Horsetail – art print
Horsetail
Equisetum arvense
A4 art print
Digitally printed on Shetland Rives 300gsm stock
Illustration from The Physick Garden book
DESCRIPTION
This primitive plant with no direct affinity to any of its more modern counterparts is descended from a super-sized ancestor that could grow up to 30m (100ft) tall and which was itself a descendant of the Palaeozoic era of more than 300 million years ago. Long considered a wound-healing herb, horsetail (which now grows to around 35cm/14in) contains large amounts of silicic acid, silicates and alkaloids (including nicotine) that support the regeneration of connective tissues and the clotting of blood.
Horsetail
Equisetum arvense
A4 art print
Digitally printed on Shetland Rives 300gsm stock
Illustration from The Physick Garden book
DESCRIPTION
This primitive plant with no direct affinity to any of its more modern counterparts is descended from a super-sized ancestor that could grow up to 30m (100ft) tall and which was itself a descendant of the Palaeozoic era of more than 300 million years ago. Long considered a wound-healing herb, horsetail (which now grows to around 35cm/14in) contains large amounts of silicic acid, silicates and alkaloids (including nicotine) that support the regeneration of connective tissues and the clotting of blood.
Horsetail
Equisetum arvense
A4 art print
Digitally printed on Shetland Rives 300gsm stock
Illustration from The Physick Garden book
DESCRIPTION
This primitive plant with no direct affinity to any of its more modern counterparts is descended from a super-sized ancestor that could grow up to 30m (100ft) tall and which was itself a descendant of the Palaeozoic era of more than 300 million years ago. Long considered a wound-healing herb, horsetail (which now grows to around 35cm/14in) contains large amounts of silicic acid, silicates and alkaloids (including nicotine) that support the regeneration of connective tissues and the clotting of blood.