Jump to content

Vanmala

Suppliers
  • Posts

    181
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Vanmala

  1. As far as how to get it down - we would always just take out a shotgun and shoot it out of the trees! (seriously!)

    LOL! Too funny! :smiley2:

    I bet it's hard to spot it at first like when you hunt sponge mushrooms. Spot one and the rest are easy. :)

  2. Thank you so much. I think I will make the pecans lighter next time. Making another one already. The mold I got from bluegoose for $ 23.00 I only ordered 1 to see how I like it, now going back to order 2 more.. One at a time wont cut it LOL

    Christina

    I was just going to post about the pecans being lighter LOL (good color if they were raisins though) I love bakery candles and it is funny how it makes ya hungry , huh?

    Anyway, great job :)

  3. I have ordered from them a couple of times and shipping was very slow. :sad2:

    They may be doing fine at this time and think they can afford to lose customers but one day it's gonna bite 'em in the butt! They may end up filing bankruptcy on their assets if they don't learn to use common courtesy as far as PR goes!

  4. Sell it on Ebay?

    I never knew where mistletoe came from. I had no idea from a tree. I assumed it grew on a bush. Hmmmm

    It grows down here in the south? I'll have to ask DH about it since he is from down here and I am from the midwest.

    Edited to add I did a search on it because I am so curious. Here is what I found:

    Soil Requirements: None. Mistletoe exists as a Semi-Parasitic Perennial found in hardwood trees, such as oak, hickory, pecan, and mahogany. As mistletoe grows on a tree, it sends out a root-like structure known as a haustoria into tree's bark and takes nutrients from the tree. Sometimes, mistletoe can harm a tree and cause deformities in a tree's branches, but usually it doesn't kill its host. If the host dies, the mistletoe dies.

×
×
  • Create New...