's national flower.

The bluebonnet became the Texas state flower in 1901. In 1971, the state legislature, named all lupine species as the official state flower.
The flower looks like a little bonnet when you look at it closely. After it rains, look for a drop of water in each bonnet or bowl-like petal. As the Texas bluebonnet flower ages, one of the top petals turns purple-red.

Pink and White Lady Slipper (cypripedium reginae) is the State flower of Minnesota. Illegal to pick in the state, the pink and white lady slipper is one of Minnesota's rarest wildflowers. They can take up to 16 years to produce their first flower, and sometimes live for 50 years.

Brocolli is the only vegetable that is a flower.
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Blood Trivia

Blood Trivia

Someone will use blood every 3 seconds!!

One of every 100 blood donors ~ which one are you?

6 O- 39 O+
7 A- 34 A+
1.5 B- 8.5 B+
.5 AB- 3.5 AB+

What percent of a person's body weight is blood?
7

Which blood type must receive only their own specific type, even in an emergency?
O-

How many blood types do cows have?
Over 800

Which blood component used for clotting cannot be frozen and has a 5 day shelf life?
Platelets

The average adult has how many pints of blood in their body?
10 - 12

How much blood can be used during a transplant?
50 - 100 + units of blood components

You can donate whole blood every 56 days - how often can you donate platelets?
Every 2 weeks

Can you name the four components of blood?
Plasma, Platelets, Red cells, White cells

More Blood Trivia:

Q. What common chemical added to blood keeps it from clotting until it is ready to be transfused to a patient?
A. Salt

Q. What common chemical added to blood greatly increases its storage time without adversely affecting the quality?
A. Sugar

Q. When and how was the first administration of blood given?
A. The early Egyptians and Romans prescribed it orally as a life-giving tonic and to transmit youth from donor to recipient.

Q. What was the nickname of the Queen of England and Ireland who resigned from 1553-1558?
A. Bloody Mary (Mary Tudor)

Q. Which ancient culture, believing that blood had magical powers, painted their bodies with it and bathed their kings in it as part of their tribal ritual to appease the gods?
A. Aztecs

Q. In ancient times, what profession became known by the name of an animal they frequently employed in their work?
A. Doctors used leeches to remove blood (which supposedly removed demons which were thought to be the cause of illness). Soon their patients started referring to physicians as "leeches."

Q. When were the four blood types identified in humans?
A. Blood transfusions were first attempted around 1600 by transfusing animal blood into humans - with disastrous results. Then, in the early 1800s an English obstetrician, James Blundell, came up with the idea of human blood for human beings. The results were better, but still some patients inexplicably died. Finally, in 1920, Karl Landsteiner identified the four basic blood types, and subsequently, the success of blood transfusions was significantly increased when patients were transfused with their same type.

Q. Which RH factor is most needed, RH+ or RH- ?
A. Both. A greater percentage of people have RH+, so this means more RH+ blood donors are needed. Fewer people have RH- blood so there are fewer donors to provide this type when needed.

Q. What is the origin of the red & white striped pole designating a barber shop?
A. In the Middle Ages, bloodletting was a popular cure for many ills, and barbers became known as professional bloodletters. Red & white barber poles symbolize the practice of hanging bloodstained bandages outside their shops.

Q. What English aristocrat believed that bathing in blood would keep her young (which may have contributed to the beginning of the vampire legend)?
A. Mary Bathory

Q. What blood type did Mr. Spock of Star Trek have?
A. His blood type was T-negative (and colored green because of the copper content)

Q. What nation has popularized the belief that blood type is an indicator of personality traits?
A. Japan

Q. What percentage of a person's body weight is blood?
A. 7%

Q. What percentage of Chinese people have RH+ blood?
A. 100%

Q. Which blood type must receive only their own specific type, even in an emergency?
A. O-

Q. How many blood types do cats have?
A. Four

Q. How many blood types do cows have?
A. Over 800

Blood Trivia Sources: http://www.wcredcross.org/bloodmobile/trivia.html
http://www.ucihealth.com/HealthcareServices/BloodTrivia1.htm
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Biology Trivia

From the 1500's to the 1700's, tobacco was prescribed by doctors to treat a variety of ailments including headaches, toothaches, arthritis and bad breath.

Ginger has been clinically demonstrated to work twice as well as Dramamine for fighting motion sickness, with no side effects.

Hydroponics is the technique by which plants are grown in water without soil.

In 1865 opium was grown in the state of Virginia and a product was distilled from it that yielded 4 percent morphine. In 1867 it was grown in Tennessee: six years later it was cultivated in Kentucky. During these years opium, marijuana and cocaine could be purchased legally over the counter from any druggist.

In 1924, Pope Urban VIII threatened to excommunicate snuff users.

