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User / Plant pests and diseases
Scot Nelson / 15,201 items

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Pathogen: Fungal, poss. Bipolaris sp.

Tags:   palm leaf spot

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Pathogen: Fungal, poss. Bipolaris sp.

Tags:   palm leaf spot

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The feeding occurred when the newly emerging leaf was furled -- rolled as a cigar -- to cause the stencil pattern

Tags:   Feeding injury leaf stencil

N 1 B 12.4K C 0 E Apr 16, 2020 F Apr 16, 2020
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The Nadis move as spirals that intersect at chakras. Two Nadis move upward (Sushumna and Pingala). One Nadi, Ida, moves downward. The spirals formed by the three Nadis are of different amplitudes: the inner nadi (Sushumna) has the smallest, whereas the outer Nadi, Pingala, has the largest amplitude. These three Nadis intertwine as the separate fibers of a rope. These Nadis are within the human spine.

The central, innermost Nadi, colored white, is the Sushumna Nadi. The second Nadi, colored blue, is the Ida Nadi or the left channel. The third Nadi, colored yellow, is the Pingala Nadi, the right channel, the outermost Nadi.

Upper right: The white (Sushumna), blue (Ida) and yellow (Pingala) concentric circles represent the three Nadis, shown here in transverse section at a given chakra. The yellow-colored circle that encloses the blue-colored circle and whose perimeters pass through the center of the Sushumna Nadi represent the right and left aspect, respectively, of a chakra while Kundalini is rising. This is the condition of a healthy chakra, because more strings of Kundalini can pass through. Below in a less-than-healthy chakra, the left and right aspects have moved apart, and only one strand of Kundalini can pass through both, left (blue) and right (yellow).

Each of the three Nadis has 21 channels within.

Tags:   subtle energy system chakras nadis


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