The pine and oak pollen season in North Carolina has already come and gone. That golden dust just makes my eye water and nose run. Is that the testosterone?
Well if that is testosterone…… I must be full of it every spring!The pine and oak pollen season in North Carolina has already come and gone. That golden dust just makes my eye water and nose run. Is that the testosterone?
Now we are back to the OP’s topic of pine sap, good. Had to think for a minute how one would use testosterone to glue feathers to arrows.I believe natives used it to glue feathers on to arrows and then wrapping them with sinew.
Thin skin...makes for a short fuse. Anyhow, I had several White pine trees and when I’d mow, I’d get that sap all over me.. wish I knew about the butter trick earlier.That's just his way. Can't handle being questioned or criticized.
Thin skin...makes for a short fuse.
I don’t know if there are any qualities in pine sap that would be medicinal, however, there’s TONS of vitamin C In the needles of a white pine. Do a google search on white pine needles and vitamin C, it gives a recipe for natural vitamin C.. not the tastiest... but not horrible either.High levels of testosterone make a person cranky. My mom said she chewed pine pitch as a gum when she was a child. She managed to survive a bout of typhoid. No idea if the two are connected.
Melted and mixed with equal volumes of ground charcoal and ground deer droppings it makes a strong filler-adhesive or hot glue.
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