In 1932 James Markham obtained the 1st patent issued for a tree. The patent was for a peach tree.

In Siberia, in 1994, a container full of marijuana was discovered in the 2,000-year-old grave of a Scythian princess and priestess, among the many other articles buried with her.

In the Netherlands, in 1634, a collector paid 1,000 pounds of cheese, four oxen, eight pigs, 12 sheep, a bed, and a suit of clothes for a single bulb of the Viceroy tulip.

Morphine was given its name in 1803 by the discoverer, a 20 year old German pharmacist named Friedrich Saturner. He named it after Morpheus, the Greek god of dreams.

No species of wild plant produces a flower or blossom that is absolutely black, and so far, none has been developed artificially.

Nutmeg is extremely poisonous if injected intravenously.

Oak trees do not have acorns until they are fifty years old or older.

You shed and regrow your skin every 28 days, that's about 1000 times in a lifetime.

The shark has to keep moving to stay alive.

An iguana always lands on its feet.

Flamingos turn pink from eating shrimp because of the beta-carotene content in the shrimp. Flamingos that don't eat shrimp are white and not pink. Beta-carotene is also in carrots.

When you are eating a piece of fruit, you are eating a swollen ovary!

Beer, as all alcoholic drinks, is made by fermentation caused by bacteria feeding on the yeast cells, then defecating. This bacterial excrement is called alcohol.

The spleen is an organ that performs several functions related to the health of your blood. First, it filters out and destroys old red blood cells. Second, it manufactures some of the white blood cells that form your immune system. And finally, it can actually manufacture new red blood cells, especially if the bone marrow isn't working properly.

84% of a raw apple is water.

99% of the pumpkins sold in the US end up as jack-o-lanterns.

A cucumber is 96% water.

A notch in a tree will remain the same distance from the ground as the tree grows.

A pineapple is a berry.

Absinthe is another name for the herb wormwood (Artemisia absinthium) and the name of a licorice-anise flavored green liqueur that was created at the end of the 18th century, and manufactured by Henry-Louis Pernod. Called the 'green Muse' it became very popular in the 19th century, but was eventually banned in most countries beginning in 1908.

According to the Guinness Book of World Records, the single-seeded fruit of the giant fan palm, or Lodoicea maldivica, can weigh 44 lbs. Commonly known as the double coconut or coco de mer, it is found wild only in the Seychelles in the Indian Ocean.

Advertisements for coffee in London in 1657 claimed that the beverage was a cure for scurvy, gout and other ills.

Almonds are the oldest, most widely cultivated and extensively used nuts in the world.

Americans eat more bananas than any other fruit: a total of 11 billion a year.

An average ear of corn has 800 kernels, arranged in 16 rows.

Willow bark, which provides the salicylic acid from which aspirin was originally synthesized, has been used as a pain remedy ever since the Greeks discovered its therapeutic power nearly 2,500 years ago.

Wine grapes, oranges, figs and olives were first planted in North America by Father Junipero Sera in 1769.

Arrowroot, an antidote for poisoned arrows, is used as a thickener in cooking.

Avocados have the highest calories of any fruit at 167 calories per hundred grams.

Banana oil never saw a banana; it's made from petroleum.

Bananas are actually herbs. Bananas die after fruiting, like all herbs do.

Both George Washington and Thomas Jefferson grew cannabis sativa (marijuana) on their plantations.

Cranberries are one of just 3 major fruits native to North America. Blueberries and Concord grapes are the other two.

Dr. Joel Poinsett, the 1st US ambassador to Mexico, brought the poinsettia to US in 1828. The plant, called "flower of the blessed night" in Mexico was renamed in Poinsett's honor.

Eggplant is a member of the thistle family.


One pound of tea can make 300 cups of the beverage.

One ragweed plant can release as many as one billion grains of pollen.

Oranges, lemons, watermelons, and tomatoes are berries.

Orchids have the smallest seeds. It takes more than 1.25 million seeds to weigh 1 gram.

Peanuts are beans.

The blue whale can produce the loudest sound produced by an animal - up to 188 decibels - and detected as far away as 853 kms (530mi).

The giraffe is one of the quietest animals: it has no vocal chords to make any noise.

A goldfish (like most marine fish) can survive in a tank full of human blood. Yashna, Canada.

In seahorses, it's the male who gives birth to the young.

From 70 to 80 percent of all ripe olives are grown in California's approximately 35,000 acres. In the 1700s, Franciscan monks brought olives to Mexico and then into California by way of the missions. The first cuttings were planted in 1769 at the San Diego Mission. Commercial cultivation of California olives began in the late 1800s. Today, anywhere from 80,000 to 160,000 tons of olives are produced in California each year.

