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Neuro-Natural General
Natural Energy
Neuro Natural General

Science has long established that many brain and nervous system disorders are a direct result of long-term nutrient deficiencies...

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The stresses of a modern life, natural depletion of essential nutrients from your diet, a decrease in your immunity and the subsequent vulnerability...

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The ‘standard’ medical solution for high cholesterol is to prescribe a statin drug. Whereas these are generally effective in lowering cholesterol…

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Lemon Tree

The lemon, orange and orange mandarin trees are citric plants coming from the Far East, where they reach up to 6 meters in height. In Europe and America, they are cultivated in areas with warm climates, without huge variations from day to night. In some countries the lemon is simply an indoor plant, growing up to one and a half meters in height. In these cases it is considered to be a bush, and it’s cultivated in recipients that enclose a soil mixture.

The lemon grows in one year in two or three rapid waves. The lemon leaves live for 2 to 3 years and they get renewed step by step. If lots of leaves fall at once it’s a sign of illness or lack of care. If the leaves fall for some reason, the plant will form others, but the next year the lemon will not give fruits. The lemon is a plant that can show all development stages at once: on the same lemon tree you can find young leaves, flowers and fruits at the same time.

For a normal growth and feeding a plant must have ten leaves for every fruit and additional ones to feed the roots and braches. In bloom time, if the lemon is not taken out to be pollinated, then windows must be opened so insects can enter and pollinated it indoors.

The lemons begin to give fruits when they are above 3 years old. From flowers to fruits, in apartment conditions, you need to allow about 8 months. After first fruits have appeared, additional fruits will grow very fast, and then the growth will constantly slow down until the final stage when it stops. In the first year the lemon will give two or three fruits, then the next year 5 to 8, the following 15 and the fourth about 25.

The lemon needs lots of warmth, being sensitive to low temperatures. The optimal temperature is of about 18 degrees Celsius. When fruits appear, temperature must be raised to at least 20 degrees.

Lemon does not need as much light as he needs warmth, but if the room temperatures are low, the lemon will not survive in the dark for more than 4 months. This is why, in winter, lemons must be kept in rooms that have high temperatures, or if that’s not possible, an artificial fluorescent light must be left on at night above the plant.

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