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5th December 09, 02:47 PM
#1
Bog Myrtle
I'm looking for some artificial bog myrtle, but I've not yet had luck. Does anyone have any suggestions where I could find some, or where I could find something that looks fairly similar?
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5th December 09, 03:13 PM
#2
I believe it is found in your state near the lakes. If it is hard to find, you might find bayberry (also Myrica) a bit easier. I am assuming you need a sprig of it? In my area it grows near the coast in sandy areas.
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5th December 09, 03:22 PM
#3
Oh I can easily see the resemblence! Do you know of anyplace that specializes in artificial plants, that I may find any of these plants from? I just need a sprig, of course!
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6th December 09, 03:35 PM
#4
There are a lot of web sites that sell artificial myrtle topiary plants, but that would be expensive if you need to cut them up to use them. I did find two sources, but I don't know how close they will come to "bog" myrtle:
1.Silk http://www.pyob.com/herb_silk_bouquets.htm
2. Dried http://www.woodcreekdrieds.com/drieds.html
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8th December 09, 07:19 PM
#5
Those darn minimum orders....Hmm, I may have to wander the craft store near me and see if I can find something that looks relatively close.
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13th December 09, 02:23 PM
#6
Don't confuse true myrtles (family Myrtaceae) with bog myrtle (family Myricaceae)...meaning that artificial myrtle is probably not even close to what you want. Again, try searching on bayberry rather than myrtle; I found several sources of artificial bayberry, for example: http://www.prontohome.com/compare/ar...ed-11500277438
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13th December 09, 10:16 PM
#7
You could ask Jock Scott to send you some of the real stuff – he might have to go into the heart of Campbell country to get it though ! (wink !) (aka God’s own country – Argyll). After all, myrtle and butcher's broom are the plant badges of the Campbells of Argyll.
I still remember the aromatic smell of bog myrtle leaves from our family holidays in Argyll as a boy. My dad, who’s from Argyll, showed me how to bruise the leaves and rub them over the skin to keep away midges. You can also use them in cooking, similar to bay leaves - use sparingly. Happy days – he also showed me how to take dockens (bracken) and squash the stems to release the white juice to rub on to relieve nettle stings. Then there was the sphagnum moss, saturated with water, straight out the bog, which was used to keep cold the fish we’d caught (salmon - caught in the sea in our net – usually illegally !, net-caught sea-trout, “angled” loch trout, line-caught mackerel while in the boat, but not grey mullet caught in our net – they went in the bin – Highland tradition ! The lobsters and cruben caught in our handful of creels were kept alive till boiling-pot time ! The congers we sometimes found in our creels were dispatched with a pater-noster and left on the beach for the gulls). Plus the carrageen gathering we did in tidal pools and the shallows, to eat ourselves in a pudding or else dry in the sun and sell to health shops in Edinburgh.
Sorry, I’m getting all nostalgic ! Maybe I should open a nostalgia thread in “Off Topic” !
Last edited by Lachlan09; 13th December 09 at 10:30 PM.
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14th December 09, 03:43 PM
#8
'tis nothin wrong with a lil nostalgia!
I've not yet found what I want, so I'm going to make it. Here's some greenery I obtained today...
Next up, to find a cluster of something for the berries(?)
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