Plants that need to attract moths for pollination are generally white or pale yellow, to be better seen when the light is dim. Plants that depend on butterflies, such as the poppy or the hibiscus, have more colorful flowers.

Quinine, one of the most important drugs known to man, is obtained from the dried bark of an evergreen tree native to South America.

Rice paper isn't made from rice but from a small tree which grows in Taiwan.

Tea was so expensive when it was first brought to Europe in the early 17th century that it was kept in locked wooden boxes.

The California redwood - coast redwood and giant sequoia - are the tallest and largest living organism in the world.

The first American advertisement for tobacco was published in 1789. It showed a picture of an Indian smoking a long clay pipe.

The fragrance of flowers is due to the essences of oil which they produce.

The largest single flower is the Rafflesia or "corpse flower". They are generally 3 feet in diameter with the record being 42 inches.

The oldest living thing in existence is not a giant redwood, but a bristlecone pine in the White Mountains of California, dated to be aged 4,600 years old.

The pineapple was symbol of welcome in the 1700-1800's. That is why in New England you will see so many pineapples on door knockers. An arch in Providence RI leading into the Federal Hill neighborhood has a pineapple on it for that very reason. Pineapples were brought home by seafarers as gifts.

The plant life in the oceans make up about 85 percent of all the greenery on the Earth.

The popular name for the giant sequoia tree is Redwood.

The rose family of plants, in addition to flowers, gives us apples, pears, plums, cherries, almonds, peaches and apricots.

The world's tallest grass, which has sometimes grown 130 feet or more, is bamboo.

There are more than 700 species of plants that grow in the United States that have been identified as dangerous if eaten. Among them are some that are commonly favored by gardeners: buttercups, daffodils, lily of the valley, sweet peas, oleander, azalea, bleeding heart, delphinium, and rhododendron.

Wheat is the world's most widely cultivated plant; grown on every continent except Antarctica.

When a coffee seed is planted, it takes five years to yield consumable fruit.

When you give someone roses, the color can have a meaning. The meaning of rose colors:
Red = Love and respect
Deep pink = Gratitude, appreciation
Light pink = Admiration, sympathy
White = Reverence, humility
Yellow = Joy, gladness
Orange = Enthusiasm, desire
Red & yellow blend = Gaiety, joviality
Pale blended tones = Sociability, friendship

Marge Simpson shared a jail cell with Tattoo Annie when she went to prison for 30 days due to shoplifting at the kwik-E-Mart.

Using radar imaging, scientists in Siberia recently located a wooly mammoth carcass. They jackhammered the carcass from the frozen tundra, and transported it to an ice cellar in Khatanga, Russia. The mammoth died at the age of 47 about 20,000 years ago, and should provide excellent samples of plants and other animal remains. Plans are afoot to attempt cloning of the mammoth by transplanting a cell nucleus into an elephant egg, and implanting it into a living elephant. Won't she be in for a surprise when she meets Junior?

It has been medically proven that alcohol, does in fact, kill brain cells. However, the use of marijuana, has also been medically proven to only numb the brain cells. When the user comes down from the high produced by the marijuana is when the cells are 'waking' or coming out of the numbing process. Until recently, scientists had reported that brain cells, once destroyed, cannot regenerate. Recent research has proven this to be false. The brain -can- actually regenerate brain cells.

Scotophobia - a fear of the dark and also the fear of anything Scottish!

Giraffes have adapted an extraordinary tongue for obtaining their staple food source, acacia leaves.

Cadang-Cadang disease, which occurs in coconut trees, is named after the noise the coconuts make when they fall to the ground.

Many scientists say that the most effective sleeping position is the fetus position. Reason? That position allows the body to experience the best blood circulation.

THX-1138 is the name of a 1971 movie by George Lucas. The numbers 1138 can be found in nearly all Lucas movies. In Star Wars, 1138 is the detention cell where Leia is held. In Raiders of the Lost Ark, it is on a license plate on a car in Egypt.

Cats eyes shine at night because of the light reflected by the tapetum, a layer of cells forming a large part of the inner eye.

Tamoxifen is the most commonly prescrived antiestrogenic drug used in hormone therapy to treat breast cancer.

Kitchen dishcloths and sponges, notorious for harboring bacteria which can cause foodborne illnesses, can be sanitized by using a household microwave oven. Researchers at the University of Wisconsin and the University of California-Davis eliminated E coli 0157:H7 and Staphylococcus and other bacteria by exposing cotton dishcloths and cellulose sponges to microwaves for one minute at the highest setting.

The worlds largest crossword-puzzel contained 82951 cells.

Pregnant women are advised not to come in contact with cat feces, because it can contain an organism which can affect the unborn child and even cause miscarriage.
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